Holotopia

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We have lost the sense of direction

Postman-meaning.jpeg

In 1990, when Tim Berners Lee was still writing the code for the World Wide Web, Neil Postman (NYU's distinguished scholar of culture and communication) warned us that our habitual massive outpouring of information tends to have the opposite effect from the one intended. It not only leaves us uninformed—but it damages our very sense of meaning; our very capacity to be informed.

Imagine a world where information and the way we handle it is consciously adapted to its core purpose—the creation of meaning

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What would the resulting information be like? By what methods, in what ways and by whom would it be created? How would information be used? What new information formats, what new kinds of information would emerge? How would the information technology be used? In what way would our public informing be different? What would academic communication and education be like? By creating the Knowledge Federation prototype, we provided an academically coherent answer to those and other related questions; answers that are not only described and explained, but also implemented, as real-life embedded prototypes.

But having done that, we are still facing the same challenge that our visionary predecessors failed to overcome.

Modernity2.jpg By depicting our civilization as a bus, and our way of handling information as its candle headlights, the Modernity ideogram points to an all-important oversight in our modernization.

We seem unable to make a change

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In the world where we've all been socialized to "mind our own business" and just publish more, as scientists, and as journalists (because that's what we are paid for, and what our careers and the prestige and the livelihood of our institutions depend on)—we have no incentive, no institution, no established method, and no willpower to make the kind of changes that would put information and knowledge into the service of meaning— which our society now most vitally needs.

A goal of the Holotopia prototype, which is currently in development, is to overcome that obstacle.

What would our world be like, if we elevated the most vital insights from the "information jungle", and combined them together to give us vision? How would our world be different, if the best ideas of our best minds were reflected in the ways we comprehend things—and if we also acted on them?

The purpose of Holotopia is to not only answer those questions by providing a clear vision of such a world—but to also empower us to begin to create it.

What would it take to change course?

Peccei-Future.jpeg

Based on a decade of The Club of Rome's research into the future prospects of mankind, Aurelio Peccei diagnosed that the humanity is on a collision course with nature. We take his diagnoses as a challenge, and as a natural benchmark test for our project. Can the new 'headlights' we are proposing help us "change course"? And if they can—what will the new course be?