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<div class="page-header" > <h1>Federation through Stories</h1> </div>
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<div class="page-header"><h1>Federation through Keywords</h1></div>
  
<p>[[File:Elephants.jpeg]]<br><small><center>Even if we don't mention him explicitly, this elephant is the main hero of our stories.</center></small></p>
 
<p></p>
 
 
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  <div class="col-md-3"><h2>What the giants have been telling us</h2></div>
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<div class="col-md-3"><font size="+1">– I cannot understand how anyone can make use of the frameworks of reference developed in the eighteenth and nineteenth century in order to understand the transformation into the post-traditional cosmopolitan world we live in today.</font>
  <div class="col-md-7"><h3>The invisible elephant</h3>
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<br>
<p>The most interesting and impactful ideas are without doubt those that challenge our very order of things. But such ideas also present the largest challenge to communication! A shared [[paradigm|<em>paradigm</em>]] is what <em>enables us</em> to communicate. How can we make sense of new things, while they still challenge the order of things that gives things meaning?</p>
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(Ulrich Beck,  <em>The Risk Society and Beyond</em>, 2000)
<p>When they attempt to share with us their insights, the visionaries appear to us like those proverbial blind or blind-folded men touching the elephant. They are of course far from being blind; they are the <em>seers</em>! But the 'elephant' is invisible. We don't even have the words to describe him yet!</p>  
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</div>  
<p>And so we hear the [[giants|<em>giants</em>]] talk about "the fan", "the hose" and "the rope" – while it's really the ear and the trunk and the tail of that big new thing they are pointing to.</p>  
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<div class="col-md-6"><p>To orient ourselves in the "post-traditional world" (where traditional recipes no longer work), to step <em>beyond</em> the "risk society" (where existential risks lurk in the dark, because we can neither comprehend nor resolve them by thinking as we did when we created them)—we must <em>create</em> new ways to think and speak; but <em>how</em>?</p>  
 
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<p>Here a technical idea—<em><b>truth by convention</b></em>—is key; I adopted it or more precisely <em><b>federated</b></em> it from Willard Van Orman Quine; who qualified the transition to "truth by convention" as a sign of maturing that the sciences have manifested in their evolution; so why not use it to mature our pursuit of <em><b>knowledge</b></em> <em>in general</em>? <em><b>Truth by convention</b></em> is the notion of truth that is usual in mathematics: Let <em>x</em> be... then... It is meaningless to argue whether <em>x</em> "really is" as defined. </p>
<h3>We begin with four dots</h3>  
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<h3><em>Truth by convention</em> gives us a way to create an independent reference system.</h3>
<p>The way to remedy this situation is, of course, by connecting the dots. Initially, all we can hope for is to show just enough of the [[invisible elephant|<em>elephant</em>]] to discern its contours. Then interest and enthusiasm will do the rest. Imagine all the fun we'll have, all of us together, discovering and creating all those details!</p>
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<p>Independent, that is, from the <em><b>beliefs</b></em> of our traditions; and from the social "reality" or <em><b>the world</b></em> we live in. <em><b>Truth by convention</b></em> empowers us to (create <em><b>information</b></em> that makes it possible to) reflect about them critically.</p>       
<p>We'll begin here with four 'dots'. We'll introduce four [[giants|<em>giants</em>]], and put their ideas together. This might already be enough to give us a start.</p>  
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<h3><em>Keywords</em> are concepts defined by <em>convention</em>.</h3>  
<p>The four stories we've chosen to tell will illuminate the [[invisible elephant|<em>elephant</em>]]'s four sides (which correspond to the four [[keywords|<em>keywords</em>]] that define our initiative):
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<p>Years ago, when this work was still in infancy and before I read about <em><b>guided evolution of society</b></em>, I coined a pair of keywords—<em><b>tradition</b></em> and <em><b>design</b></em>—to explain the nature of the error I am inviting you to correct; the one the Modernity ideogram is pointing to. <em><b>Tradition</b></em> and <em><b>design</b></em> are two ways of thinking and being in the world; and two distinct ways of evolving culturally and socially—corresponding to the two ways in which <em><b>wholeness</b></em> can result: <em><b>Tradition</b></em> relies on spontaneous evolution (where things are adjusted to each other through many generations of use); <em><b>design</b></em> relies on accountability and deliberate action. <em><b>Design</b></em> means thinking and acting as a designer would, when designing a technical object such as a car; and making sure that the result is functional (it can take people places), and also safe, affordable, appealing etc. The point of this definition is that when <em><b>tradition</b></em> can no longer be relied on—<em><b>design</b></em> must be used.</p>
<ul>  
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<p>So let us right away take a decisive step toward the <em><b>design</b></em> thinking and being by turning "reification" into a <em><b>keyword</b></em>; and explain that <em><b>reification</b></em> is something the <em><b>traditional</b></em> cultures did and <em>had to</em> do (to compel everyone to comply to the traditional order of things without needing to understand it); and use the Modernity ideogram to explain why <em>we</em> must learn to <em>avoid</em> <em><b>reification</b></em> (because it hinders us from <em><b>designing</b></em> i.e. from deliberately <em><b>seeing things whole</b></em> and <em><b>making things whole</b></em>).</p>
<li>What constitutes right knowledge, and the right way to knowledge ([[design epistemology|<em>design epistemology</em>]])</li>  
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<p>You may now understand the error I am inviting you to correct as something (only) the <em><b>traditional</b></em> people could have made; and the Modernity ideogram as depicting a point of transition: We are no longer <em><b>traditional</b></em>; and we are not yet <em><b>designing</b></em>; we live in a (still haphazard) transition from one stable way of evolving and being in the world, which is no longer functioning—and another one, which is not yet in place.</p>
<li>How should the new information technology be used ([[collective mind|<em>collective mind</em>]] paradigm, or [[knowledge federation|<em>knowledge federation</em>]])</li>  
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<h3><em>Reification</em> is the <em>traditional</em> approach to communication.</h3>  
<li>How shall we direct our creative abilities ([[systemic innovation|<em>systemic innovation</em>]]) </li>  
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<p>And to concept definition in particular. <em><b>See</b></em> the approach to concept definition I have just introduced <em><b>as</b></em> a way or <em>the</em> way to avoid <em><b>reification</b></em>.</p>  
<li>How to make a good use of knowledge itself ([[guided evolution of society|<em>guided evolution of society</em>]]) </li>
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<p> When I define for instance "culture" by <em><b>convention</b></em>, and turn it into a <em><b>keyword</b></em>, I am not saying what culture "really is"; I am creating a <em>way of looking</em> at an endlessly complex real thing—and <em>projecting</em> it, as it were, onto some judiciously chosen plane; so that we may talk about it and comprehend it in simple and clear terms, by seeing it from a specific <em>angle</em>; and I'm inviting you, the reader, to <em><b>see</b></em> culture <em><b>as</b></em> it's been defined.</p>
</ul> </p>  
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<p>Defined by <em><b>convention</b></em>, institutions like "science" or "religion" are not <em><b>reified</b></em> as what they <em>currently</em> are—but defined as means to an end i.e. in terms of a certain specific function or a collection of <em>functions</em> in the <em><b>system</b></em> of society; so that we may <em>adapt</em> the actual institutions to those functions.</p>
</div></div>
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<h3><em>Keyword</em> creation is a form for linguistic and institutional recycling.</h3>
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<p>Often but not always, <em><b>keywords</b></em> are adopted from the repertoire of a frontier thinker, an academic field or a cultural tradition; they then enable us to <em><b>federate</b></em> what's been comprehended or experienced in some of our culture's dislodged compartments.</p>
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<h3><em><b>Keywords</b></em> enable us to "stand on the shoulders of giants" and see further.</h3>
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</div>  
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<div class="col-md-3 round-images">[[File:Beck.jpeg]] <br><small><center>[[Ulrich Beck]]</center></small></div></div>
 
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  <div class="col-md-3"><h2>These stories are vignettes</h2></div>
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<div class="col-md-3"></div>  
  <div class="col-md-7"><h3>New thinking made easy</h3>
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<div class="col-md-7"><h2>Paradigm</h2>
<p>The technique we'll use – the [[vignettes|<em>vignettes</em>]] – is in essence what the journalists use to make ideas accessible. They tell them through people stories! </p>  
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<p>I use the keyword <em><b>paradigm</b></em> informally, to point to a societal and cultural order of things as a whole; and to explain the strategy for solving "the huge problems now confronting us" and continuing cultural evolution I am proposing to implement—which is to <em>enable</em> the <em><b>paradigm</b></em> to change; from the one we presently live in, which I'll characterize as <em><b>materialism</b></em>—all the way to <em><b>holotopia</b></em>.</p>
<p>We hope these stories will allow you to "step into the shoes" of [[giants|<em>giants</em>]], "see through their eyes", be moved by their visions.</p>  
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<p>[[File:Elephant.jpg]]<br><small><center>The purpose of <em><b>knowledge federation</b></em> is to (enable us to) <em><b>connect the dots</b></em>.</center></small></p>
<p>By combining the [[vignettes|<em>vignettes</em>]] into [[threads|<em>threads</em>]], we begin to put the [[invisible elephant|<em>elephant</em>]] together. The [[threads|<em>threads</em>]] add a dramatic effect; they make the insights of [[giants|<em>giants</em>]] enhance one another.</p>
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<p>I use the keyword <em><b>elephant</b></em> as a nickname for <em><b>holotopia</b></em> when I want to be even more informal—and highlight that it's a <em>coherent</em> order of things where everything depends on everything else, as the organs of an <em><b>elephant</b></em> do.</p>
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<p>I also use <em><b>elephant</b></em> as metaphor and <em><b>keyword</b></em> to motivate the strategy I have just mentioned by pointing to a paradox: <em><b>Paradigms</b></em> resist change; you just <em>can't</em> fit an elephant's ear onto a mouse! And yet <em>comprehensive</em> change, of a <em><b>paradigm</b></em> as a whole, can be natural and effortless—when the conditions for it are ripe.</p>
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<h3>We live in such a time.</h3>
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<p>When all the data points that are needed for constituting an entirely different <em><b>paradigm</b></em> are already there; so that all that remains is—to <em><b>connect the dots</b></em>; or more accurately—to restore our collective <em><b>capability</b></em> to <em><b>connect the dots</b></em>.</p>
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<h3>Which is what <em><b>knowledge federation</b></em> proposal is all about.</h3>
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<p>The <em><b>elephant</b></em> was in the room when the 20th century’s <em><b>giants</b></em> wrote or spoke; but we failed to see him because of the jungleness of our <em><b>information</b></em>; and because of disciplinary and cultural fragmentation; and because our thinking and communication are still as the traditions shaped them. We heard the <em><b>giants</b></em> talk about a ‘thick snake’, a ‘fan’, a ‘tree-trunk’ and a ‘rope’, often in Greek or Latin; they didn’t make sense and we ignored them. How differently our information fares when we understand that it was the ‘trunk’, the ‘ear’, the ‘leg’ and the ‘tail’ of a vast exotic ‘animal’ they were talking about; whose very <em>existence</em> we ignore! </p>
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<p><em><b>Transdisciplinarity</b></em>, as <em><b>prototyped</b></em> by <em><b>knowledge federation</b></em> is also a <em><b>paradigm</b></em>—in <em><b>information</b></em>; which will empower us to <em><b>connect the dots</b></em> and manifest the <em>comprehensive</em> <em><b>paradigm</b></em>. You may now comprehend this call to action (to institute <em><b>transdisciplinarity</b></em> or <em><b>knowledge federation</b></em> academically) as a call to mobilize the power that our society has invested in science and in the university institution at large—to <em><b>design</b></em> the process and <em>be</em> the process by which the society's 'candle headlights' will be turned into the real thing. This process must be <em><b>designed</b></em> because no matter how hard we try—we'll <em>never</em> create the lightbulb by incrementally improving the candle. To substitute 'the lightbulb' for 'the candle' we must <em><b>design</b></em> a suitable <em>process</em>; which (a moment of thought might be necessary to see why) will have to include a <em><b>prototype</b></em>.</p>
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<h3><em>Knowledge federation</em> is both the process and the <em>prototype</em>.</h3>  
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<p>Science enabled the existing <em><b>paradigm</b></em> to come about; <em><b>transdisciplinarity</b></em> must be in place to enable us to transition to the next one.</p>
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<p>I use the keyword <em><b>paradigm</b></em> also more formally, as Thomas Kuhn did—to point to
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<ul>
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<li>a different way to conceive a domain of interest, which</li>
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<li>resolves the reported anomalies and</li>
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<li>opens a new frontier to research and development.</li>
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</ul></p>
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<p>Only here the domain of interest is not a conventional academic field, where <em><b>paradigm</b></em> changes have been relatively common—but <em><b>information</b></em> and <em><b>knowledge</b></em> and cultural evolution at large.</p>
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<p>In what follows I will structure my case for <em><b>transdisciplinarity</b></em> alias <em><b>knowledge federation</b></em> as a <em><b>paradigm</b></em> proposal—i.e. as a reconception of <em><b>information</b></em> and other categories on which our evolutionary <em><b>course</b></em> depends; and show how this reconception enables us to resolve the anomalies that thwart our efforts to comprehend and handle <em>the</em> core or <em><b>pivotal</b></em> themes of our lives and times; and how those anomalies are resolved by the proposed approach; and how this reconception opens up a creative frontier closely similar to the one that began to blossom after Galilei's and Descartes' time—where the next-generation <em><b>scientists</b></em> will be empowered to be creative in ways and degrees as the founders of Scientific Revolution were creative; and as the condition of their world will necessitate.</p>  
 
