The word "Cybernetics" comes from the ancient Greek kybernētēs (κυβερνήτης): the helmsman, the one who steers a ship.
In 1948, mathematician Norbert Wiener used this word to describe a new science: the study of control, communication, and feedback in humans, animals, and machines.
His central insight was remarkably simple.
Every effective system follows the same pattern:
• It has a goal.
• It observes where it is.
• It compares reality to the goal.
• It adjusts its course.
• It repeats.
A thermostat does it.
A pilot does it.
A guided missile does it.
Even the human body constantly regulates itself through feedback.
The surprising part is that success doesn't come from staying on course, it comes from continuously correcting your course.
A guided missile is off course for much of its flight. It reaches its destination not because it flies perfectly, but because it detects errors and keeps making small adjustments.
Years later, plastic surgeon Maxwell Maltz borrowed this idea and applied it to the human mind in Psycho-Cybernetics.
After treating thousands of patients, he noticed something fascinating.
Some people's lives changed dramatically after surgery.
Others looked completely different, yet still felt inadequate, insecure, or "not enough."
The difference wasn't their appearance.
It was their self-image.
Maltz argued that we rarely behave according to objective reality. We behave according to the identity we have built in our own minds.
If your internal model says, "I'm not capable," your actions will often reinforce that belief.
If your internal model changes, your behavior gradually changes with it.
Whether or not every aspect of Maltz's theory stands up to modern scientific scrutiny, one principle remains deeply valuable:
Treat feedback as information, not as judgment.
Failure is not a verdict.
It's data.
It's a signal that helps you make the next adjustment.
Perhaps that's the deeper lesson of cybernetics.
Life isn't about perfection.
It's about having a direction, paying attention to reality, learning from every result, and making the next correction.
Just like a good helmsman.
I find it fascinating that one of the most influential ideas in personal development is rooted in an ancient Greek word that simply means the person who holds the helm.
Maybe growth has never been about becoming perfect.
Maybe it has always been about learning how to steer.
Point Zero Forum in Zurich is happening now.
Maghnus Mareneck @0xMagmar, our Co-CEO, is on the ground in Zurich today. If you're at the forum, reach out.
We have been quietly putting together an all star team of incredible quality.
@eranbarak and @IamIanKane add to heavyweights like:
- @vladjdk
- “KZ” + many without X
- @cozartshmoopler
To grateful to work with these folks
1/ Cosmos new hires 🤝
@cosmoslabs_io just brought in some big names. Could this finally be the dream team $ATOM and Cosmos Hub always needed?
A thread 🧵 👇
@tonyler_ At last some proper management from people that work with actual financial systems (says a random guy on the internet). These are the people that add value on a project not hyppers with one good idea that abandon the ship on hardship.
👉@tonyler u r also part of cosmos vision!
Things that happened to $ATOM since @cosmoslabs_io took over:
→ Robinhood listed ATOM spot trading
→ Revolut launched ATOM staking
→ eToro added ATOM staking
→ Bitstamp added ATOM spot trading
→ Binance delisted the ATOM/BTC margin pair (less manipulation)
→ Part of Mastercard's crypto partner program
1/ Solana Meets Cosmos 🌱
@NolusProtocol is about to plug into Solana via IBC. If that works the way it should, the whole protocol changes... and it will change the whole @cosmos ecosystem with it.
A thread 🧵 👇
1/ Weekly Cosmos Hub news 🌱
@cosmoshub dropped its third weekly update. A lot is moving at once.
→ Liquidity layer
→ Tokenomics
→ USDC migration
→ more...
A thread on cosmos:native news🧵 👇