In the years when it looked like things were going well, the central banks developed a view of the world in which the changing structures of global finance werenât part of their job. They didnât pay attention to the debt bubble, and they had got rid of the communication channels that might have carried the red-alert warnings up to the highest levels of policy-making. More precisely, they had got rid of the translation systems. There was no shortage of people warning that there was a problem in 2006 and 2007, but none of these warnings was given in a form that could be recognised by the worldâs central bank governors as requiring action. A failure to build System 4 and balance its variety against System 3 is itself a failure of System 5 â thatâs the function that has the job of balancing âhere and nowâ against âthere and thenâ. So, using the viable system model to diagnose the causes of the global financial crisis, we end up with a rather interesting conclusion. Where things went wrong was a matter of philosophy. The central banks had an identity-creating function, but it had failed; it defined their purpose in such a way that they failed to understand that particular kinds of information were relevant to them.