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<div class="col-md-3"><h2>Right way to knowledge</h2></div>
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<div class="col-md-3"><h2>   </h2>
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<font size="+1">– Some years ago I was struck by the large number of falsehoods that I had accepted as true in my childhood, and by the highly doubtful nature of the whole edifice that I had subsequently based on them. I realized that it was necessary, once in the course of my life, to demolish everything completely and start again right from the foundations if I wanted to establish anything at all in the sciences that was stable and likely to last.</font>
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<br>
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(René Descartes,  <em> Meditations on First Philosophy</em>, 1641)
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</div>
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<div class="col-md-6"><h2>Logos</h2>
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<p>The <em>Liberation</em> book opens with the iconic image of Galilei in house arrest—at the point in humanity's evolution when a sweeping <em><b>paradigm</b></em> shift was about to take place; the book then draws a parallel between that moment in history and the time <em>we</em> live in. So let me right away turn "mind" into a <em><b>keyword</b></em>; and use it to point out that <em>liberating</em> the way we use the <em><b>mind</b></em> and allowing it to change is—and has always been—<em>the</em> way to enable the <em><b>paradigm</b></em> to change; or the way to <em><b>change course</b></em>. I give the keyword <em><b>mind</b></em> a more general meaning meaning than this word usually has; closer to its French cognate "<em>esprit</em>", as Descartes used it in the title of his unfinished work <em>Règles pour la direction de l'esprit</em> (Rules for the Direction of the Mind). Indeed (as I pointed out in <em>Liberation</em> book's ninth chapter, which has "Liberation of Science" as title)—the course of action I am proposing can be seen as the "it's about time" continuation of Descartes' all-important project.</p>
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<p><em><b>Transdisciplinarity</b></em>, as <em><b>prototyped</b></em> by <em><b>knowledge federation</b></em>, is envisioned as a <em>liberated</em> academic space where the next-generation <em><b>scientists</b></em> will be empowered to be creative in ways as Galilei and Descartes were creative—and "start again right from the foundations"; and <em>design</em> the way(s) they do <em><b>science</b></em> (instead of blindly inheriting them from <em><b>tradition</b></em>).</p>
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<p>I also coin <em><b>logos</b></em> as <em><b>keyword</b></em>; and erect is as banner demarcating this frontier, and inviting to the <em>next</em> scientific revolution; where we'll <em>again</em> liberate the <em><b>mind</b></em> (from compliance to "logic" as fixed and eternal "right" way to think; and from the suffix "logy" which we use to name scientific disciplines—and suggest that they <em>embody</em> <em><b>logos</b></em>; and compel us to <em>comply</em> to the hereditary procedures they embody). <em><b>Logos</b></em> as 'banner' invites (next-generation) <em><b>scientists</b></em> to revive an age-old quest—for the <em><b>correct</b></em> way to use the <em><b>mind</b></em>; by pointing to its <em>historicity</em> (i.e. that it <em>did</em> change in the past and <em>will</em> change again).</p>
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<p>"In the beginning was logos and logos was with God and logos was God." To Hellenic thinkers logos was the principle according to which God organized the world; which makes it possible to us humans to <em>comprehend</em> the world correctly—provided we align with it the way we use our minds. How exactly we may achieve that—there the opinions differed; and gave rise to a multitude of philosophical schools and traditions.</p>
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<p>But "logos" faired poorly in the post-Hellenic world; neither Latin nor the modern languages offered a suitable translation. For about a millennium our European ancestors believed that <em><b>logos</b></em> had been <em>revealed</em> to us humans by God's own son; and considered questioning that to be the deadly sin of pride, and a heresy.</p>
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<p>The scientific revolution unfolded as a reaction to earlier theological or "teleological" explanations of natural phenomena; as Noam Chomsky pointed out in his University of Oslo talk "The machine, the ghost, and the limits of understanding", its founders insisted that a "scientific" explanation <em>must not</em> rely on a 'ghost' acting within 'the machine'; that the natural phenomena must be explained in ways that are <em>completely</em> comprehensible to the mind—as one would explain the functioning of a clockwork. </p>
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<p>Initially, science and church or tradition coexisted side by side—the latter providing the <em><b>know-what</b></em> and the former the know-how; but then right around mid-19th century, when Darwin stepped on the scene, the way to use the <em><b>mind</b></em> that science brought along <em>discredited</em> the mindset of tradition; and it appeared to educated masses that <em>science</em> was the answer; that science was <em>the</em> right way to knowledge.</p>
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<p>So here is my <em><b>point</b></em>—what I wanted to tell you by reviving this old word, and restoring it to function: The way we use the <em><b>mind</b></em> today—on which <em><b>materialism</b></em> grew—has not been chosen on <em>pragmatic</em> grounds; indeed it has not been chosen <em>at all</em>—but simply adopted or adapted from what people saw as "scientific" way to think; in the 19th century, when the educated masses abandoned the <em><b>belief</b></em> that <em><b>logos</b></em> was revealed and recorded once and for all in the Bible. And it was by this same sequence of historical accidents that science (which had been developed for an <em>entirely</em> different purpose—to unravel the mechanisms of nature) ended up in the the much larger role of "Grand Revelatory of modern Western culture" as Benjamin Lee Whorf branded it in <em>Language, truth and reality</em>.</p>
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<h3><em>That</em>'s how we ended up with 'candles' as 'headlights'.</h3>
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</div>
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<div class="col-md-3 round-images"><h2>  </h2>
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[[File:Descartes.jpg]] <br><small><center>[[René Descartes]]</center></small></div></div>
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<div class="col-md-3"><h2>  </h2>
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<font size="+1">– The Matrix is the world that has been pulled over your eyes to blind you from the truth.</font>
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<br>
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(Morpheus to Neo, <em>The Matrix</em>.)
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</div>
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<div class="col-md-7"><h2>Materialism</h2>
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<p>Before we turn to <em><b>holotopia</b></em>, let's take a moment and theorize our present <em><b>paradigm</b></em>. What I'm calling <em><b>materialism</b></em> is not an actual but a theoretical or "ideal" order of things—which follows as consequence of the cultural–<em><b>fundamental</b></em> coup I've just described; where the <em><b>traditional</b></em> ideas and ideals (which, while far from perfect, used to provide people <em><b>know-what</b></em>) have been abandoned, and a proper replacement has not yet been found or even sought for. Here's the gist of it, in a nutshell, and I'll put it crudely: I acquire some material thing and this gives me a pleasurable feeling; and I interpret what happened in causal terms—and see the acquisition as <em>cause</em> and the gratifying feeling as its <em>consequence</em>; and I conceive my "pursuit of happiness" accordingly.</p>
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<p>See <em><b>materialism</b></em>'s way to use the <em><b>mind</b></em> as a travesty of science; and <em><b>materialism</b></em> itself as the cultural and social order of things that follows from its consistent application—where (a certain causal clockwork-like comprehension of) "the material world" is used as a measure of all things; where the direct experience of the material world, what <em>feels</em> attractive or unattractive, is presumed to be an experimental fact of sorts and promoted to the status of "interests" or "needs"; and allowed to determine or to <em>be</em> our <em><b>know-what</b></em>—so that all that remains is technical know-how; the knowledge of <em>how to</em> acquire what we want or need; by competing Darwin-style within <em><b>systems</b></em> conceived as a "fair" or "zero-sum" games.</p>
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<h3>In <em>materialism</em>, (direct experience of, and mechanistic-comprehension of) "material reality" serves as reference system.</h3> 
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<p>Anthony Giddens wrote in <em>Modernity and Self-Identity</em>) in 1991: “The threat of personal meaninglessness is ordinarily held at bay because routinised activities, in combination with basic trust, sustain ontological security. Potentially disturbing existential questions are defused by the controlled nature of day-to-day activities within internally referential systems. Mastery, in other words, substitutes for morality; to be able to control one’s life circumstances, colonise the future with some degree of success and live within the parameters of internally referential systems can, in many circumstances, allow the social and natural framework of things to seem a secure grounding for life activities.”</p>
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<h3>In <em>materialism</em> "success" (what works in practice) is used for orientation.</h3>
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<p>"Mind could be introduced into the general picture only as a kind of mirror of the material world", Werner Heisenberg wrote in <em>Physics ad Philosophy</em>. Not having any guiding ideas or principles, in <em><b>materialism</b></em> people use direct experience or <em><b>convenience</b></em> to make choices; they simply this complex and <em><b>pivotal</b></em> matter by <em><b>reifying</b></em> the way they experience the material world; they <em><b>reify</b></em> their wants as their "needs". The rest is then just the matter of know-how—of how to acquire the material things one "needs".</p>
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<h3>"Convenience"—reaching out toward what <em>feels</em> attractive—is <em>materialism</em>'s "core value".</h3>
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<p>Which follows from its characteristic way to use the mind (whereby only "the things or events that we could perceive by our senses or that could be observed by means of the refined tools that technical science had provided" are considered as possible or relevant or "real", as Heisenberg pointed out)–and considers those things and <em>only</em> those things that appear attractive to our senses as real and worth pursuing (technical science here won't be of much help); and in this way decides or circumvents the larger issue of <em><b>know-what</b></em>, so that know-how (how to <em>acquire</em> the things we "need") is all that remains.</p> 
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<p>"Doxa" is the keyword that Pierre Bourdieu used (he adopted it from Max Weber, but its usage dates as far back as Aristotle) to point to corresponding phenomenology: The more familiar word "orthodoxy" means believing that one's own worldview or <em><b>paradigm</b></em> is the only "right" one; doxa ignores even the <em>existence</em> of alternatives; it means <em><b>believing</b></em> that the existing social reality is in a similar way immutable and real as the physical world is. You may comprehend <em><b>doxa</b></em> as an addiction—which results when the <em><b>mind</b></em>'s adaptive function (which evolved to help us adapt and function in the natural world) is applied so that the <em>social</em> world is experienced as "the reality" to which we must adapt. In <em>Liberation</em> book's Chapter Nine I point out how Socrates demonstrated that we humans tend to be victims of <em><b>doxa</b></em> and have <em><b>belief</b></em> instead of <em><b>knowledge</b></em>; and how Plato instituted the Academia to help his fellow humans evolve <em><b>knowledge-based</b></em>, by creating general insights and principles.</p>
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<h3>Once again the (evolution of) academic tradition, and the human <em>mind</em>, must be  liberated.</h3>
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<p>Just as the case was in Galilei's time.</p>
 +
<p>From the movie <em>The Matrix</em> I'll adopt <em><b>the world</b></em> as keyword—and use it to point to this so enticing yet sinister addiction that <em><b>materialism</b></em> thrives on—the addiction to "reality"; to "success"; which compels us to reproduce the dysfunctional habits and <em><b>systems</b></em> all the way until the bitter end; and to point to <em>the</em> urgent duty we have as generation.</p>
 +
<h3><em>Transdisciplinarity</em> and <em>holotopia</em> are conceived as steps toward liberating our next generation from <em>the world</em>.</h3> 
 +
</div> </div>  
  
<div class="col-md-6"><h3>Modern physics gave us a gift</h3>
+
<div class="row">
<p>
+
<div class="col-md-3"><h2>   </h2>
<blockquote>
+
<font size="+1">– [T]he nineteenth century developed an extremely rigid frame for natural science which formed not only science but also the general outlook of great masses of people.</font>
(T)he nineteenth century developed an
+
<br>
extremely rigid frame for natural science which formed not
+
(Werner Heisenberg, <em>Physics and Philosophy</em>, 1958.)
only science but also the general outlook of great masses of
+
</div>
people.
+
<div class="col-md-6"><h2>Design epistemology</h2>
</blockquote></p>
+
<p>You'll comprehend the <em><b>category</b></em> from which this <em><b>foundational</b></em> of <em><b>holotopia</b></em>'s <em><b>five points</b></em> stems if you think of the subtle ambiguity in the word "foundation", as it's been used in this context: What Descartes was searching for, when he used that word, was the Archimedean point for acquiring "objectively true" knowledge—of "reality" as it "truly is"; which (he took this for granted) would be revealed to the mind as the <em>sensation</em> of absolute certainty; and which, when found (he and his colleagues also <em><b>believed</b></em>) would remain the lasting truth forever.</p>
<p>Werner Heisenberg got his Nobel Prize in 1932, "for the creation of quantum mechanics" he did while still in his twenties. </p>
+
<p>What I call <em><b>foundation</b></em> is what <em><b>information</b></em> is founded on; and <em><b>culture</b></em> as a whole; which—just as <em><b>information</b></em>—needs to be <em><b>seen as</b></em> a human-made thing for human purposes; so that when the <em><b>foundation</b></em> changes (as it did in Darwin's time)—we need to deliberately secure that the new <em><b>foundation</b></em> is still suitable for <em>the</em> all-important function it needs to perform.</p>  
<p>In 1958, this [[giants|<em>giant</em>]] of science looked back at the experience of his field, and wrote "Physics and Philosophy" (subtitled "the revolution in modern science"), from which the above lines have been quoted. </p>
+
<p>I'll use <em><b>ontological</b></em> and <em><b>pragmatic</b></em> as <em><b>keywords</b></em> to pinpoint the nature of the fundamental error I've been telling you about, and how I propose to correct it; and say that a <em><b>foundation</b></em> is <em><b>ontological</b></em> if it rests upon the intrinsic nature of things or "reality"; that a certain way to (found) knowledge is the right one because it gives us "objective" knowledge, of the world as it truly is. My point is that we (the institution in control of this matter, the <em><b>academia</b></em>) must urgently develop a significant part of our activity on a <em><b>pragmatic foundation</b></em>—because science as it is <em>does not</em> tell us how to solve "the huge problems now confronting us".</p>
<p>In the manuscript Heisenberg explained how science rose to prominence owing to successes in deciphering the secrets of nature. And how, as a side effect, its way of exploring the world became dominant also in our culture at large; in spite of the fact that frame of concepts was
+
<h3>And because the <em>foundation</em> we have is not a one on which the cultural evolution can continue.</h3> 
<blockquote>
+
<p>When Nietzsche diagnosed, famously, that "<em>Got ist tot</em>!" (God is dead), he did not of course mean that God <em>physically</em> died; but that <em>religion</em> no longer had a <em><b>foundation</b></em> to stand on, that it was about to be eroded; which was needless to say true not only of religion—but of <em><b>culture</b></em> at large.</p>
so narrow and rigid that it was difficult to find a place in it for many concepts of our
+
<p>In the late 1990s, when this line of work was still beginning to take shape, I drafted a book manuscript titled <em>What's Going on?</em> and subtitled "A Cultural Renewal". The book was conceived as an <em><b>information holon</b></em>; whose <em><b>point</b></em> (pointed to by its title and an <em><b>ideogram</b></em> on its cover—which was a house about to collapse, with a large crack extending from its foundation to its top) was what I'm telling you here—namely that "the huge problems now confronting us" are consequences of the <em><b>foundation</b></em> of it all being inadequate for holding the huge edifice it now supports; and that the way to solution is not fixing but rebuilding; and that this rebuilding <em>must</em> begin from the <em><b>foundation</b></em> up. And it had, of course, also this other <em><b>point</b></em>—that what's <em>really</em> going on (i.e. what we above all need to <em><b>know</b></em> to consider ourselves <em><b>informed</b></em>) is this overall <em><b>gestalt</b></em>; not the fine details of 'cracks in walls' that our media informing brings us daily.</p>
language that had always belonged to its very substance, for
+
<p>As I said—the 19th century change of <em><b>foundation</b></em> was not done for <em><b>pragmatic</b></em> reasons, but for <em><b>ontological</b></em> ones.</p>
instance, the concepts of mind, of the human soul or of life.
+
<h3>People began to <em><b>believe</b></em> that <em>science</em> (not the Bible) was the right way to truth.</h3> 
</blockquote></p></div>
+
<p>You'll fully comprehend the <em><b>anomaly</b></em> that I am proposing to unravel (and here <em><b>design epistemology</b></em> is a concrete proposal pointing out that this <em>can</em> be done, and showing how)—when you see that the <em><b>ontological</b></em> argument for the present <em><b>foundation</b></em> has been <em>proven</em> wrong and disowned—<em>by science itself</em>!</p>
<div class="col-md-3"> [[File:Heisenberg.jpg]] <br><small><center>[[Werner Heisenberg]]</center></small></div>
+
<p>When scientists became able to zoom in on small quanta of energy-matter—they found them behaving in ways that could <em>not</em> be explained in the "classical" way (as Descartes and his Enlightenment colleagues demanded); and that they even contradicted the <em>common sense</em> (as J. Robert Oppenheimer pointed out in <em>Uncommon Sense</em>)! Just as the case was at the time of Copernicus—a <em>different</em> way to see the world, and use the <em><b>mind</b></em>, was necessary to enable the <em>physical</em> science to continue evolving.</p>
 +
<p>A careful reading of Werner Heisenberg's <em>Physics and Philosophy</em> will show that this book is conceived as a rigorous <em>disproof</em> of <em><b>materialism</b></em>'s fundamental premises; and a call to action—to reconfigure and replace and revive <em><b>culture</b></em>, on a <em>new</em> <em><b>foundation</b></em>. His point was that—based on certain fundamental assumptions—science created a certain way to knowledge and experimental machinery; and when this machinery was applied to small quanta of matter-energy—the results contradicted the fundamental assumptions that served as departure point; so the whole thing has the logical structure of a proof by contradiction—which, in the present <em><b>paradigm</b></em> is a legitimate way of proving assumptions wrong.</p>
 +
<p>Seeing that what they had uncovered had profound implications for our "edifice of knowledge" and culture at large—the <em><b>giants</b></em> of physics wrote popular books and essays to clarify or <em><b>federate</b></em> it. In <em>Physics and Philosophy</em>, in 1958, Werner Heisenberg pointed out that the <em><b>foundation</b></em> that our general culture imbibed from 19th century science was "so narrow and rigid that it was difficult to find a place in it for many concepts of our language that had always belonged to its very substance, for instance, the concepts of mind, of the human soul or of life." Since "the concept of reality applied to the things or events that we could perceive by our senses or that could be observed by means of the refined tools that technical science had provided", whatever failed to be <em><b>founded</b></em> in this way was considered impossible or unreal. This in particular applied to those parts of our culture in which our ethical sensibilities were rooted, such as religion, which "seemed now more or less only imaginary. [...] The confidence in the scientific method and in rational thinking replaced all other safeguards of the human mind."</p>
 +
<p>The experience of modern physics constituted a rigorous <em>disproof</em> of this approach to knowledge, Heisenberg explained; and concluded that "one may say that the most important change brought about by its results consists in the dissolution of this rigid frame of concepts of the nineteenth century." Heisenberg wrote <em>Physics and Philosophy</em> anticipating that <em>the</em> most valuable gift of modern physics to humanity would be a <em>cultural</em> transformation; which would result from the <em>dissolution</em> of the <em><b>narrow frame</b></em>.</p>
 +
<h3>So what is to be done?</h3>
 +
<p>You already know my answer—it's what the Modernity ideogram points to; namely to fist identify the function or <em>functions</em> that need to be served; and then create a <em><b>prototype</b></em> by <em><b>federating</b></em> whatever points of reference or evidence may be relevant to that function; just as one would do to create the lightbulb.</p>
 +
<p>What I call <em><b>epistemology</b></em> is the result of applying this procedure (where we first <em><b>federate</b></em> the way we use the <em><b>mind</b></em> or <em><b>logos</b></em>; and then use it to <em><b>federate</b></em> a new <em><b>foundation</b></em> for it all.</p>
 +
<p>As an insight, <em><b>design eistemology</b></em> shows that a <em><b>broad</b></em> and <em><b>solid</b></em> <em><b>foundation</b></em> for truth and meaning, and for <em><b>knowledge</b></em> and <em><b>culture</b></em>, can be developed by this approach.</p>
 +
<p>The <em><b>design epistemology</b></em> originated by <em><b>federating</b></em> the state-of-the-art <em><b>epistemological</b></em> findings of the <em><b>giants</b></em> of 20th century science and philosophy; which I'll here illustrate by quoting a single one—Einstein's "epistemological credo"; which he left us in <em>Autobiographical Notes</em>:</p> 
 +
<p>“I see on the one side the totality of sense experiences and, on the other, the totality of the concepts and propositions that are laid down in books. <nowiki>[…]</nowiki> The system of concepts is a creation of man, together with the rules of syntax, which constitute the structure of the conceptual system. <nowiki>[…]</nowiki> All concepts, even those closest to experience, are from the point of view of logic freely chosen posits, just as is the concept of causality, which was the point of departure for [scientific] inquiry in the first place.”</p>
 +
<h3><em>Design epistemology</em> turns Einstein's "epistemological credo" into a <em>convention</em>.</h3>
 +
<p>And adds to it a purpose or function—the one we've been talking about all along.</p>
 +
<h3><em>Design epistemology</em> as <em>foundation</em> is <em>broad</em>.</h3>
 +
<p>Since it expresses the <em><b>phenomenological</b></em> position (that it is human experience and not "objective reality" that <em><b>information</b></em> needs to reflect and communicate), the <em><b>design epistemology</b></em> gives us a <em><b>foundation</b></em> not only overcomes the <em><b>narrow frame</b></em> handicap that Heisenberg was objecting to—but also allows us to treat <em>all</em> cultural heritage, including cultural artifacts and even the rituals, mores and beliefs of traditions on an equal footing; by <em><b>seeing</b></em> it all <em><b>as</b></em> just records of human experience, in a variety of media; and finding similarities and patterns, and reaching <em><b>insights</b></em> or <em><b>points</b></em>. Instead of simply ignoring what fails to fit our "scientific" worldview or the <em><b>narrow frame</b></em>—the <em><b>design epistemology</b></em> empowers us and even <em>obliges</em> us to carefully consider and <em><b>federate</b></em> <em>all forms of</em> human experience that could be relevant to a theme or task at hand.</p>
 +
<p>By <em><b>convention</b></em>, human experience has no a priori "right" interpretation or structure, which we can or need to "discover"; rather, experience is considered as something to which we <em>assign</em> meaning (as one would assign the meaning to an inkblot in Rorschach test). Multiple interpretations or insights or <em><b>gestalts</b></em> are possible.</p>
 +
<h3><em>Design epistemology</em> as <em>foundation</em> is also <em>solid</em>.</h3>
 +
<p>Since it expresses (as a <em><b>convention</b></em>) the "constructivist credo"—that we are not "discovering objective reality" but <em>constructing</em> interpretations and explanations of human experience—the <em><b>design epistemology</b></em> turns the <em><b>epistemological</b></em> position that  the Modernity ideogram expresses into a <em><b>convention</b></em>; it empowers us to do as Modernity ideogram calls upon us to do—and <em>design</em> the ways in which we see the world, and pursue <em><b>knowledge</b></em>. The resulting <em><b>foundation</b></em> is <em><b>solid</b></em> or "academically rigorous"—because it represents the epistemological state of the art; <em>and</em> because it's a <em><b>convention</b></em>. The added purpose can hardly be debated—because (from a <em>pragmatic</em> point of view) <em><b>evolutionary guidance</b></em> has become all-important; and because (from a <em>theoretical</em> point of view) a <em><b>foundation</b></em> of this kind is incomplete unless it has a purpose (which we can use to distinguish useful "constructions" from all those useless ones). This added function <em>too</em> is only a <em><b>convention</b></em>; a <em>different</em> one, and an altogether different way to knowledge can be created by the same approach to suit a <em>different</em> function.</p>
 +
<p>Appeals to legitimate <em><b>transdisciplinarity</b></em> academically—if they were at all considered—have been routinely rejected on the account that they lacked "academic rigor". I'm afraid it will turn out that the contemporary academic conception of "rigor" is based on not much more than the <em>sensation</em> of certainty and clarity we experience when we've followed a certain prescribed procedure to the letter—as Stephen Toulmin suggested in his last book <em>Return to Reason</em>. It was <em><b>logos</b></em> Toulmin was urging us to return to; and that's been my proposal and call to action too.</p>
 +
</div>
 +
<div class="col-md-3 round-images"><h2>  </h2>
 +
[[File:Heisenberg.jpg]] <br><small><center>[[Werner Heisenberg]]</center></small></div>
 
