THE COMPETENCE BETWEEN ECO[NOMIC]SYSTEMS AND HISTORY

The II Earth: Carbolife ecosystems. The III Earth: Metalife ecosystems
It is then when the premise for a combined analysis of history and economics appears:
Can we talk as machines reproduce in greater numbers, and evolve into ever more complex species of energy/information, of a fight between carbolife and metalife, Nature and machines, for the vital spaces of The Earth, when they reproduce and compete for limited resources of energy and information?
Today we are on the verge of a new r=evolution of machines, the robotic r=evolution that will make machines far more powerful, and able to perform almost every job humans perform, both in the work place and in war fields. It is legitimate to ask ourselves about the consequences that the evolution of metal-species, with metal-bodies stronger than our bodies, and metal-heads [chips, mobiles, cameras], that perceive, communicate and resolve actions much better than most men can do, will have for Human survival on Earth. Since after all, we are just another carbolife being; and machines not only compete and displace Animal Species, but also displace human beings, in the ecosystem of labor, and ecosystems of war, [where they kill human beings].
That competence between Natural and Historic Ecosystems [Animal and Agricultural ecosystems] and Economic ecosystems, [ecosystems of machines and Animetals, humans simbiotic to those machines], is the very essence of the Historic Process. Whose engine is not the fight between 'social classes', but the fight between 2 biological species: social human beings, organized by 'verbal networks of information' [Religions, political laws] and machines and animetals, organized by 'digital networks of information' [money and science].
Only if we are able to understand objectively under biological laws, the nature of human social organisms - the body of history - and the causes of their sickness, we will be able to cure as modern doctors do, the illness of our nations, and improve the life of human beings.
Such are the themes that Bio-Economics, and Bio-History study in depth, according to the biological, and economic facts of History.