</div>
 
</div>
 
<div class="row">
 
<div class="row">
<div class="col-md-3"></div>
+
<div class="col-md-3"><h2>  </h2>
<div class="col-md-7">
+
<font size="+1">– I suppose it is tempting, if the only tool you have is a hammer, to treat everything as if it were a nail.</font>
<p>Since
+
<br>
<blockquote>
+
(Abraham Maslow,  <em>Psychology of Science</em>, 1966)
the concept of reality applied to the things or events that we could perceive by our senses or that could be observed by means of the refined tools that technical science had
+
</div>
provided,
+
<div class="col-md-6"><h2>Polyscopic methodology</h2>
</blockquote>
+
<p>You'll comprehend the <em><b>anomaly</b></em> this <em><b>holotopia</b></em>'s <em><b>insight</b></em> points to, if you <em><b>see</b></em> method—the category the <em><b>polyscopic methodology</b></em> pillar in the Holotopia ideogram stems from—<em><b>as</b></em> the toolkit with which we construct truth and meaning, and <em><b>knowledge</b></em>; and consider that—as Maslow pointed out—this method is now so specialized, that it compels <em>us</em> to be specialized; and choose themes and set priorities (not based on whether they are practically <em>relevant</em> or not, but) according to what this <em>tool</em> enables us to do.</p>
whatever failed to fit in was considered unreal. This in particular applied to those parts of our culture in which our ethical sensibilities were rooted, such as religion, which
+
<p>As an <em>insight</em>, the <em><b>polyscopic methodology</b></em> points out that a general-purpose <em><b>methodology</b></em>, which alleviates this problem, can be created by the proposed approach  (by applying <em><b>logos</b></em> or <em><b>knowledge federation</b></em> to method); by <em><b>federating</b></em> the findings of <em><b>giants</b></em> of science and the very <em>techniques</em> that have been developed in the sciences—with an aim to preserve the advantages of science, and alleviate its limitations.</p>
<blockquote>
+
<p><em><b>Design epistemology</b></em> mandates such a step: When we on the one hand acknowledge that (as far as we <em><b>know</b></em>) <em> there is no</em> conclusive truth about reality; and on the other hand, that our very <em>existence</em> depends on <em><b>information</b></em> and <em><b>knowledge</b></em>—we are bound to be <em>accountable</em> for providing <em><b>knowledge</b></em> about the most relevant themes (notably the ones that determine our society's evolutionary <em><b>course</b></em>) <em>as well as we are able</em>; and to of course <em>continue to improve</em> both our <em><b>knowledge</b></em> and our <em>ways</em> to <em><b>knowledge</b></em>.</p>
seemed now more or less only imaginary. (...) The confidence in the scientific method and in rational thinking replaced all other safeguards of the human mind.
+
<p>As long as "reality" and its "objective" descriptions constitute our reference system and provide it a <em><b>foundation</b></em>—we have no way of evaluating our <em><b>paradigm</b></em> critically. The <em><b>polyscopic methodology</b></em> empowers us to develop the <em><b>realm of ideas</b></em> as an <em>independent</em> reference system; where ideas are founded (not on "correspondence with reality" but) on <em><b>truth by convention</b></em>; and then use clearly and academically defined ideas to develop clear and academically well-founded <em>theories</em>—in all walks of life; as it has been common in natural sciences. Suitable theoretical constructs, notably the <em><b>patterns</b></em> (defined as "abstract relationships", which have in this generalized <em><b>science</b></em> a similar role as mathematical functions do in traditional sciences) enable us to formulate general results and theories, <em>including</em> the <em><b>gestalts</b></em>; suitable <em><b>justification</b></em> methods (I prefer the word "justification" to the commonly used word "proof", for obvious reasons) can then be developed as <em>social processes</em>; as an up-to-date alternative to "peer reviews" (which have, needless to say, originated in a world where "scientific truth" was believed to be "objective" and ever-lasting). </p>
</blockquote></p>
+
<p>The details of <em><b>polyscopic methodology</b></em> or <em><b>polyscopy</b></em> are beyond this brief sketch; and I'll only give you this hint: Once it's been formulated and theorized in <em><b>the realm of ideas</b></em>, a <em><b>pattern</b></em> can be used to <em><b>justify</b></em> a result; since (by <em><b>convention</b></em>) the substance of it all is human experience, and since (by <em><b>convention</b></em>) experience does not have an a priori "real" structure that can or needs to be "discovered"—a result can be configured as the claim that the <em><b>dots</b></em> <em>can</em> be <em><b>connected</b></em> in a certain specific way (as shown by the <em><b>pattern</b></em>) and <em>make sense</em>; and its <em><b>justification</b></em> can be conceived in a manner that resembles the "repeatable experiment"—which is "repeatable" to the extent that different people can <em>see</em> the <em><b>pattern</b></em> in the data. This social social process can then further be refined to embody also other desirable characteristics, such as "falsifiability"; I'll come back to this in a moment, and also show an example.</p>  
<p>Heisenberg then explained how the experience of modern physics constituted a rigorous <em>disproof</em> of this approach to knowledge; and concluded that
+
</div>
<blockquote>
+
<div class="col-md-3 round-images"><h2>  </h2>
one may say that the most important change brought about by its results consists in the dissolution of this rigid frame of concepts of the nineteenth century.
+
[[File:Maslow.jpg]]<br><small><center>[[Abraham Maslow]]</center></small></div>
</blockquote>
+
</div>  
<em>The most important</em> change?!</p>
 
 
 
<h3>What exactly happened</h3>
 
<p>The key to understanding  this "dissolution of the narrow frame" is the so-called double-slit experiment. You'll easily find an explanations online, so we'll here only draw a quick sketch and come to conclusion. </p>
 
<p>A source of electrons is shooting electrons toward a screen - which, like an old-fashioned TV screen, remains illuminated at the places where an electron has landed. Between the source and the screen is a plate pierced by two parallel slits, so that the only way an electron can reach the screen is to pass through one of those slits.</p>
 
<p><em>One</em> of the slits?</p>  
 
<p>What really happens is this: When the movement of the electron is observed, it behaves as a particle – it passes through one of the slits and lands on the corresponding spot on the screen.</p>
 
<p>When, however, this observation is <em>not</em> made, electrons behave as waves – they pass through <em>both</em> slits and create an interference pattern on the screen.</p>
 
<p>The question naturally arises – are electrons waves, or particles?</p>  
 
<p>The answer is, of course, that they are neither. </p>  
 
 
 
<h3>What this tells us about our "frames"</h3>
 
<p>Electrons thus defy both our words, and our reason.</p>
 
<p>This compelled the scientists to conclude that "wave" and "particle" are concepts, and corresponding behavioral patterns, which we have acquired through experience with common physical objects, such as water and pebbles. And that the electrons are simply something else – that they <em>behave unlike anything we have in experience</em>.</p>
 
<p>In the book Heisenberg talks about the physicists unable to describe the behavior of small quanta of matter in conventional language. The language of mathematics still works – but the common language doesn't!</p>
 
 
 
<h3>What this tell us about reality</h3>
 
<p>In "Uncommon Sense" Robert Oppenheimer – Heisenberg's famous colleague and the leader of the WW2 Manhattan project – tells about the double-slit experiment to conclude that <em>even our common sense</em>, however solidly objective it might appear to us, is really derived from our experience with common objects. And that it may no longer work – and <em>doesn't</em> work –  when we apply it to things we <em>don't</em> have in experience.</p>
 
<p>Science rose from a tradition, whose roots are in antiquity, and whose goal was to understand and explain the reality as it truly is, through right reasoning.</p>  
 
<p>Science brought us to the conclusion that <em>there is no right reasoning</em> that can lead us to that goal.</p>  
 
</div></div>
 
 
<div class="row">
 
<div class="row">
  <div class="col-md-3"></div>
+
<div class="col-md-3"><h2>  </h2>
  <div class="col-md-6"><h3>What this tells us about science</h3>  
+
<font size="+1">– The future will either be an inspired product of a great cultural revival, or there will be no future.</font>
<p>Heisenberg was, of course, not at all the only [[giants|<em>giant</em>]] who reached that conclusion. A whole <em>generation</em> of [[giants|<em>giants</em>]], in a variety of field, found evidence against the reality-based approach to knowledge.</p>
+
<br>
<p>We'll here let one of them, Benjamin Lee Whorf, summarize the conclusion.</p>  
+
(Aurelio Peccei,  <em>One Hundred Pages for the Future</em>, 1981)
<p><blockquote>It needs but half an eye to see in these latter days that science, the Grand Revelator of modern Western culture, has reached, without having intended to, a frontier. Either it must bury its dead, close its ranks, and go forward into a landscape of increasing strangeness, replete with things shocking to a culture-trammelled understanding, or it must become, in Claude Houghton’s expressive phrase, the plagiarist of its own past."
+
</div>
</blockquote>
+
<div class="col-md-6"><h2>Convenience paradox</h2>
It may be interesting to observe that this was written already in the 1940s – and published a decade later as part of a book.</p></div>
+
<p>How do you raise a child in a culture whose values are in significant dimensions opposite from yours?</p>  
  <div class="col-md-3"> [[File:Whorf.jpg]] <br><small><center>[[Benjamin Lee Whorf]]</center></small></div>
+
<p>Noah and I have been having a series of <em><b>dialogs</b></em> whose shared theme or red thread is <em><b>epistemology</b></em> (when he was a baby, I joked that "epistemology" would be the first word he'd learn). It's late December in Oslo now, Christmas is in the air; so the other day I played to Noah versions of the "Oh Happy Day" gospel by several gospel choirs on YouTube; where "Oh happy day, when Jesus washed (...) my sins away" is emphatically and enthusiastically repeated. I asked Noah to imagine what a <em><b>materialist</b></em> might think about this message: "Jesus died centuries ago; these poor souls don't understand that he most certainly cannot <em>do</em> anything for them..." And yet when you look at the faces of the gospel singers, and listen to the <em>way</em> they sing—you cannot but conclude that the joyful <em>experience</em> they are singing about <em>does</em> exist; that there's an exquisite sort of "high" that people can reach through certain practice; and that music or chanting in quire can help both in reaching and in communicating this experience. And if you are in doubt—you may move on next door, to the Sufis; or to the Suan Mokkh forest monastery in Southern Thailand; where the language, the symbolism and the ritual may be in some ways different and in other ways similar—and yet have the same joyful-exuberant experience as result—with interesting variations.</p>
 +
<h3>A vast creative frontier opens up—for academic and personal.</h3>
 +
<p>As soon as we step beyond the <em><b>belief</b></em> system of <em><b>materialism</b></em>—and use <em><b>logos</b></em> to (create <em><b>epistemology</b></em> and <em><b>methodology</b></em> and ) explore in a systematic way such basic themes as "happiness" and "values"; and importantly—<em>how they are related</em> to each other. Which is—now you'll now easily comprehend that—what "Religion beyond Belief", the <em>Liberation</em> book's subtitle is hinting at.</p>
 +
<p>What I've just described was quite accurately my own way into and through this creative frontier; <em><b>convenience paradox</b></em> was the very first <em><b>prototype</b></em> result of this line of work. I presented in 1995, at Einstein Meets Magritte (in addition to a parallel <em><b>methodology</b></em> "prospectus" paper); and I've been working on it off and on ever since. </p>
 +
<h3><em>Convenience paradox</em> is one of <em>holotopia</em>'s <em>five insights</em>.</h3>
 +
<p>You'll appreciate the <em>relevance</em> of the <em><b>convenience paradox insight</b></em> if you consider it in the context of our contemporary condition: The evolutionary <em><b>course</b></em> of <em><b>materialism</b></em>—marked by growth of material production and consumption—must be <em>urgently</em> changed (certainly in the "developed" parts of the world, and arguably in other parts too); but to what? It seems that everyone who has looked into this question concluded that the pursuit of humanistic or <em>cultural</em> goals and values will have to be the answer; you can hear this [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U7Z6h-U4CmI straight from the horse's mouth].</p>  
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<p>You'll begin to see the <em>anomaly</em> this <em><b>point</b></em> points to if you consider the obvious—<em>desensitization</em>; the more our senses are stimulated—the less <em>sensitive</em> they'll become; but where shall we draw the line? Could <em>fasting</em> (and making our senses more sensitive) could be a better way to gastronomic pleasure than eating until our stomach hurt? Already at the turn of the <em>nineteenth</em> century Nietzsche saw his contemporary "modern" human as so overwhelmed by "the abundance of disparate impressions", that he "instinctively resists taking in anything, taking anything deeply, to ‘digest’ anything"; so that "a kind of adaptation to this flood of impressions takes place: men unlearn spontaneous action, they merely react to stimuli from outside." What would Nietzsche say if he saw us <em>today</em>?</p>  
 +
<p><em><b>Convenience</b></em> in the role of 'headlights' (or way to determine the <em><b>know-what</b></em>) leaves in the dark one whole <em>dimension</em> of physical reality—time; and also an important side or one could even say <em>the</em> important 'half' of the three dimensions of space—its <em>inner</em> or embodied part; I emphasize its importance because while "happiness" (or whatever else we may choose to pursue on similar grounds) <em>appears</em> to be "caused" by events in the outer world—it is <em>inside</em> us that our emotions <em>materialize</em>; and it is <em>there</em> that the difference that makes a difference can and needs to be made.</p>
 +
<p>Did you notice, by the way—when you watched the video I've just shared (and if you haven't watched it, do it now; because it's the state of the world diagnosed by the world's foremost expert—who studied and <em><b>federated</b></em> this theme for more than four decades—condensed in a six-minute trailer)—how Dennis Meadows, while pointing in this new evolutionary direction, struggled to find the words that would do it justice; and came up with little more than "knowledge" and "music"?</p>
 +
<h3>This is where the <em>Liberation</em> book <em>really</em> takes off!</h3>
 +
<p>Its entire first half (its first five chapters) is dedicated to mapping not only specific opportunities, but five whole <em>realms</em> where we may dramatically improve our condition through inner development; whereby a roadmap to inner <em><b>wholeness</b></em> is drafted, as the book calls it. The <em>Liberation</em> book opens with an amusing little ruse—where a note about freedom and democracy is followed by the observation that we are free to "pursue happiness as we please"; and I imagined the reader would say "Sure—what could possibly be wrong about <em>that</em>?" But what do we really <em><b>know</b></em> about "happiness"? And whether "happiness" is at all what we <em>out</em> to be pursuing? Perhaps "love" could be a better choice? So let me for a moment zoom in on "love" as theme; which hardly needs an explanation—considering how much, both in our personal lives and in our culture, revolves around it: "My baby's gone, and I got the blues, It sure is awful to be lonsesome like me, Worried, weary up in a tree." The <em>Liberation</em> book invites us to look at this theme from a freshly <em>different</em> viewpoint: <em>What sort of "love"</em>—or what <em>quality</em> of love—are any of us really <em>capable of experiencing</em>? Can you imagine a world where we are culturally empowered to <em>cultivate</em> love; including our ability to <em>experience</em> love and importantly—to <em>give</em> love? In the third chapter of the <em>Liberation</em> book, which has "Liberation of Emotions" as title, <em><b>phenomenological</b></em> evidence for illuminating this realm of questions is drawn from the tradition of Sufism; in order to demonstrate that <em>love</em> has a spectrum of possibilities that reaches far beyond the outreach of our common experience and even awareness; and that certain kinds of practice, which combine poetry and music with meditation and ethical behavior, <em>can</em> make us, in the long run <em>capable of experiencing</em> the kinds of love whose very <em>existence</em> we as culture ignore; which can make <em>our experience of poetry and music too</em> incomparably more nuanced and rewarding.</p>
 +
<p><em><b>Convenience paradox</b></em> is the <em><b>point</b></em> of a very large <em><b>information holon</b></em>; which asserts (and invites us to turn it into shared and acted-upon fact, by giving it a similar visibility and credibility as what the "Newton's Laws" now enjoy) that <em><b>convenience</b></em> is a useless and deceptive "value", behind which a myriad opportunities to improve our lives and condition—through <em>cultural</em> pursuits—await to be uncovered. The <em><b>rectangle</b></em> of this <em><b>information holon</b></em> is populated by a broad range of—curated—ways to improve our condition through cultural pursuits or by <em><b>human development</b></em> (which Peccei qualified as <em>the</em> most important goal).</p>
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<p>Originally, the <em><b>convenience paradox</b></em> result was conceived as a proof-of-concept application of <em><b>polyscopic methodology</b></em>; I showed preliminary versions of both in 1995, at the Einstein Meets Magritte conference that the transdisciplinary center Leo Apostel and Brussels Free University organized (this conference marked the turning point in my career); the corresponding articles were published in 1999 in the "Yellow Book" of the proceedings titled <em>World Views and the Problem of Synthesis</em>. My point was to show how the <em><b>methodological</b></em> approach to <em><b>knowledge</b></em> I've been telling you about here (which empowers us to consider all forms and all <em>records</em> of human experience as data; and to synthesize and <em><b>justify</b></em> general and overarching <em><b>insights</b></em> as <em><b>patterns</b></em>; and to communicate them and make them palpable through <em><b>ideograms</b></em>) can allow us to collect and combine culturally relevant experiences and insights <em>across</em> worldviews and cultural traditions; and to give them visibility and citizenship rights; and empower them to <em>impact</em> our culture. I've  been working this so fascinating creative frontier ever since.</p>
 +
<p>The <em>Liberation</em> book too is a fruit of this line of work. The entire book can be <em><b>seen as</b></em> a <em><b>prototype</b></em> of a <em><b>system</b></em>—for empowering or <em><b>federating</b></em> culture-transformative experiences and insights or <em><b>memes</b></em>. The book is conceived as a <em><b>federation</b></em> of a single such <em><b>meme</b></em>—the legacy and vision of Buddhadasa, Thailand's 20th century holy man and Buddhism reformer; who—anticipating that something essential may have been misunderstood—withdrew to an abandoned forest monastery near his native village Chaya, to practice and experiment as Buddha did in his day. Having seen what he found out as potential antidote to (the global onslaught of) <em><b>materialism</b></em>, and also as the (still widely ignored) shared essence of the great religions of the world—Buddhadasa undertook to do whatever he could to make his insight available to both Thai people and foreigners.</p>
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<p>It should go without saying that the <em><b>Buddhadasa meme</b></em> (as I call it in the book) makes no sense in the context of <em><b>materialism</b></em>—which it undertakes to transform. The <em>Liberation</em> book alleviates this problem by drafting a <em>different</em> context—so that Buddhadasa's transformative insights can be <em><b>seen as</b></em> an essential elements in a new and emerging order of things (envisioned as <em><b>holotopia</b></em>); or metaphorically—as a vital organ of the <em><b>elephant</b></em>.</p>  
 
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<div class="col-md-3 round-images"><h2>  </h2>
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[[File:Peccei.jpg]] <br><small><center>[[Aurelio Peccei]]</center></small>
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<div class="col-md-3"><h2>  </h2>
<div class="col-md-6"><h3>We are at a turning point</h3>
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<font size="+1">– Many years ago, I dreamed that digital technology could greatly augment our collective human capabilities for dealing with complex, urgent problems.</font>
<!-- ANCHOR -->
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<br>
<span id="Story_of_Doug"></span>
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(Doug Engelbart, "Dreaming of the Future*, <em>BYTE Magazine</em>, 1995)
<p>The Enlightenment empowered the human reason to rebel against the tradition and freely explore the world.</p>  
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</div>
<p>Several centuries of exploration brought us to another turning point – where our reason has become capable of self-reflecting; of seeing its own limitations, and blind spots.</p>
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<div class="col-md-6"><h2>Knowledge federation</h2>
<p>The natural next step is to begin to expand those limitations, to correct those blind spots – by <em>creating</em> new ways to create knowledge.</p>
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<p>David Graeber and David Wengrow wrote in <em>The Dawn of Everything: A New History of Humanity</em>: "There is no doubt that something has gone terribly wrong with the world. A very small percentage of its population do control the fate of almost everyone else, and they are doing it in an increasingly disastrous fashion." Why am I quoting (from a book that offers us a wealth of insights, emerging from scientific studies in ethnography, about latent opportunities for configuring human relations and society that are <em>beyond</em> <em><b>materialism</b></em>) something that "everyone knows"? Because I'm about to tell you why I passionately <em>disagree</em> with it! And in the same breath introduce to you <em><b>communication</b></em> as the <em><b>category</b></em> from which <em><b>knowledge federation</b></em> stems as <em><b>point</b></em> or <em><b>insight</b></em>; and also Norbert Wiener as yet another ignored <em><b>giant</b></em>. And a <em><b>giant</b></em> he manifestly was—having earned academic degrees in mathematics, zoology and philosophy, and then a doctorate in mathematical logic from Harvard <em>while he was still a teenager</em>! Wiener then went on to do seminal work in a variety of fields, one of which was cybernetics (but not alone; Margaret Mead was a member of the small transdisciplinary circle from which cybernetics emerged). Wiener's ignored <em><b>point</b></em> was already in the <em>title</em> of his seminal <em>Cybernetics: Or Control and Communication in the Animal and the Machine</em>: Control and communication are <em>inextricably</em> connected; control <em>depends</em> on right or <em><b>correct</b></em> communication. You'll see this if you just think of the bus with candle headlights: We who are in the bus do see someone sitting behind the steering wheel, and think he's in control; and there <em>is</em>, of course a fierce battle inside the buss for those "driver" positions (which are, indeed, available to only a few people, as Graeber & Wengrow observed). But in the larger picture—<em>are they</em> really in control? Will <em>anyone</em> benefit from steering the society in a "disastrous fashion"?</p>
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<p>The word "cybernetics" is derived from Greek "<em>kubernan</em> (to steer); it is related to the English noun "government" and the verb "to govern". As an academic field, cybernetics is dedicated to the study of governability—or more precisely, what structure do <em><b>systems</b></em> need to have to be <em>viably</em> governable or "sustainable" (Wiener framed this question by using "homeostasis" as technical keyword—to point to an organism's or <em><b>system</b></em>'s activities to maintain a stable or viable <em><b>course</b></em>). Wiener's all-important and <em>still</em> flagrantly ignored point was that "free competition" won't do (he called the <em><b>belief</b></em> that we can rely on it a "simpleminded theory" which contradicts the evidence). The <em><b>point</b></em> of it all is that to make our <em><b>systems</b></em> viable or "sustainable"—we must learn about the relationship between communication and control by studying living systems ("the animal") and technical systems ("the machine")—and apply the resulting insights there where they'll make the largest difference—in the design and control of <em>society</em> and its <em><b>systems</b></em>.</p>
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<h3>Isn't this what we've been talking about all along?</h3>  
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<p> In social systems—composed of relatively autonomous individuals—communication <em>is</em> the system, Wiener pointed out in <em>Cybernetics</em>; and he talked about ants and bees to demonstrate that. You'll comprehend the <em><b>anomaly</b></em> that <em><b>knowledge federation</b></em> as <em><b>holotopia</b></em>'s <em><b>point</b></em> points to if you consider that the "digital technology"—the interactive, network-interconnected digital media you and I use to read email and browse the Web—has been <em>envisioned</em> (by Doug Engelbart—already in 1951!) and developed (by his SRI-based team, and publicly demonstrated in 1968) to serve as "a collective nervous system" of a <em>radically</em> novel kind; and <em>enable</em> a quantum leap in the evolution of our "collective social organisms"—which  would <em>dramatically</em> augment their—and <em>our</em>—"capabilities for dealing with complex, urgent problems". You'll easily see what all this means if you imagine us all traveling in that so horrid bus—rushing off-chart at an accelerating speed and dodging trees: We must be able to act <em>fast</em>; and if also we want to give the whole thing a viable <em>direction</em>—we must be able to synthesize a whole new <em>view</em> of the world (which shows us forests, not trees); and <em>use it</em> for steering. The key to grasping the gist of Engelbart's vision—which I'll refer to as <em><b>collective mind</b></em>—is his acronym CoDIAK; which stands for "concurrent development, integration and application of knowledge. Take a moment to reflect on his word "concurrent": <em>Every other</em> technology I can think of—including handwritten letters carried by caravans and books printed by Gutenberg—require that a physical object with the message be <em>physically carried</em> from its author to its recipient; only this Engelbart's technology provided the genuine functionality of the nervous system—which enables us, and indeed <em>compels</em> us to "develop, integrate and apply" knowledge <em>concurrently</em>, as cells in a single human mind  do; but of course—to take advantage of this technology, to <em>realize</em> this possibility, our communication needs to be structured and organized in entirely new ways; which is, of course, what <em><b>knowledge federation</b></em> is all about. Imagine if <em>your</em> cells were using your nervous system to merely <em>broadcast</em> data—and you'll easily see what I'm talking about.</p> 
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<p>You'll see the related <em><b>anomaly</b></em>  if you notice that this technology is <em>still</em> largely used to send back and forth messages and publish or <em>broadcast</em> documents—i.e. to implement and speed up the sort of processes that the old technologies of communication made possible (here Noah, my thirteen-year-old,  would instantly object; so I must qualify that it's <em>academic</em> or "serious" communication I am talking about). Or to use <em><b>knowledge federation</b></em>'s lead metaphor:</p>
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<h3>'Electrical technology' is <em>still</em> used to produce 'fancy candles'.</h3>  
 +
<p>Substantial parts of the <em><b>knowledge federation prototype</b></em> have been developed by a community of knowledge media researchers and developers committed to continuing and completing the work on Engelbart's vision—by creating completely <em>different</em> <em><b>systems</b></em> that this technology enables; and taking part in the quantum leap in the evolution of humanity's core <em><b>systems</b></em>—which this technology enables, and our situation necessitates. I'll here illustrate this line of work by a single example—our Tesla and the Nature of Creativity 2015 prototype; where we showed how <em>academic</em> communication can be updated, to benefit the society far more than it presently does.</p>  
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<p>To begin, I'll invite you to <em><b>see</b></em> the academic system <em><b>as</b></em> a gigantic socio-technical 'machine' that takes as input gifted young people and society's resources; and produces creative people and ideas as output; and explore  the question that follows—<em>How suitable</em> is this <em><b>system</b></em> for its all-important role? In a moment I'll show you the <em><b>prototype</b></em> where the result of an academic researcher  has been <em><b>federated</b></em>; but before I do that let us zoom in even further, and examine how a researcher's result is handled in our present system—which first subjects it to "peer reviews" (which made sense in those good old days when it was academically <em>legitimate</em> to <em><b>believe</b></em> that conforming to a <em><b>traditional</b></em> disciplinary procedure and that alone would qualify a result as worthy of being included in "the edifice of knowledge"; that once it passed that test—if would remain part  of this edifice forever; which today has as unhappy consequence that it keeps academic creativity all too narrowly confined—to so-called "safe" which means not-so-novel areas) and then—if it receives a passing grade—commits it to academic bookshelves; where <em>nobody</em> will ever find it—except those few specialists to whom it's addressed; who are anyhow the only ones who can <em>comprehend</em> what the result is all about. </p>
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<p>[[File:TNC2015.jpeg]]<br><small><center>Knowledge Federation's Tesla and the Nature of Creativity 2015 workshop in Sava Center, Belgrade.</center></small></p> 
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<p>In our Tesla and the Nature of Creativity 2015 <em><b>prototype</b></em> we <em><b>federated</b></em> the result of a researcher—University of Belgrade's Dejan Raković—in three phases; where:
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<ul>
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<li>The first phase was to make the result <em>comprehensible</em> to lay audiences; which we (concretely <em><b>knowledge federation</b></em>'s communication design team) did by turning this technical research article into a multimedia object; where its main <em><b>points</b></em> were extracted and <em><b>connected</b></em> and made comprehensible by explanatory diagrams or <em><b>ideograms</b></em>; and further clarified by (placing on them links to) recorded interviews with the author</li>
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<li>In the second phase we made the result <em>known</em> and at the same time discussed in space, by leading international experts on Tesla—by staging a televised and streamed high-profile <em><b>dialog</b></em> at Sava Center Belgrade</li>
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<li>The third phase constituted a technology-enabled global social process (we used DebateGraph) by which the result was processed further, .</li> 
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</ul></p>
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<p>This third stage is in particular illustrative of the vast difference the new media technology can make—once we use it to re-create our "social life of information"; here the <em><b>points</b></em> that were extracted and explained in the first phase were made available online as DebateGraph nodes; so that other experts or DebateGraph users—anywhere in the world—can add to them <em>new</em> nodes, corresponding to the sort of action they deem appropriate: They may add supporting evidence; or challenge the result by counterevidence and so on. Here (not the reviewers' verdict on an academic article, but) this <em><b>connecting the dots</b></em>—this new creative process of this new <em><b>collective mind</b></em>—is allowed to continue forever. Two MS theses were developed to complement and complete this <em><b>prototype</b></em>: One of them made  it possible to create 'dialects' on DebateGraph (which determine what actions or moves can be applied to a certain kind of node, such as an idea, or an negative or positive evaluation of an idea); and  effect <em>program</em> "the social life" of academic information.  The other MS thesis <em><b>prototyped</b></em> two objects called <em><b>domain map</b></em> and <em><b>value matrix</b></em>; which enabled both authors <em>and</em> their contributions to be evaluated by multiple criteria.</p> 
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<p>Also the <em>theme</em> of Raković's result—the nature of the creative process that distinguishes "creative genius"—must be taken into consideration to fully comprehend this <em><b>prototype</b></em>: Raković first demonstrated <em><b>phenomenologically</b></em> (by referring to Nikola Tesla's own descriptions of his creative process) that there are two distinct <em>kinds of</em> creativity; and that the "outside the box" creativity necessitates an entirely <em>different</em> creative process, and <em><b>ecology of mind</b></em>, distinct from its common alternative; and he then theorized this creative process within the paradigm of quantum physics. <em>Imagine</em> if it turns out that the way we (teach the young people how to) think and use the mind, at schools and universities—which happens to be the kind of creative work that the machines are now doing quite well—<em>inhibits</em> this entirely <em>different</em> process that we <em>ought</em> to be using, and teaching! I open the "Liberation of Mind" chapter of the <em>Liberation</em> book by quoting Bob Dylan and Leonard Cohen, to hint that the evidence for it is <em>everywhere</em>, that it's staring us in the eye! And so the question—the <em>key</em> question—is by what social process are we handling this and other similar <em><b>pivotal</b></em> questions?</p>
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<p>With this in mind, compare the <em><b>federation</b></em> process I've just outlined—which  (1) models the <em><b>phenomenology</b></em> of Tesla's creative process; (2) submits this <em><b>phenomenology</b></em> outline to expert researchers and biographers of Tesla and (3) proposes an <em>explanatory model</em> of this process as a <em><b>prototype</b></em>—available online, with provisions to be indefinitely improved—to a peer review; which will say "yes" or "no" depending on whether the <em>model</em> is stated and "proven" by a certain hereditary <em>procedure</em>.</p>
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<h3>Isn't all this just a way to keep the humanity's creative powers in the proverbial 'box'?</h3> 
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<p>"So you are creating a <em>collective</em> Tesla", Serbian TV anchor commented while conversing with our representative in the studio; and rendered the gist of our initiative better than I have been able to.</p>  
 
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<div class="col-md-3 round-images"><h2>  </h2>
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[[File:Engelbart.jpg]] <br><small><center>[[Doug Engelbart]]</center></small></div>
 
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<div class="col-md-3"><h2>Right use of technology</h2></div>
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<div class="col-md-3"><h2>   </h2>
<div class="col-md-6"><h3>Digital technology calls for new thinking</h3>
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<font size="+1">– The task is nothing less than to build a new society and new institutions for it. With technology having become the most powerful change agent in our society, decisive battles will be won or lost by the measure of how seriously we take the challenge of restructuring the ‘joint systems’ of society and technology.</font>
<p><blockquote>
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<br>
Digital technology could help make this a better world. But we've also got to change our way of thinking.
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(Erich Jantsch,  <em>Integrative Planning for the "Joint Systems" of Society and Technology—the Emerging Role of the University</em>, MIT Report,1969)
</blockquote>
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</div>
These two sentences were intended to frame Douglas Engelbart's message to the world – which was to be delivered at a panel organized and filmed at Google in 2007. </p>
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<div class="col-md-6"><h2>Systemic innovation</h2>
<h3>An epiphany</h3>
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<p>You'll see the relevance of <em><b>innovation</b></em>—the category from which this <em><b>insight</b></em> stems—if you consider that it's <em>both</em> (whereby we use and direct our technology-augmented power to create and induce change, and hence) what drives the metaphorical bus forward <em>and</em> what needs to be redirected so that its headlights can be replaced.</p>
<p>In December of 1950 Engelbart was a young engineer just out of college, engaged to be married, and freshly employed. His life appeared to him as a straight path to retirement. He did not like what he saw.</p>
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<p>You'll see the "different" way of looking at <em><b>innovation</b></em>, by which it can be comprehended in a new way and <em><b>corrected</b></em>, if you imagine the <em><b>systems</b></em> in which we live and work as gigantic machines, comprising people and technology; and acknowledge that they determine <em>how</em> we live and work; and importantly, what the <em>effects</em> of our work will be—whether they'll be problems, or solutions. Béla H. Bánáthy wrote in <em>Designing Social Systems in a Changing World</em>:</p>
<p>So there and then he decided to direct his career in a way that will maximize its benefits to the mankind.</p>
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<p>“I have become increasingly convinced that [people] cannot give direction to their lives, they cannot forge their destiny, they cannot take charge of their future—unless they also develop the competence to take part directly and authentically in the design of the systems in which they live and work, and reclaim their right to do so. This is what true empowerment is about.”</p>
<p>Facing now an interesting optimization problem, he spent three months thinking intensely how to solve it. Then he had an epiphany: The computer had just been invented. And the humanity had all those problems it didn't know how to solve. What if...</p>
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<h3>How suitable are our <em>systems</em> for the functions they need to perform "in a changing world"?</h3>
<p>To be able to pursue his vision, Engelbart quit his job and enrolled in the doctoral program in computer science at U.C. Berkeley.</p>
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<p>If the <em><b>system</b></em> whose function is to enable us to <em>direct</em> our efforts <em><b>correctly</b></em> is a 'candle'—<em>what about all others</em>? How suitable are our financial system, our governance, our international corporation and our education for what <em>they</em> need to be able to achieve?</p>  
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<p>In 2013 I was invited to give an online talk to a workshop of social scientists who convened at IUC Dubrovnik; who were interested in journalism, IT innovation and e-democracy. The title I gave my talk was "Toward a Scientific Comprehension and Handling of Problems", in order to draw attention to my <em>main</em> <em><b>point</b></em>—namely that there is an altogether different or "scientific" way to comprehend and handle the society's ills that journalism reports, and innovation and democracy aim to resolve. To explain and justify this <em><b>point</b></em>, I drafted a parallel between the society and the human organism—and invited my audience to <em><b>see</b></em> communication <em><b>as</b></em> the society's nervous system, finance as its vascular system, the corporation as its muscular system, education as reproductive system and so on; and I demonstrated, one by one, that what we see as society's problems are indeed (or need to be seen as) <em>symptoms</em> of <em><b>systemic</b></em> malfunction. Scientific medicine distinguishes itself by comprehending and handling symptoms in terms of the <em>anatomy and pathophysiology</em> that underlie  them, my point was; why not comprehend and handle our <em>society's</em> issues in a similar, <em><b>scientific</b></em> way?</p>
 +
<p>I ended my talk on a positive note; by showing a photo of an electoral victory, to which I added in Photoshop "The systems, stupid!" as featured winning electoral slogan; which was, of course, a paraphrase of Bill Clinton's winning 1992 slogan "The Economy, stupid!" In a society where the survival of businesses depends on their ability to sell people things—<em>of course</em> one needs to keep the economy growing if one wants the business to be profitable and the people employed. But economic growth is <em>not</em> "the solution to our problem". </p>  
 +
<h3><em>Systemic innovation</em> empowers us to <em>change</em> the <em>system</em> of our economy.</h3>
 +
<p>Instead of only <em>adapting</em> to it, until the bitter end.</p>
 +
<p>In the <em>Liberation</em> book (where, as I said, I explain abstract ideas by telling people stories), I let Erich Jantsch <em>iconize</em> <em><b>systemic innovation</b></em>. I introduce Jantsch's legacy and vision by qualifying them as the environmental movement's forgotten history; and its ignored theory; which we'll <em>have to</em> comprehend to be able to <em>act</em>, instead of only reacting.</p>
 +
<p>In the story we meet Jantsch at the point where he's just given his keynote to The Club of Rome's inaugural meeting in 1968 in Rome. Jantsch readily saw what needed to be done to pave the way to solutions; and right away convened a workshop of a hand-picked team of experts—to craft <em><b>systemic innovation</b></em> theory and methodology; and then—seeing that the university is the only institution capable of developing and spearheading this new way to think and act—spent a semester at MIT drafting a plan for the transdisciplinary university, from which I quoted the above excerpt; and lobbying with the MIT academic colleagues and administration to <em>implement</em> this necessary and so timely change.</p>
 +
<p>Then there was this <em>wonderful</em> turn of events—which spices up both the story of Jantsch and <em><b>systemic innovation</b></em>, and the story of Engelbart and <em><b>knowledge federation</b></em> I shared a moment ago: During the 1970s Jantsch and Engelbart were practically neighbors—separated only by the San Francisco Bay! But they never met or collaborated—even though each of them needed the other to fulfill <em>his own</em> larger-than-life mission: Engelbart was struggling to explain to Silicon Valley businesses and innovators that <em><b>innovation</b></em> needed to be directed in an <em>entirely</em> different way; that the technology he gave them was intended to serve as enabler for an quantum leap in evolution of humanity's <em><b>systems</b></em>. And just across the bay there was this other ignored <em><b>giant</b></em>, with the <em>complementary</em> message. Let me be blunt: Would <em>you</em> choose to leave your children loads and loads of dough—and a world about to collapsed on their heads? I mean—if you <em>knew</em> what was going on; and that <em>you</em> could make a difference.</p>
 +
<p>But Jantsch didn't stop there; during the 1970s, until his premature death in 1980, Jantsch was earnestly and with all his power developing a <em>different</em> view of the <em><b>elephant</b></em> (and supporting himself by working as a music critic); he gave it different names in different publications, and I'll call it <em><b>evolutionary vision</b></em>; as Jantsch did in the last expert workshop he organized, and his corresponding last book he edited.</p>
 +
<p>The turning point in Jantsch's creative process was the talk that Ilya Prigogine gave U.C. Berkeley (where Jantsch was an <em><b>adjunct assistant professor</b></em>; I adopted this <em><b>keyword</b></em> from Doug Engelbart to use it as he did—to point to the highest academic position available to <em><b>system</b></em> reformers) about his work (for which he received the Nobel Prize five years later); which showed Jantsch that even <em>physical</em> systems follow a certain peculiar evolutionary dynamic. You'll comprehend the gist of it if you think for a moment about <em>the</em> key point of cybernetics (in the context of the error I am inviting you to correct, and the challenge of making our society's evolutionary <em><b>course</b></em> governable or sustainable): Wiener's idea of control (he used "homeostasis" as keyword to pinpoint it) was the maintenance of a certain equilibrium state or condition; and using "communication and control" to avoid and <em>eliminate</em> the deviations. What Jantsch saw (and also Prigogine) was an entirely <em>different</em> evolutionary dynamic—where the system operates in a state that is <em>far</em> from equilibrium; in a manner that is in a fundamental sense <em>creative</em>.</p>
 +
<p>In <em>Design for Evolution</em>, his 1975 seminal work, Jantsch introduced the <em><b>evolutionary vision</b></em> by inviting us to see ourselves as passengers (not in a bus but) in a boat on a river. The traditional sciences would have us look at the boat from above, Jantsch explained—and aim to describe it "objectively"; the traditional systems science would position us <em>on</em> the boat—and instruct us how to steer it safely. The <em><b>evolutionary vision</b></em> would have us to see ourselves as—the river! The <em><b>point</b></em> of it all being that <em>the way we present ourselves</em> to evolution is what determines its course!</p>
 +
<h3>Why am I telling you at length about these so technical themes?</h3>  
 +
<p>Because we've just placed the <em>Liberation</em> book's overall main <em><b>point</b></em> into this website's all-important context (our quest or guiding light or <em><b>know-what</b></em>): According to <em><b>evolutionary vision</b></em>, the "liberated" or "enlightened" condition this book portrays <em>is</em> "the solution to our problem".</p>
 
</div>
 
</div>
<div class="col-md-3"> [[File:Engelbart.jpg]] <br><small><center>[[Douglas Engelbart]]</center></small></div>
+
<div class="col-md-3 round-images"><h2>  </h2>
 +
[[File:Jantsch.jpg]] <br><small><center>[[Erich Jantsch]]</center></small></div>
 
</div>
 
</div>
 
<div class="row">
 
<div class="row">
<div class="col-md-3"></div>
+
<div class="col-md-3"><h2>  </h2>
<div class="col-md-7"><h3>Silicon Valley failed to hear its giant</h3>
+
<font size="+1">– Modernity did not make people more cruel; it only invented a way in which cruel things could be done by non-cruel people. Under the sign of modernity, evil does not need any more evil people. Rational people, men and women well riveted into the impersonal, adiaphorized network of modern organization, will do perfectly.</font>
<p>It took awhile for the people in Silicon Valley to realize that the core technologies that led to "the revolution in the Valley" were not developed by Steve Jobs and Bill Gates, or at the XEROX research center where <em>they</em> found them – but by Douglas Engelbart and his SRI-based research team. On December 9, 1998 a large conference was organized at the Stanford University to celebrate the 30th anniversary of Engelbart's Demo, where this technology was first shown to the public. Engelbart received the highest honors an inventor could have, including the Presidental award and the Turing prize (the computer science equivalent to Nobel Prize). Allen Kay (another Silicon Valley icon) honored him  even more highly, by asking "What will the Silicon Valley do when they run out of Doug's ideas?".</p>
+
<br>
<p>And yet it was clear to Doug – and he made it clear to others – that the core of his vision was neither implemented nor understood. </p>  
+
(Zygmunt Bauman  <em>Life in Fragments: Essays in Postmodern Morality</em>, 1995)
<p>Doug felt celebrated for wrong reasons. He was notorious for telling people "You just don't get it!" The slogan "Douglas Engelbart's Unfinished Revolution" was coined as the title of the 1998 Stanford University celebration of the Demo, and it stuck.</p>
+
</div>
<p>On July 2, 2013 Doug passed away, celebrated and honored – yet feeling he had failed.</p>
+
<div class="col-md-6"><h2>Power structure</h2>
 
+
<p>Before we can <em>solve</em> "the huge problems now confronting us", we need to <em>diagnose</em> them <em><b>correctly</b></em>.</p>
<h3>The elephant was in the room</h3>
+
<h3><em>Power structure</em> is a social-and-cultural disease.</h3>  
<p>What was the essence of "Engelbart's unfinished revolution"? What did he see, which he was unable to communicate? </p>  
+
<p>It is also an update or redesign of the traditional idea of the enemy. The <em><b>power structure</b></em> is not a physical entity but a <em><b>pattern</b></em>; it is not bacteria-like but cancer-like. It  has similar effects on our minds and liberties as a dictator; but it remains invisible—as long as we look at freedom and justice in any of our inherited or <em><b>traditional</b></em> ways. The <em><b>power structure</b></em> is not a conspiracy theory but its exact opposite: The people who co-created it have no evil intentions; and indeed not a faintest idea that they <em>might</em> be part of the problem. Before I say more about it, let me bring this down to earth by sharing how <em>I</em> got to be aware of <em><b>power structure</b></em>.</p>
<p>Whenever Doug was speaking or being celebrated, that elephant, which is the main hero of our stories, was present in the room. A huge, spectacular animal in the midst of a university lecture hall – should that not be a front-page sensation and the talk of the town? How can such a large thing remain unseen?</p>
+
<p>When around 1995 I caught a glimpse of the vast and wondrous creative frontier I've been telling you about, and reconfigured my life and my work to be able to focus on it fully—I anticipated a completely <em>different</em> dynamic than what I <em>actually</em> encountered: I expected a spirited conversation; and perhaps some doubt and disbelief to begin with.  What I got instead was—silence; accompanied with a vague sense of discomfort. Evidently, I was doing something wrong; but even <em>that</em> was only communicated in body language. Could it be that the academic culture is not steered by academic <em><b>logos</b></em>, as I took it for granted; but by something quite different, which I could not even <em>name</em>? The experience was disheartening; it's as if you put all your chips on being a painter; and work with all your power to manifest all those wonderful images you were carrying in intuition—only to realize that your fellow painters and gallerists are <em>color blind</em>! But when I explored this phenomenon a bit, I realized that what I was experiencing was not just some weird anomaly, but <em>the</em> problem—that's preventing us from solving "the grave problems now confronting us"; and so naturally, I undertook to research it thoroughly. It was at that point that I undertook to explore the related results humanities, about which I knew next to nothing.</p>
<p>And yet nobody saw it!</p>
+
<p>Here in front of me on the table I have Zygmunt Bauman's book <em>Modernity and the Holocaust</em>; which—as I am now re-reading it—reflects back to me a closely similar message—namely that there is something <em>essential</em> we still ignore about ourselves and our society, and importantly—about the relationship between us and society (Bauman's "we" included his fellow sociologists). When we theorize the Holocaust while ignoring that all-important something—we see it as "an interruption in the normal flow of history, a cancerous growth on the body of civilized society, a momentary madness among sanity"; whereas when we look carefully at how it <em>really</em> developed (as documented by the historians)—we are bound to see it as just an extreme case of a pathology that <em>permeates</em> our society; which by being so extreme—invites us to comprehend that all-permeating pathology. Hannah Arendt left us a similar message when she talked about "banality of evil"; but her diagnoses too were ignored, and considered "controversial".</p>  
<p>If this may seem incredible – take a look at these first four slides that Doug prepared for the 2007 "A Call to Action" panel at Google. This presentation was organized to share with the world Doug's final message, at the end of his career.</p>  
+
<h3>These warning we must <em>urgently</em> attend to.</h3>  
<p></p>
+
<p>Because the banal evil is acquiring <em>grotesque</em> proportions! I am considering to use <em><b>geocide</b></em> as keyword to rub it in; but perhaps you already got my point?</p>
<p>[[File:Doug-4.jpg]]<br><small><center>The title and the first three slides that were prepared for Engelbart's "A Call to Action" panel at Google in 2007.</center></small></p>
+
<p>At InfoDesign 2000 conference in Coventry, GB, I presented the <em><b>power structure</b></em> theory alongside with <em><b>polyscopic methodology</b></em>; and introduced the former as a proof-of-concept application of the latter.</p>  
<p></p>
+
<h3>We must look through the <em>holoscope</em> to diagnose the society's deadly disease!</h3>
<p>You will notice that Doug's "call to action" requested new thinking. And that he introduced this new thinking by a variant of the bus metaphor we used to introduce [[knowledge federation|<em>knowledge federation</em>]]. </p>  
+
<p>In Coventry I was invited to elaborate both ideas in Information Design Journal; which resulted in two publications: "Designing Information Design" introduced the <em><b>methodological</b></em> or <em><b>design</b></em> approach to <em><b>information</b></em> and gave (an early version of) the same call to action I am proposing here; "Information for Conscious Choice" introduced the <em><b>power structure</b></em> theory and a <em>pragmatic</em> argument for that call to action: "Free competition" and the related notion of "free choice" is what's breeding the <em><b>power structure</b></em> and driving us to extinction; our choices <em>must</em> be illuminated by suitable or <em><b>designed</b></em> information.</p>  
<p>And that the third slide brought the "nervous system" metaphor we shared on the front page.</p>
+
<p>The Power Structure ideogram consists of three white entities joined together by three black arrows; and suggests that the <em><b>power structure</b></em> is not a distinct thing but a <em>structure</em>—comprising known entities and their subtle relationships. The entities are power (represented in the <em><b>ideogram</b></em> by a dollar sign), <em><b>information</b></em> (represented by a book), and our personal and socio-cultural <em><b>wholeness</b></em> (represented by a stethoscope). The <em><b>point</b></em> here is that "the enemy", that what <em>really</em> has the power over us the people is not any of those three things alone—but their <em>combination</em>; or more to the point—their <em>synergy</em>.</p>  
<p>If you wonder what happened with this call to action, you'll easily find the answer by googling Engelbart's 2007 presentation at Google. The Youtube recording will show that  
+
<p>The reason why those relationships remained invisible and ignored is that they are not mechanical but <em>evolutionary</em>; it is (not deliberate scheming but) <em>evolution</em> that adjusts those three (obviously co-dependent) entities to each other; and turns them into something that for all practical purposes acts as an organism.</p>  
 +
<p>I used results and insights from multiple fields of science to elaborate the <em><b>power structure</b></em> as a <em><b>pattern</b></em>: <em>The</em> basic insights from stochastic optimization, artificial intelligence and artificial life—to show that co-dependent entities <em>can</em> co-evolve to form a coherent structure, which can behave as if it were intelligent and alive; Antonio Damasio's revolutionizing insights in cognitive neuroscience, explained in his book appropriately titled <em>Descartes' Error</em>—to point to the pre-conscious and embodied and hence 'programmable' nature of (what's <em><b>believed</b></em> to be) "free choice"; and Pierre Bourdieu's explorations of of "symbolic power" and his "theory of practice" to explain the <em><b>power structure</b></em> dynamic; and how it's related to economic and political power.</p>  
 +
<p>The <em><b>power structures</b></em> exist at distinct levels of generality or details; smaller <em><b>power structures</b></em> compose together larger ones; so that we are justified in <em><b>seeing</b></em> it all <em><b>as</b></em> just <em>the</em> (one single) <em><b>power structure</b></em>.</p>  
 +
<p>I used metaphors to make this invisible enemy comprehensible and palpable; one of which was cancer: The <em><b>power structure</b></em> is a cancer-like <em>deformation</em> of society's 'tissues and organs'; which—unless it's recognized and countered by society's 'immune system'—can proliferate and be fatal.</p>
 +
<p>Bourdieu left us a pair of useful metaphors and keywords, "field" and "game"; which he used interchangeably to describe the dynamics of <em><b>power structure</b></em>. imagine us all as tiny magnets immersed in a large magnetic field; which subtly orients our seemingly free or random behavior; which—as we align ourselves with it—becomes stronger. The <em><b>power structure</b></em>, or "field", then <em><b>gamifies</b></em> the society; and reduces for each of us the disturbing complexity of our world to just learning a social role and performing in it; which gives us "ontological security" and eliminates the need for ethics and for <em><b>knowledge</b></em>, as Giddens pointed out.</p>
 +
<h3><em>Power structure</em> is not a pejorative label but a way of looking.</h3>  
 +
<p>As long as we live in a society—we <em>are</em> affected by <em><b>power structure</b></em> and we <em>must</em> see to it that this co-dependence is minimal; because both our freedom <em>and</em> our society's future depend on our liberation.</p>  
 +
<p><em><b>Power structure</b></em> is not one of <em><b>holotopia</b></em>'s <em><b>five insights</b></em>; it <em>is</em>, however, a theme that permeates all of them, <em>and</em> the <em>Liberation</em> book; which gives us a way to revisit and revise other themes including</p>
 
<ul>  
 
<ul>  
<li>these four slides were not even shown at the event (the first slide that was shown was number four)</li>
+
<li>Ethics; to be part of the societal 'cancer', and be culpable of [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d1x7lDxHd-o <em><b>geocide</b></em>], we need to do no more than—"do our job"; in "the impersonal, adiaphorized network of modern organization" (Bauman used this keyword, "adiaphorized", to delineate the style of thinking I've asked you to associate with <em><b>materialism</b></em>—which is "purely rational", devoid of ethical or emotional concerns; we do something not because it's right or just—but because it is "our job", or "good for business"); or even more simply—act in <em><b>materialism</b></em>'s characteristically self-centered way (which turns us into 'little magnets'...) </li>  
<li>no call to action was mentioned</li>  
+
<li>Politics; the <em><b>geocide</b></em> is <em>not</em> in anyone's "interest"; the <em><b>holotopian</b></em> politics is not conceived as "us against them", as it's been usual—but as <em>all of us</em> against the <em><b>power structure</b></em></li>
<li>Engelbart is still introduced in the Youtube subtitle as "the inventor of the computer mouse"</li>
+
<li>Religion; in Chapter Ten of the <em>Liberation</em> book, titled "Liberation of Religion", I defined <em><b>religion</b></em> as a function in culture—to help us counteract <em>self-centeredness</em>; and see ourselves as parts in a larger <em><b>whole</b></em>.</li>
 
</ul>  
 
</ul>  
</p>  
+
<p>You may now comprehend the <em>Liberation</em> book's subtitle "Religion beyond Belief" a notch deeper; and see the evolution of <em><b>religion</b></em> as having three stages; so that in the first, the <em><b>beliefs</b></em> of tradition were used to coerce everyone to do the right thing (which, needless to say, didn't always work as intended); and in the second, the <em><b>beliefs</b></em> of <em><b>materialism</b></em> gradually made us do the <em>wrong</em> thing; so that we have a chance to bring <em><b>religion</b></em> into its <em>third</em> phase of evolution—by founding it on <em><b>knowledge</b></em>, not <em><b>belief</b></em>.</p>  
 
+
<p>You may now also see science and the way the pursuit of <em><b>knowledge</b></em> has been institutionalized, and the <em><b>ontological</b></em> argument for our (lack of) <em><b>foundation</b></em>, in a completely new light. In their 1966 classic  <em>Social Construction of Reality</em>, Berger and Luckmann told us that societies have a special category of people, suitably institutionalized, whose prerogative is to define "reality" for us; they called them "universal experts", and explained that "[t]his does not mean that they claim to know everything, but rather that they claim to know the ultimate significance of what everybody knows and does. Other men may continue to stake out particular sectors of reality, but they claim expertise in the ultimate definitions of reality as such." The social function of "ultimate definitions of reality as such" has been to maintain the given social order by inhibiting change: "Habitualization and institutionalization in themselves limit the flexibility of human actions. Institutions tend to persist unless they become ‘problematic’. Ultimate legitimations inevitably strengthen this tendency. The more abstract the legitimations are, the less likely they are to be modified in accordance with changing pragmatic exigencies. If there is a tendency to go on as before anyway, the tendency is obviously strengthened by having excellent reasons for doing so. This means that institutions may persist even when, to an outside observer, they have lost their original functionality or practicality. One does certain things not because they work, but because they are right – right, that is, in terms of the ultimate definitions of reality promulgated by the universal experts."</p>  
<h3>The 21st century's printing press</h3>
+
</div>
<p>How important was Engelbart's intended gift to humanity?</p>  
+
<div class="col-md-3 round-images"><h2>  </h2>
<p>The printing press is a fitting metaphor in our context, as the technology that made the Enlightenment possible, by giving access to knowledge.</p>  
+
[[File:Bauman.jpg]] <br><small><center>[[Zygmunt Bauman]]</center></small></div>
<p> If we now ask what technology might play a similar role in the <em>next</em> enlightenment, you will probably answer "the Web" (or  "the network-interconnected interactive digital media" if you are technical). And you would probably be right.</p>
 
<p>But there's a catch! </p>
 
<p>While there can be no doubt that the printing press led to a revolution in knowledge work, <em>that revolution was only a revolution in quantity</em>. The printing press could only do what the scribes were doing – while making it faster!</p>
 
<p>The network-interconnected interactive digital media, however, is a disruptive technology of a completely <em>new</em> kind. It is not a broadcasting device, but in a truest sense <em>a nervous system</em> connecting people together! </p>
 
<p>A nervous system is a thinking and sense-making organ, not a broadcasting device.</p>  
 
<p>To use it right, a <em>a new and different specialization and organization</em> of knowledge work must be put in place.</p>  
 
 
 
<h3>Bootstrapping</h3>  
 
<p>You may now easily guess what it was that, Doug felt, he was leaving unfinished. He called it "bootstrapping" – and we've adopted that as one of our [[keywords|<em>keyword</em>]]. </p>  
 
<p>Bootstrapping was so central to Doug's thinking, that when he and his daughter Christina created an institute to realize his vision, they called it "Bootstrap Institute" – and later changed the name to "Bootstrap Alliance" because, as we shall see, an alliance rather than an institute is  needed to do bootstrapping. </p>  
 
<p>"Bootstrapping" meant several things.</p>  
 
<p>Being a systemic thinker, Doug saw that the most effective way in which one can invest his creative capabilities (and make "the largest contribution to humanity") – is by applying them to improve <em>everyone's</em> creative capabilities, including one's own.</p>
 
<p>And most importantly, Doug saw that <em>the systemic change</em> was the necessary next step, if "collective intelligence" (which he understood as our ability to respond to rapidly growing complexity and urgency of our problems) should be the result. And that systemic change can only  happen when the people carry it out in their own work and institutions, with their own minds and bodies.</p>
 
 
</div>
 
</div>
 +
<div class="row">
 +
<div class="col-md-3"><h2>  </h2>
 +
<font size="+1"><em><b>See things whole</b></em>.</font>
 +
<br>
 +
The <em><b>holoscope principle</b></em>.
 
</div>
 
</div>
-------
+
<div class="col-md-7"><h2>Holoscope</h2>
 +
<p>René Descartes pointed out in his testament, his unfinished <em>Règles pour la direction de l’esprit</em> (Rules for the Direction of the Mind)—as Rule One: “The objective of studies needs to be to direct the mind so that it bears solid and true judgments about everything that presents itself to it.” And pointed to academic specialization as <em>the</em> impediment to practicing Rule One: “In truth, it surprises me that almost everyone studies with greatest care the customs of men, the properties of the plants, the movements of the planets, the transformations of metals and other similar objects of study, while almost nobody reflects about sound judgment or about this universal wisdom, while all the other things need to be appreciated less for themselves than because they have a certain relationship to it. It is then not without reason that we pose this rule as the first among all, because nothing removes us further from the seeking of truth, than to orient our studies not towards this general goal, but towards the particular ones.”</p>
 +
<h3>You have seen four independent arguments for developing <em>knowledge</em> on <em>pragmatic foundation</em>.</h3>
 +
<p>See them as four ways of looking, as four projection planes corresponding to the edges of the <em><b>rectangle</b></em> from which my main <em><b>point</b></em> follows as "the dot on the i"; which is, as I said, not a statement of fact but a course of action and an invitation to act: To enable <em><b>knowledge</b></em>-based evolution of culture and society by instituting academic <em><b>transdisciplinarity</b></em>.</p>
 +
<p>Those four arguments are:</p>
 +
<ul>
 +
<li>(Pragmatic argument) it stands to reason that our species will quite surely be eliminated from the evolutionary scene unless we learn to use <em><b>information</b></em>  as guiding light, to provide us <em><b>know-what</b></em>; and vice-versa—(as I will demonstrate in a moment) developing <em><b>knowledge</b></em> on a <em><b>pragmatic foundation</b></em> will lead to comprehensive change of <em><b>course</b></em> in two natural and easy steps; the change that is <em>the</em> solution to "the huge problems now confronting us</li>
 +
<li>(Fundamental argument) the <em><b>ontological foundation</b></em> rests upon historical <em><b>beliefs</b></em> about knowledge, reality and human mind that have been <em>proven</em> wrong and disowned by the <em><b>giants</b></em> of science; developing <em><b>knowledge</b></em> on <em><b>pragmatic foundation</b></em> is a way to restore to <em><b>information</b></em> and <em><b>knowledge</b></em> the quality that is most closely associated with the word "academic"; and to <em>continue</em> academic evolution</li>
 +
<li>(Political and ethical argument) "the correspondence theory of truth" or <em><b>reification</b></em>, which underlies <em><b>ontological foundation</b></em>, is (needs to be <em><b>seen as</b></em>) an instrument of <em><b>power structure</b></em>; the change to <em><b>pragmatic foundation</b></em> is the way to liberation</li>
 +
<li>(IT argument) It is only when we see <em><b>information</b></em> as something we humans make for human purposes, and learn to tailor it to the most vital among those purposes—that we'll be able to (stop reproducing old <em><b>systems</b></em> in new technology, and) take advantage of the intrinsic properties of new information technology to provide us <em>new</em> collective capabilities; on which our future depends.</li>
 +
</ul>
 +
<h3>Comprehensive <em>paradigm</em> shift follows from this change of <em>foundation</em>.</h3>
 +
<p>You'll see it if you take another look at Holotopia ideogram; and see its four side edges as forming a "V" for (our conclusive) "victory" (over <em><b>power structure</b></em>); which stems from <em><b>design epistemology</b></em> as root or <em><b>foundation</b></em>.</p>
 +
<p>The bottom edge on the left, connecting <em><b>design epistemology</b></em> with <em><b>polyscopic methodology</b></em>, points to the first step that naturally follows from  <em><b>pragmatic foundation</b></em>—where we specify (or more precisely <em><b>federate</b></em>) what <em><b>information</b></em> needs to be like (which includes, once again, the methods by which information is created and structured, and the ways it needs to be used) by creating a <em><b>methodology</b></em>. </p>
 +
<p>The bottom edge on the right, connecting <em><b>design epistemology</b></em> with <em><b>knowledge federation</b></em> (as and up-to-date technology-enabled social process of <em><b>communication</b></em>), points to the other, parallel step that naturally follows from <em><b>pragmatic foundation</b></em>—where we (acknowledging that the use of new technology to publish or broadcast documents, and make the processes that have evolved based on the printing press as technology more effective, has given us overloads of documents that by many orders of magnitude exceed what any human mind can process, and made <em><b>knowledge</b></em> impossible) create processes and <em><b>systems</b></em> that <em>complement</em> document publishing by <em>structuring</em> <em><b>information</b></em>; and organize us in creating <em>meaning</em>; and restore the severed tie between information and action; or in a word—which <em><b>federate knowledge</b></em>.</p>
 +
<p>Look now at the horizontal line (in Holotopia ideogram) that connects <em><b>polyscopic methodology</b></em> with <em><b>knowledge federation</b></em>; which has "information" as label; and points to the <em>synergy</em> between those two <em><b>points</b></em> of action: It is only when we develop an academic i.e. well-founded and relied on theory of what <em><b>information</b></em> needs to be like—that we'll be able to develop the corresponding communication (both academically, and in real-life practice). And vice-versa: It is only when we have <em><b>knowledge federation</b></em> as process that we'll be able to create and evolve this theory; because <em><b>information</b></em> is by its nature <em><b>transdisciplinary</b></em>; its <em><b>informed</b></em> creation and use need to draw <em><b>insights</b></em> from a number of disciplines, and other traditions.</p>
 +
<h3>I gave this new <em>information</em> the name <em>holoscope</em>.</h3>
 +
<p>In order to highlight that the university institution <em>must</em> give us the people (not only the likes of the microscope and the telescope, but also) a way to see the world that is functional <em>by design</em>; which makes <em>us</em> functional. And I coined a suitable rule of thumb, <em><b>see things whole</b></em>, and called it <em><b>holoscope principle</b></em>; to pinpoint the distinguishing character of this new way to see the world.</p>
 +
<h3>We need the <em>holoscope</em>, alias <em><b>knowledge federation</b></em>, to make <em>knowledge</em> possible.</h3>
 +
<p>I explained in <em>Liberation</em>: "It may seem to me that the Earth is flat and I might even <em><b>believe</b></em> that; but people have traveled around the Earth; and others saw it from outer space. When I take account of evidence—I cannot but change my mind."</p>
 +
</div> </div>
 +
<div class="row">
 +
<div class="col-md-3"><h2>  </h2>
 +
<font size="+1"><em><b>Make things whole</b></em>.</font>
 +
<br>The <em><b>holotopia principle</b></em>.
 +
</div>
 +
<div class="col-md-7"><h2>Holotopia</h2>
 +
<p>Have a look now at the next level on Holotopia ideogram; see the edge connecting <em><b>polyscopic methodology</b></em> with <em><b>convenience paradox</b></em> on the left: When we adapt and apply (the method and the approach that distinguishes) <em><b>science</b></em> to life's core themes, and use it to orient our "pursuit of happiness" and inform our values—<em><b>wholeness</b></em> will be our value of choice; and the aim of our pursuits. And with such radical shift in orientation—the change of <em><b>course</b></em> will most naturally follow; as we'll evolve toward <em><b>wholeness</b></em>. And since guiding <em><b>insights</b></em> will be drawn (or <em><b>federated</b></em>) from all world traditions, <em>including</em> the disciplines of science—the continuities in cultural evolution too will be restored.</p>
 +
<p>Look now at the edge connecting <em><b>knowledge federation</b></em> with <em><b>systemic innovation</b></em> on the right: It is only when we'll have <em><b>knowledge federation</b></em> in place, as instituted social process that empowers us to configure (<em><b>prototypes</b></em> of) <em><b>systems</b></em> evidence-based—that we'll be able to adapt <em><b>systems</b></em> to their function; and to the exigencies of our new situation; and it is only when we'll have <em><b>knowledge federation</b></em> as technology-enabled communication infrastructure or "collective nervous system" that we'll be able to give the society's <em><b>systems</b></em> the faculty of vision they necessitate; to be viable or "sustainable" or <em><b>whole</b></em>.</p>
 +
<p>Look at the horizontal line connecting <em><b>convenience paradox</b></em> on the left and <em><b>systemic innovation</b></em> on the right; which has "action" as label: It is only we've become sufficiently <em><b>whole</b></em>, by pursuing "human development" or <em><b>wholeness</b></em> as value—that we'll have the moral strength to collaborate and co-create our <em><b>systems</b></em>; and it is only when our <em><b>systems</b></em> liberate us from struggle and competition, and afford us the free time—that we'll become capable of cultivating our <em>inner</em> <em><b>wholeness</b></em>.</p>
 +
<h3>I call this new <em>informed</em> action <em>holotopia</em>.</h3>
 +
<p>In order to highlight that it has all the "beyond belief" qualities of a utopian vision—in addition to this all-important <em>distinguishing</em> one: <em><b>Holotopia</b></em> is a <em>realistic</em> future scenario; the <em><b>belief</b></em> that we can continue to live <em>without</em> radical change is what's utopian.</p>
 +
<p>I coined a suitable rule of thumb, <em><b>make things whole</b></em>, and called it <em><b>holotopia principle</b></em>; to pinpoint the distinguishing character of this new way to act.</p>
 +
<p>And so to sum up: As soon as we develop <em><b>information</b></em> on a <em><b>pragmatic foundation</b></em>—it will be obvious that <em><b>information</b></em> must enable us to <em><b>see things whole</b></em>; and it is only when our <em><b>course</b></em> is illuminated by such <em><b>information</b></em>—that we'll be able to <em><b>make things whole</b></em>. </p>
 +
</div></div>
 
<div class="row">
 
<div class="row">
<div class="col-md-3"><h2>Right way to innovate</h2></div>
+
<div class="col-md-3"><h2>   </h2>
<div class="col-md-6"><h3>Democracy for the third millennium</h3>  
+
<font size="+1">– As long as a paradox is treated as a problem, it can never be dissolved.</font>
<p>
+
<br>
<blockquote>
+
(David Bohm,  <em>Problem and Paradox</em>.)
The task is nothing less than to build a new society and new institutions for it. With technology having become the most powerful change agent in our society, decisive battles will be won or lost by the measure of how seriously we take the challenge of restructuring the “joint systems” of society and technology.
+
</div>
</blockquote>
+
<div class="col-md-6"><h2>Dialog</h2>
Erich Jantsch reached and reported the above conclusion quite exactly a half-century ago – at the time when Doug Engelbart and his team were showing their demo.</p> </div>
+
<p>Whenever the way we think is part of the problem—and this is clearly the case with "the huge problems now confronting us"—what we are up against is not a problem but a paradox. And yet we must conform to the common way to think to be able to <em>communicate</em> with people; and <em>function</em> in society.</p>
<div class="col-md-3"> [[File:Jantsch.jpg]] <br><small><center>[[Erich Jantsch]]</center></small></div>
+
<p>To liberate myself sufficiently and be able to complete the <em><b>knowledge federation prototype</b></em>, I withdrew into a self-imposed quarantine; which lasted about five years. I am now <em><b>coming out</b></em>—and entering the next phase of this creative process; whose focus will be on communication, and collective action toward implementation and scaling. But I don't intend to come out of <em><b>holotopia</b></em>, where I've made myself a home during this period; why would I?</p>
 +
<h3>I invite you to meet me half way.</h3>  
 +
<p>Which is what the <em><b>dialog</b></em> is about: Instead of thinking and speaking as we've been socialized to—we'll <em><b>federate</b></em> a suitable new way or a <em>collection</em> of new and better ways to think and communicate; and we'll use them to explore the core themes of our lives and times; <em>and</em> we'll rebuild our "public sphere" or <em><b>collective mind</b></em> as we go along.</p>  
 +
<h3>The <em>dialog</em> is (a way to develop) our society's new 'headlights'.</h3>  
 +
<p>I'll illustrate a broad range of resources we'll bring together to inform the <em><b>dialog</b></em> by a single one—David Bohm's related legacy. You'll find this on BohmDialogue.org:  "Dialogue is really aimed at going into the whole thought process and changing the way the thought process occurs collectively. We haven't really paid much attention to thought as a process. We have engaged in thoughts, but we have only paid attention to the content, not to the process." This website further explains: "Dialogue, as David Bohm envisioned it, is a radically new approach to group interaction, with an emphasis on listening and observation, while suspending the culturally conditioned judgments and impulses that we all have. This unique and creative form of dialogue is necessary and urgent if humanity is to generate a coherent culture that will allow for its continued survival."</p>
 +
<p>What I have in mind is not a single <em><b>prototype</b></em> but a broad variety of them; and it is this <em>variety</em> that attracts me most strongly; <em><b>knowledge federation</b></em> has been <em><b>prototyping</b></em> <em><b>dialogs</b></em> all along; some of them are described in <em>Liberation</em> book; others are outlined in the concluding ("conversations" or "action") page of this website.</p>
 +
<p>In Chapter Nine of <em>Liberation</em> (which has "Liberation of Science" as title) I talk about the academic <em><b>dialog</b></em> in front of the (metaphorical) <em><b>mirror</b></em>; which is a self-reflective <em><b>dialog</b></em> whose goal to liberate us from the "objective observer" self-identity that now so narrowly confines academic thought and action; and to empower the <em><b>academia</b></em> to <em>act</em> in the guiding role it already has—and guide us the people to new thinking; and toward the emerging <em><b>paradigm</b></em>.</p>
 +
<p>I see the larger, public <em><b>dialog</b></em> as up-to-date alternative and antidote to the media "infotainment" or "spectacle"; which will document and facilitate the emergence of the <em>real</em> spectacle—the <em><b>elephant</b></em> that has all too long remained the room unnoticed. It is by giving voice to the people who <em>have</em> <em><b>knowledge</b></em>, and by using <em><b>knowledge</b></em> to elevate us collectively to simple and empowering <em><b>insights</b></em>—that the <em><b>dialog</b></em> will give the new media technologies the function they can and <em>must</em> have.</p>
 +
</div>  
 +
<div class="col-md-3 round-images"><h2>  </h2>
 +
[[File:Bohm.jpg]] <br><small><center>[[David Bohm]]</center></small></div>
 
</div>
 
</div>
<div class="row">
 
  <div class="col-md-3"></div>
 
<div class="col-md-7">
 
<p>We weave their stories together in the second book of Knowledge Federation trilogy, whose title is "Liberation" and subtitle "Democracy for the Third Millennium". Their stories <em>belong</em> together. The task to "build a new society and new institutions for it", which (as we'll see in a moment) Jantsch saw as necessary for making our society capable of responding to its new condition and issues, is (as we have just seen) also what's needed to use the new information technology in a good or right way.</p>
 
<p>But why this subtitle? Why "democracy"?</p>
 
  
<h3>Why "democracy"</h3>
+
<!-- XXXXXXX
<p>In the old [[paradigm|<em>paradigm</em>]], democracy is what it is – the free press, the elections, people's elected representatives. As long as that is in place, we have democracy <em>by definition</em>. </p>
 
<p> The nightmare scenario in this traditional conception of democracy is a dictatorship, where a dictator has taken away from the people the democracy and its instruments.</p>
 
<p>But there is another way – to consider democracy as a social system where the people are in control.</p>
 
<p>The nightmare scenario in this systemic conception of democracy is what Engelbart showed on his second slide – it's the condition where <em>nobody</em> is in control, because the system is lacking whatever is needed for <em>anyone</em> to be able to control it!</p>
 
<p>A dictator is a smaller matter – he might be ousted; he might come to his senses. But when the control is physically or <em>systemically</em> impossible – then we really have a problem!</p>
 
  
<h3>First things first</h3>
+
need to <em><b>see</b></em> ourselves <em><b>as</b></em> and part of ; ethics—the new, <em><b>holotopian</b></em> one—demands that we carefully investigate just how much; and take precautions. Nobody—no profession or institution—is exempt; not even <em>science</em>. </p>  
<p>Jantsch got his doctorate in astrophysics in 1951, when he was only 22. Recognizing, like Doug, our society's new and growing needs, he soon got engaged in a study (for the OECD in Paris) of what was then called "technological planning" – i.e. of the strategies for developing and deploying technology.</p>
+
<p>When Berger and Luckmann told us in <em>Social Construction of Reality</em> that "because they are historical products of human activity, all socially constructed universes change, and the change is brought about by the concrete actions of human beings"—their aim was to prepare us to hear their <em>main</em> <em><b>point</b></em>—show us what makes us the people <em>incapable</em> of changing our "socially constructed universes"; even when their change is overdue and <em>immanent</em>. Societies have a special category of people, they explained, who are  suitably institutionalized; whose prerogative is to define "reality" for us. Berger and Luckmann called them "universal experts"; and explained that "[t]his does not mean that they claim to know everything, but rather that they claim to know the ultimate significance of what everybody knows and does. Other men may continue to stake out particular sectors of reality, but they claim expertise in the ultimate definitions of reality as such." And definitions of "reality", <em>Social Construction of Reality</em> explained, is <em>the</em> instrument for <em>inhibiting</em> social change: "Habitualization and institutionalization in themselves limit the flexibility of human actions. Institutions tend to persist unless they become ‘problematic’. Ultimate legitimations inevitably strengthen this tendency. The more abstract the legitimations are, the less likely they are to be modified in accordance with changing pragmatic exigencies. If there is a tendency to go on as before anyway, the tendency is obviously strengthened by having excellent reasons for doing so. This means that institutions may persist even when, to an outside observer, they have lost their original functionality or practicality. One does certain things not because they work, but because they are right – right, that is, in terms of the ultimate definitions of reality promulgated by the universal experts."</p>  
<p>So when The Club of Rome was to be initiated (fifty years ago at the time of this writing), as an international think tank whose mission was to provide our society the guiding light it needed, Jantsch was chosen to put the ball in play by giving a keynote speech.</p>
+
<p>In effect, what Berger and Luckmann left us in <em>Social Construction of Reality</em> is a most useful view of the <em><b>power structure</b></em>—its use of "social construction of reality"; which they did by pointing to "a profound affinity" that exists between "those with an interest in maintaining established power positions" (think of the kings in Galilei's time) and "the personnel administering monopolistic traditions of universe-maintenance" (think of the clergy): "Historically, of course, most of these monopolies have been religious."</p>
 +
<h3>I let you reflect on how this bears upon the parallel between Galilei in house arrest and what is happening in <em>our</em> time.</h3>
 +
<p>And how this bears upon the most interesting relationship between science and religion.</p>
  
<h3>How systemic innovation was conceived</h3>
+
-------
<p>With a doctorate in physics, it was not difficult to Jantsch to put two and two together and see what needed to be done.</p>
 
<p>If our civilization is "on a collision course with nature" (as The Club of Rome diagnosed), then (as Engelbart metaphorically put it) its headlights and its steering and braking controls must be dysfunctional. </p>
 
<p>So right after The Club of Rome's first meeting in Rome, Jantsch gathered a group of creative leaders and researchers in Bellagio, Italy, to put together the necessary insights and methods. The result was a [[systemic innovation|<em>systemic innovation</em>]] methodology. </p>
 
<p>By calling it "rational creative action", Jantsch gave a message that is central for us: There are many ways to be creative; but if our creative action is to be <em>rational</em> – then here is what must be done... </p>
 
<p>Rational creative action begins with forecasting, which explores future scenario, and ends with [[systemic innovation|<em>systemic innovation</em>]], as a way to steer toward the most <em>desirable</em> future.
 
<blockquote>We are living in a world of change, voluntary change as well as the change brought about by mounting pressures outside our control. Gradually, we are learning to distinguish between them. We engineer change voluntarily by pursuing growth targets along lines of policy and action which tend to ridgidify and thereby preserve the structures inherent in our social systems and their institutions. We do not, in general, really try to change the systems themselves. However, the very nature of our conservative, linear action for change puts increasing pressure for structural change on the systems, and in particular, on institutional patterns.</blockquote></p>
 
  
<h3>The emerging role of the university</h3>
+
<p>I coined <em><b>academia</b></em> as <em><b>keyword</b></em>, and defined it as "institutionalized academic tradition"—to help me clarify the word "institute" in my proposal. We use the adjective "academic" to legitimate what we do at universities—by projecting it as being built on the aims, values and legacy of the the tradition that Plato began twenty-four centuries ago in Athens; when he founded Academia. It is no secret that Plato's primary aim was to create general ideas or <em><b>insights</b></em> about <em><b>know-what</b></em> or values; and more generally to explore life's core themes through <em><b>logos</b></em>—as we've done by creating the <em><b>five insights</b></em>; and that the core academic value—to build <em><b>knowledge</b></em> on evidence—is what I've been appealing to.</p>
<p>If [[systemic innovation|<em>systemic innovation</em>]] is the new capability that our institutions and our civilization at large now require, to be able to steer a viable course into the future –  then who (that is, what institution) will foster this capability? Jantsch concluded that the university (institution) will have to be the answer. And that to be able to fulfill this role, the university itself will need to change its own system.
+
<h3>Correcting the fundamental error is <em>the</em> academic job.</h3>  
<blockquote>[T]he university should make structural changes within itself toward a new purpose of enhancing the society’s capacity for continuous self-renewal. It may have to become a political institution, interacting with government and industry in the planning and designing of society’s systems, and controlling the outcomes of the introduction of technology into those systems. This new leadership role of the university should provide an integrated approach to world systems, particularly the ‘joint systems’ of society and technology.</blockquote>
+
<p>As soon as we've corrected the error—by <em><b>founding</b></em> <em><b>information</b></em> on pragmatic grounds, by conceiving it and handling it as a human-made thing for human purposes—we are bound to recreate or <em><b>federate</b></em> also the method, and create a <em><b>methodology</b></em> (see <em><b>polyscopic methodology</b></em> stemming from <em><b>design epistemology</b></em> on the left); and of course also the social process, or communication (<em><b>knowledge federation</b></em> stems from <em><b>design epistemology</b></em> on the right).</p>
In 1969  Jantsch spent a semester at the MIT, writing a 150-page report about the future of the university, from which the above excerpt was taken, and lobbying with the faculty and the administration to begin to develop this new way of thinking and working in academic practice.</p>
 
  
<h3>The evolutionary vision</h3>
 
<p>Even this brief sketch of Erich Jantsch's vision and legacy would be unjustly incomplete, if we would not mention evolution.</p>
 
<p>Jantsch had at least two strong reasons for this interest. The first one was his insight – or indeed lived experience – that the basic institutions and other societal systems were too immense and inert to be change by human action. And that changing the way the systems evolve provided a whole other degree of impact.</p>
 
<p>Another reason Jantsch had for this interest was that he saw it as a genuinely new paradigm in science, and an emerging scientific frontier.
 
<blockquote>
 
With Ervin Laszlo we may say that having addressed ourselves to the understanding and mastering of change, and subsequently to the understanding of order of change, or process, what we now need is an understanding of order of process (or order of order of change) – in other words, an understanding of evolution.
 
</blockquote> </p>
 
<p>Jantsch spent the last decade of his life living in Berkeley, teaching sporadic seminars at U.C. Berkeley and writing prolifically. Ironically, the man who with such passion and insight lobbied that the university should take on and adapt to its vitally important new role in our society's evolution – never found a home and sustenance for his work at the university. </p>
 
<p>In 1980 Jantsch published two books about  "the evolutionary paradigm", and passed away after a short illness, only 51 years old. In his will he asked that his ashes be tossed into the ocean, "the cradle of evolution".</p>
 
</div>
 
</div>
 
 
-------
 
-------
<div class="row">
 
<div class="col-md-3"><h2>Right use of knowledge</h2></div>
 
<div class="col-md-6"><h3>Giving the society its guiding light</h3>
 
<p>
 
<blockquote>
 
The human race is hurtling toward a disaster. It is absolutely necessary to find a way to change course.</blockquote>
 
[[Aurelio Peccei]] – the co-founder, first president and the motor power behind The Club of Rome – wrote this in 1980, in One Hundred Pages for the Future, based on this think tank's first decade of research.</p>
 
<p>Peccei was an unordinary man. In 1944, as a member of Italian Resistance, he was captured by the Gestapo and tortured for six months without revealing his contacts. Here is how he commented his imprisonment only 30 days upon being released:
 
<blockquote>
 
My 11 months of captivity were one of the most enriching periods of my life, and I regard myself truly fortunate that it all happened. Being strong as a bull, I resisted very rough treatment for many days. The most vivid lesson in dignity I ever learned was that given in such extreme strains by the humblest and simplest among us who had no friends outside the prison gates to help them, nothing to rely on but their own convictions and humanity. I began to be convinced that lying latent in man is a great force for good, which awaits liberation. I had a confirmation that one can remain a free man in jail; that people can be chained but that ideas cannot.
 
</blockquote></p></div>
 
<div class="col-md-3">[[File:Peccei.jpg]]<br><small><center>[[Aurelio Peccei]]</center></small></div>
 
</div>
 
<div class="row">
 
<div class="col-md-3"></div>
 
<div class="col-md-7">
 
<p> Peccei was also an unordinarily able business leader. While serving as the director of Fiat's operations in Latin America (and securing that the cars were there not only sold but also produced) Peccei established Italconsult, a consulting and financing agency to help the developing countries catch up with the rest. When the Italian technology giant Olivetti was in trouble, Peccei was brought in as the president, and he managed to turn its fortunes around. And yet the question that most occupied Peccei was a much larger one – the condition of our civilization as a whole; and what we may need to do to take charge of this condition.</p>
 
 
<h3>How to change course</h3>
 
<p>In 1977, in "The Human Quality", Peccei formulated his answer as follows:
 
<blockquote>
 
Let me recapitulate what seems to me the crucial question at this point of the human venture. Man has acquired such decisive power that his future depends essentially on how he will use it. However, the business of human life has become so complicated that he is culturally unprepared even to understand his new position clearly. As a consequence, his current predicament is not only worsening but, with the accelerated tempo of events, may become decidedly catastrophic in a not too distant future. The downward trend of human fortunes can be countered and reversed only by the advent of a new humanism essentially based on and aiming at man’s cultural development, that is, a substantial improvement in human quality throughout the world.
 
</blockquote></p>
 
<p>And to leave no doubt about this point, he framed it even more succinctly:
 
<blockquote>
 
The future will either be an inspired product of a great cultural revival, or there will be no future.
 
</blockquote>
 
On the morning of the last day of his life (March 14, 1984), while working on "The Club of Rome: Agenda for the End of the Century", Peccei dictated to his secretary from a hospital bed that
 
<blockquote>
 
human development is the most important goal.
 
</blockquote>
 
</p>
 
<p>Peccei's and Club of Rome's core insight and advice (that the focus should not be on problems but on the condition or the "problematique" as a whole) tends to be ignored not only by "climate deniers", but also by activists and believers. </p>
 
</div></div>
 
----
 
<div class="row">
 
<div class="col-md-3"><h2 style="color:red">Reflection</h2></div>
 
<div class="col-md-7"><h3>Connecting the dots</h3>
 
<p> </p>
 
<p>[[File:Elephant.jpg]]<br><small><center>It remains to connect the dots.</center></small></p>
 
<p> </p>
 
<p>Already connecting Peccei's core insight with the one of Heisenberg will bring us a step further.</p>
 
<p>Peccei observed that our future depends on our ability to revive <em>culture</em>, and identified improving the human quality is the key strategic goal. Heisenberg explained that the "narrow and rigid" way of looking at the world that the 19th century science left us was damaging to culture  – and in particular its parts on which the human quality depended. And that the "dissolution" of this rigid frame was due for intrinsic or academic reasons.</p>
 
<p>Connecting the ideas of Jantsch and Engelbart is even easier, they are just two sides of a single coin. The new information technology can give us the vision we need – provided that [[systemic innovation|<em>systemic innovation</em>]] is in place, to reconfigure our communication. And if we should also be able to steer – [[systemic innovation|<em>systemic innovation</em>]] must be there to give us control.</p>
 
<p>Our key task, our natural next step, is an institution that can evolve our knowledge work – and use the resulting knowledge to steer the evolution of all other systems as well.</p>   
 
</div></div>
 
-----
 
<div class="row">
 
<div class="col-md-3"><h2><em>Our</em> story</h2></div>
 
  
<div class="col-md-7"><h3>Engelbart's dream came true</h3>
+
Let me begin with what I see as Bohm's main point: Our thinking and speech are not automatically "free" when physical forms of censorship and compulsion are removed; we live in a web of human relationships—and subtle suggestions in body language, or even just simply <em>incomprehension</em>, can suffice to keep us "in the box".</p>  
<p>Less than two weeks after Engelbart passed away, in July 2013, his wish to see his ideas taken up by an academic community came true!</p>  
+
<h3>Bohm conceived his "dialogue" as a means of collective liberation.</h3>  
<p>And the community – the International Society for the Systems Sciences – couldn't be better chosen.</p>  
+
<p>As next-generation modern physicist (a student of Oppenheimer and younger friend and protege of Einstein), who extended the paradigm of new physics to studies of creativity and communication, Bohm may well serve as an icon for the line of work we are about to develop. "The point is that this notion of dialogue and common consciousness suggests that there is some way out of our collective difficulties" is the first of a number of wonderful quotations of Bohm
<p>At this society's 57th yearly conference, in Haiphong Vietnam, the ISSS began to self-organize according to Engelbart's principles – by taking advantage of new media technology, to become collectively intelligent. Engelbart's name was often heard.</p>
 
</div></div>
 
<div class="row">
 
<div class="col-md-3"></div>
 
<div class="col-md-6">
 
<h3>Jantsch's legacy lives on</h3>
 
<p>Alexander Laszlo was the ISSS President who initiated the mentioned development.</p>
 
<p>Alexander was practically born into systemic innovation. His father Ervin, himself a creative leader in the systems community, pointed out out that our choice was “evolution or extinction” in the very title of one of his books.  So Alexander made the obvious choice – he became a leader of guided evolution. </p></div>
 
<div class="col-md-3 round-images">[[File:Laszlo.jpg]]<br><small><center>[[Alexander Laszlo]]</center></small></div>
 
</div>
 
<div class="row">
 
<div class="col-md-3"></div>
 
<div class="col-md-7">
 
<p>Alexander’s PhD advisor was Hasan Özbekhan, who wrote the first 150-page systemic innovation theory, as part of the Bellagio team initiated by Jantsch. He later worked closely in the circle of Bela H. Banathy, who for a couple of decades held the torch of systemic innovation in the systems community.</p>
 
  
<h3>We came to build a bridge</h3>
 
<p>As serendipity would have it, at the point where the International Society for the Systems Sciences was having its 2012 meeting in San Jose, at the end of which Alexander was appointed as the society's president, Knowledge Federation was having its presentation of The Game-Changing Game (a generic, practical way to change institutions and other large systems) practically next door, at the Bay Area Future Salon in Palo Alto.</p>
 
<p>Louis Klein – a senior member of the systems community – attended our presentation, and approached us afterwards saying "I will introduce you to some people".  He introduced us to Alexander Laszlo and his team.</p>
 
<p>"Systemic thinking is fine", we wrote in an email, "but what about systemic <em>doing</em>?" "Systemic doing is exactly what we are about", they reassured us. So we joined them in Haiphong.</p>
 
<p> "We are here to build a bridge", was our opening line at our presentation in Vietnam, " between two communities of interest, and two domains – systems science, and knowledge media research." The title of our contribution was "Bootstrapping Social-Systemic Evolution". As a springboard story we told about Erich Jantsch and Doug Engelbart, who needed each other to fulfill their missions. And how they never met, in spite of living and working so close to each other. </p>
 
  
<h3>Knowledge Federation was conceived by an act of bootstrapping</h3>
+
-------
<p>Knowledge Federation was initiated in 2008 by a group of academic knowledge media researchers and developers. At our first meeting, in the Inter University Center Dubrovnik (which as an international federation of universities perfectly fitted our purpose), we realized that the technology that our colleagues were developing could "make this a better world". But that to help realize that potential, we would need to organize ourselves differently. Our second meeting in 2010, whose title was "Self-Organizing Collective Mind", brought together a multidisciplinary community of researchers and professionals. The participants were invited to see themselves not as professionals pursuing a career in a certain field, but as cells in a collective mind – and to begin to self-organize accordingly. </p>
 
<p>What resulted was Knowledge Federation as a [[prototypes|<em>prototype</em>]] of a [[transdiscipline|<em>transdiscipline</em>]]. The idea is natural and simple: a trandsdisciplinary community of researchers and other professionals and stakeholders gather to create a systemic [[prototypes|<em>prototype</em>]] – which can be an insight or a systemic solution for knowledge work or in any specific domain of interest. In this latter case, this community will usually practice [[bootstrapping|<em>bootstrapping</em>]], by (to use Alexander's personal motto) "being the systems we want to see in the world". This simple idea secures that the knowledge from the participating domain is represented in the [[prototypes|<em>prototype</em>]] and vice-versa – that the challenges that the [[prototypes|<em>prototype</em>]] may present are taken back to the specific communities of interest and resolved. </p>
 
<p>At our third workshop, which was organized at Stanford University within the Triple Helix IX international conference (whose focus was on the collaboration between university, business and government, and specifically on IT innovation as its enabler) – we pointed to [[systemic innovation|<em>systemic innovation</em>]] as an emerging and necessary new trend; and as (the kind of organization represented by) [[knowledge federation|<em>knowledge federation</em>]] as its enabler. </p>
 
<p></p>
 
<p>[[File:BCN2011.jpg]] <br><small><center>Paddy Coulter (director of Oxford Global Media and former director of Oxford University Reuters School of Journalism), Mei Lin Fung (founder of the Program for the Future) and David Price (co-founder of Debategraph and of Global Sensemaking) speaking at our 2011 workshop "An Innovation Ecosystem for Good Journalism" in Barcelona.</center></small></p>
 
<p>At our workshop in Barcelona, later that year, media creatives joined the forces with innovators in journalism, to create a [[prototypes|<em>prototype</em>]] for the journalism of the future. </p>
 
<p>A series of events followed – in which the [[prototypes|<em>prototypes</em>]] shown in Federation through Applications were developed.</p>
 
  
<h3>Knowledge Federation is a federation</h3>
 
<p>Throughout its existence, and especially in this early period, Knowledge Federation was careful to make close ties with the communities of interest in its own domain – so that our own body of knowledge could be federated and not improvised. </p>
 
<p>When our workshops were in Palo Alto, Doug and Karin Engelbart joined us to hear and comment on our presentation in Mei Lin Fung's house. Bill and Roberta English – Doug's right and left hand during the Demo days – were with us all the time.</p>
 
  
<h3>The Lighthouse</h3>
+
<p>We have now come to <em>the</em> important step <em><b>three</b></em>; which takes us from information to action; which is represented  by the second horizontal line in the Holotopia ideogram. The nature or the course of the "action" here—to <em><b>make things whole</b></em>—follows from the <em><b>five points</b></em>; and defines the <em><b>holotopia</b></em> initiative.</p>
<p>From a number of [[prototypes|<em>prototypes</em>]] that resulted from our collaboration with the systems scientists, we highlight only one, The Lighthouse.</p>
+
<h3>What <em>are</em> those "things" we need to make <em>whole</em>?</h3>  
<p> </p>  
+
<p>The first thing you want to <em><b>know</b></em> about <em><b>wholeness</b></em> is that it is all-inclusive: <em>We</em> cannot be <em><b>whole</b></em> unless our social and natural environments are <em><b>whole</b></em> and vice versa. Which is the reason why this "action" line is connecting <em><b>convenience paradox</b></em> on its left with <em><b>systemic innovation</b></em> on its right. The <em><b>point</b></em> of the former being that there is a <em>comprehensively</em> better way to be human—"better" in <em>all</em> of its important dimensions including emotions, ethics, physical wellbeing <em>and</em> creativity; and the point of the latter being that there is a <em>radically</em> better way to organize us as society—and dramatically enhance the effectiveness of our work, the flourishing of our culture and importantly, the benefits we draw from our creative efforts of various kinds. </p>
[[File:Lighthouse2.jpg]]<br><small><center>The initial Lighthouse design team, at the ISSS59 conference in Berlin where it was formed. The light was subsequently added by our communication design team, in compliance with their role.</center></small>  
+
<h3>The point of it all is that those two realms of improvement opportunities depend on each other.</h3>  
<p> </p>  
+
<p>It is only when we've reconfigured our <em><b>systems</b></em> that the pursuit of inner <em><b>wholeness</b></em> will truly be possible; and it is only when we've grown insightful and wise enough to collaborate and self-organize instead of competing—that we'll be able to reconfigure our <em><b>systems</b></em>.</p>
<p>If you'll imagine stray ships struggling on stormy seas, then the purpose of The Lighthouse is to show the way to a safe harbor – where  [[systemic innovation|<em>systemic innovation</em>]] is the chosen new way to steer, and to become capable of steering. </p>
+
<h3>I let the <em>holotopia principle</em> point, by its simplicity, to the difference that <em>transdisciplinarity</em> will make.</h3>  
<p>In the context of the International Society for the Systems Sciences as an academic community, The Lighthouse extends its conventional repertoire of activities (conferences, articles, books...) by a single new capability – to inform the public. The task of The Lighthouse is to [[knowledge federation|<em>federate</em>]] the answer to a single key question: Is [[systemic innovation|<em>systemic innovation</em>]] really necessary? Or is it enough to rely on "the invisible hand" of the market?</p>  
+
<p>Have a look at the all-important transition from step <em><b>two</b></em> to step <em><b>three</b></em>: The <em><b>paradigm</b></em> change will happen (only) when we the people elevate ourselves to the (metaphorical) <em><b>mountain</b></em> top from where we can jointly see and follow this new direction.</p>
<p>You will notice that an answer to this question is needed to give all other work in the community the impact it needs to have.</p>  
+
<h3>Only <em>science</em> can achieve that.</h3>
</div>
+
<p>The <em><b>paradigm</b></em> change will not be possible unless step <em><b>two</b></em> has been performed with the esteem and credibility that (only) the brand "science" enjoys. Which brings us back to this proposal—to establish academic work on a <em>different</em> foundation, which <em><b>design epistemology</b></em> and Modernity ideogram point to; and develop on this <em><b>foundation</b></em> <em>new</em> methods and <em>different</em> social processes of communication—which <em><b>polyscopic methodology</b></em> and <em><b>knowledge federation</b></em> as <em><b>insights</b></em> point to.</p>  
</div>
+
<p>Today we rely on humanities and social sciences to tell us what we need to know about ourselves and our society.</p>
 +
<h3>How suitable is their <em>system</em> for this all-important role?</h3>  
 +
<p>In 2009, while on sabbatical in San Francisco Bay Area (to hand-pick a team for <em><b>knowledge federation</b></em>'s second workshop in Dubrovnik that would represent the state of the art in academic and other domains that are necessary for composing the <em><b>transdiscipline</b></em>), I had a memorable meeting with Doug and Karen Engelbart in Doug's SRI office; to which I contributed some delicious locally grown tangerines and a draft of the statement-of-purpose article for <em><b>knowledge federation</b></em> I was then editing, which I dedicated to Doug. This article was subsequently published online within the CEUR Workshop Proceeding series. Here too I clarified my call to action—to add an evolutionary organ to the academic <em><b>system</b></em>—by sharing <em><b>vignettes</b></em>; which illustrated how this <em><b>system</b></em> is <em>currently</em> evolving.  It is tempting to just copy from it and paste, and I won't resist the temptation:</p>
 +
<p>‟After the Second World War sociology grew dramatically, and by the 1980s the number of sociologists and sociology publications increased more than five-fold. At the same time, sociology divided itself into a number of regional and methodological sub-specialties, which were rapidly losing contact with one another.</p>
 +
<p>The disadvantages of this style of organization were easily recognized, and in 1989 a conference was organized by two leading researchers, European Pierre Bourdieu and American James Coleman, to explore the possibility of bridging the dividing lines and putting sociology back together. In the epilog to the book that resulted from this conference, titled ‛On the possibility of a field of world sociology’,  Bourdieu argued that ‛the progress of scientific reason in sociology hinges crucially on a transformation of the social organization of scientific production and communication.’ His argumentation is insightful and worth quoting:</p>  
 +
<p>‛Max Weber (1978) reminds us that, in the art of warfare, the greatest progress originated not in technical inventions but in transformations of the social organization of the warriors, as for instance in the case of the invention of the Macedonian phalanx. One may, along the same line, ask whether a transformation of the social organization of scientific production and circulation and, in particular, of the forms of communication and exchange through which logical and empirical control is carried out would not be capable of contributing
 +
to the progress of scientific reason in sociology—and to do so more powerfully than the refinement of new technologies of measurement or the endless warnings and ‘presuppositional’ discussions of epistemologists and methodologists. I have in mind here a scientific politique—that is, policy and politics—whose goal would be to foster scientific communication and debate across the many divisions associated with rational traditions and with the fragmentation of social science into empirical subspecialties, theoretical paradigms, and methodological schools.’ </p>
 +
<p>The same reasoning needs to be taken further. While Bourdieu’s concern was the progress of <em>sociology</em>, the problematic nature of fragmentation of sociology becomes <em>spectacular</em> when considered in the context of <em>society</em>: Its consequence is that our society no longer has <em>the sociology</em> to inform it about its problems!</p>  
 +
<p>The Club of Rome was organized to supplement this all-important role.</p>
 +
<p>But The Club of Rome lacked the mandate to incite action—which the instituted or "official" sciences (at least in theory) enjoy.</p>

Latest revision as of 13:32, 12 January 2024

– I cannot understand how anyone can make use of the frameworks of reference developed in the eighteenth and nineteenth century in order to understand the transformation into the post-traditional cosmopolitan world we live in today.


(Ulrich Beck, The Risk Society and Beyond, 2000)

To orient ourselves in the "post-traditional world" (where traditional recipes no longer work), to step beyond the "risk society" (where existential risks lurk in the dark, because we can neither comprehend nor resolve them by thinking as we did when we created them)—we must create new ways to think and speak; but how?

Here a technical idea—truth by convention—is key; I adopted it or more precisely federated it from Willard Van Orman Quine; who qualified the transition to "truth by convention" as a sign of maturing that the sciences have manifested in their evolution; so why not use it to mature our pursuit of knowledge in general? Truth by convention is the notion of truth that is usual in mathematics: Let x be... then... It is meaningless to argue whether x "really is" as defined.

Truth by convention gives us a way to create an independent reference system.

Independent, that is, from the beliefs of our traditions; and from the social "reality" or the world we live in. Truth by convention empowers us to (create information that makes it possible to) reflect about them critically.

Keywords are concepts defined by convention.

Years ago, when this work was still in infancy and before I read about guided evolution of society, I coined a pair of keywords—tradition and design—to explain the nature of the error I am inviting you to correct; the one the Modernity ideogram is pointing to. Tradition and design are two ways of thinking and being in the world; and two distinct ways of evolving culturally and socially—corresponding to the two ways in which wholeness can result: Tradition relies on spontaneous evolution (where things are adjusted to each other through many generations of use); design relies on accountability and deliberate action. Design means thinking and acting as a designer would, when designing a technical object such as a car; and making sure that the result is functional (it can take people places), and also safe, affordable, appealing etc. The point of this definition is that when tradition can no longer be relied on—design must be used.

So let us right away take a decisive step toward the design thinking and being by turning "reification" into a keyword; and explain that reification is something the traditional cultures did and had to do (to compel everyone to comply to the traditional order of things without needing to understand it); and use the Modernity ideogram to explain why we must learn to avoid reification (because it hinders us from designing i.e. from deliberately seeing things whole and making things whole).

You may now understand the error I am inviting you to correct as something (only) the traditional people could have made; and the Modernity ideogram as depicting a point of transition: We are no longer traditional; and we are not yet designing; we live in a (still haphazard) transition from one stable way of evolving and being in the world, which is no longer functioning—and another one, which is not yet in place.

Reification is the traditional approach to communication.

And to concept definition in particular. See the approach to concept definition I have just introduced as a way or the way to avoid reification.

When I define for instance "culture" by convention, and turn it into a keyword, I am not saying what culture "really is"; I am creating a way of looking at an endlessly complex real thing—and projecting it, as it were, onto some judiciously chosen plane; so that we may talk about it and comprehend it in simple and clear terms, by seeing it from a specific angle; and I'm inviting you, the reader, to see culture as it's been defined.

Defined by convention, institutions like "science" or "religion" are not reified as what they currently are—but defined as means to an end i.e. in terms of a certain specific function or a collection of functions in the system of society; so that we may adapt the actual institutions to those functions.

Keyword creation is a form for linguistic and institutional recycling.

Often but not always, keywords are adopted from the repertoire of a frontier thinker, an academic field or a cultural tradition; they then enable us to federate what's been comprehended or experienced in some of our culture's dislodged compartments.

Keywords enable us to "stand on the shoulders of giants" and see further.

Paradigm

I use the keyword paradigm informally, to point to a societal and cultural order of things as a whole; and to explain the strategy for solving "the huge problems now confronting us" and continuing cultural evolution I am proposing to implement—which is to enable the paradigm to change; from the one we presently live in, which I'll characterize as materialism—all the way to holotopia.

Elephant.jpg

The purpose of knowledge federation is to (enable us to) connect the dots.

I use the keyword elephant as a nickname for holotopia when I want to be even more informal—and highlight that it's a coherent order of things where everything depends on everything else, as the organs of an elephant do.

I also use elephant as metaphor and keyword to motivate the strategy I have just mentioned by pointing to a paradox: Paradigms resist change; you just can't fit an elephant's ear onto a mouse! And yet comprehensive change, of a paradigm as a whole, can be natural and effortless—when the conditions for it are ripe.

We live in such a time.

When all the data points that are needed for constituting an entirely different paradigm are already there; so that all that remains is—to connect the dots; or more accurately—to restore our collective capability to connect the dots.

Which is what knowledge federation proposal is all about.

The elephant was in the room when the 20th century’s giants wrote or spoke; but we failed to see him because of the jungleness of our information; and because of disciplinary and cultural fragmentation; and because our thinking and communication are still as the traditions shaped them. We heard the giants talk about a ‘thick snake’, a ‘fan’, a ‘tree-trunk’ and a ‘rope’, often in Greek or Latin; they didn’t make sense and we ignored them. How differently our information fares when we understand that it was the ‘trunk’, the ‘ear’, the ‘leg’ and the ‘tail’ of a vast exotic ‘animal’ they were talking about; whose very existence we ignore!

Transdisciplinarity, as prototyped by knowledge federation is also a paradigm—in information; which will empower us to connect the dots and manifest the comprehensive paradigm. You may now comprehend this call to action (to institute transdisciplinarity or knowledge federation academically) as a call to mobilize the power that our society has invested in science and in the university institution at large—to design the process and be the process by which the society's 'candle headlights' will be turned into the real thing. This process must be designed because no matter how hard we try—we'll never create the lightbulb by incrementally improving the candle. To substitute 'the lightbulb' for 'the candle' we must design a suitable process; which (a moment of thought might be necessary to see why) will have to include a prototype.

Knowledge federation is both the process and the prototype.

Science enabled the existing paradigm to come about; transdisciplinarity must be in place to enable us to transition to the next one.

I use the keyword paradigm also more formally, as Thomas Kuhn did—to point to

  • a different way to conceive a domain of interest, which
  • resolves the reported anomalies and
  • opens a new frontier to research and development.

Only here the domain of interest is not a conventional academic field, where paradigm changes have been relatively common—but information and knowledge and cultural evolution at large.

In what follows I will structure my case for transdisciplinarity alias knowledge federation as a paradigm proposal—i.e. as a reconception of information and other categories on which our evolutionary course depends; and show how this reconception enables us to resolve the anomalies that thwart our efforts to comprehend and handle the core or pivotal themes of our lives and times; and how those anomalies are resolved by the proposed approach; and how this reconception opens up a creative frontier closely similar to the one that began to blossom after Galilei's and Descartes' time—where the next-generation scientists will be empowered to be creative in ways and degrees as the founders of Scientific Revolution were creative; and as the condition of their world will necessitate.

– Some years ago I was struck by the large number of falsehoods that I had accepted as true in my childhood, and by the highly doubtful nature of the whole edifice that I had subsequently based on them. I realized that it was necessary, once in the course of my life, to demolish everything completely and start again right from the foundations if I wanted to establish anything at all in the sciences that was stable and likely to last.
(René Descartes, Meditations on First Philosophy, 1641)

Logos

The Liberation book opens with the iconic image of Galilei in house arrest—at the point in humanity's evolution when a sweeping paradigm shift was about to take place; the book then draws a parallel between that moment in history and the time we live in. So let me right away turn "mind" into a keyword; and use it to point out that liberating the way we use the mind and allowing it to change is—and has always been—the way to enable the paradigm to change; or the way to change course. I give the keyword mind a more general meaning meaning than this word usually has; closer to its French cognate "esprit", as Descartes used it in the title of his unfinished work Règles pour la direction de l'esprit (Rules for the Direction of the Mind). Indeed (as I pointed out in Liberation book's ninth chapter, which has "Liberation of Science" as title)—the course of action I am proposing can be seen as the "it's about time" continuation of Descartes' all-important project.

Transdisciplinarity, as prototyped by knowledge federation, is envisioned as a liberated academic space where the next-generation scientists will be empowered to be creative in ways as Galilei and Descartes were creative—and "start again right from the foundations"; and design the way(s) they do science (instead of blindly inheriting them from tradition).

I also coin logos as keyword; and erect is as banner demarcating this frontier, and inviting to the next scientific revolution; where we'll again liberate the mind (from compliance to "logic" as fixed and eternal "right" way to think; and from the suffix "logy" which we use to name scientific disciplines—and suggest that they embody logos; and compel us to comply to the hereditary procedures they embody). Logos as 'banner' invites (next-generation) scientists to revive an age-old quest—for the correct way to use the mind; by pointing to its historicity (i.e. that it did change in the past and will change again).

"In the beginning was logos and logos was with God and logos was God." To Hellenic thinkers logos was the principle according to which God organized the world; which makes it possible to us humans to comprehend the world correctly—provided we align with it the way we use our minds. How exactly we may achieve that—there the opinions differed; and gave rise to a multitude of philosophical schools and traditions.

But "logos" faired poorly in the post-Hellenic world; neither Latin nor the modern languages offered a suitable translation. For about a millennium our European ancestors believed that logos had been revealed to us humans by God's own son; and considered questioning that to be the deadly sin of pride, and a heresy.

The scientific revolution unfolded as a reaction to earlier theological or "teleological" explanations of natural phenomena; as Noam Chomsky pointed out in his University of Oslo talk "The machine, the ghost, and the limits of understanding", its founders insisted that a "scientific" explanation must not rely on a 'ghost' acting within 'the machine'; that the natural phenomena must be explained in ways that are completely comprehensible to the mind—as one would explain the functioning of a clockwork.

Initially, science and church or tradition coexisted side by side—the latter providing the know-what and the former the know-how; but then right around mid-19th century, when Darwin stepped on the scene, the way to use the mind that science brought along discredited the mindset of tradition; and it appeared to educated masses that science was the answer; that science was the right way to knowledge.

So here is my point—what I wanted to tell you by reviving this old word, and restoring it to function: The way we use the mind today—on which materialism grew—has not been chosen on pragmatic grounds; indeed it has not been chosen at all—but simply adopted or adapted from what people saw as "scientific" way to think; in the 19th century, when the educated masses abandoned the belief that logos was revealed and recorded once and for all in the Bible. And it was by this same sequence of historical accidents that science (which had been developed for an entirely different purpose—to unravel the mechanisms of nature) ended up in the the much larger role of "Grand Revelatory of modern Western culture" as Benjamin Lee Whorf branded it in Language, truth and reality.

That's how we ended up with 'candles' as 'headlights'.

– The Matrix is the world that has been pulled over your eyes to blind you from the truth.
(Morpheus to Neo, The Matrix.)

Materialism

Before we turn to holotopia, let's take a moment and theorize our present paradigm. What I'm calling materialism is not an actual but a theoretical or "ideal" order of things—which follows as consequence of the cultural–fundamental coup I've just described; where the traditional ideas and ideals (which, while far from perfect, used to provide people know-what) have been abandoned, and a proper replacement has not yet been found or even sought for. Here's the gist of it, in a nutshell, and I'll put it crudely: I acquire some material thing and this gives me a pleasurable feeling; and I interpret what happened in causal terms—and see the acquisition as cause and the gratifying feeling as its consequence; and I conceive my "pursuit of happiness" accordingly.

See materialism's way to use the mind as a travesty of science; and materialism itself as the cultural and social order of things that follows from its consistent application—where (a certain causal clockwork-like comprehension of) "the material world" is used as a measure of all things; where the direct experience of the material world, what feels attractive or unattractive, is presumed to be an experimental fact of sorts and promoted to the status of "interests" or "needs"; and allowed to determine or to be our know-what—so that all that remains is technical know-how; the knowledge of how to acquire what we want or need; by competing Darwin-style within systems conceived as a "fair" or "zero-sum" games.

In materialism, (direct experience of, and mechanistic-comprehension of) "material reality" serves as reference system.

Anthony Giddens wrote in Modernity and Self-Identity) in 1991: “The threat of personal meaninglessness is ordinarily held at bay because routinised activities, in combination with basic trust, sustain ontological security. Potentially disturbing existential questions are defused by the controlled nature of day-to-day activities within internally referential systems. Mastery, in other words, substitutes for morality; to be able to control one’s life circumstances, colonise the future with some degree of success and live within the parameters of internally referential systems can, in many circumstances, allow the social and natural framework of things to seem a secure grounding for life activities.”

In materialism "success" (what works in practice) is used for orientation.

"Mind could be introduced into the general picture only as a kind of mirror of the material world", Werner Heisenberg wrote in Physics ad Philosophy. Not having any guiding ideas or principles, in materialism people use direct experience or convenience to make choices; they simply this complex and pivotal matter by reifying the way they experience the material world; they reify their wants as their "needs". The rest is then just the matter of know-how—of how to acquire the material things one "needs".

"Convenience"—reaching out toward what feels attractive—is materialism's "core value".

Which follows from its characteristic way to use the mind (whereby only "the things or events that we could perceive by our senses or that could be observed by means of the refined tools that technical science had provided" are considered as possible or relevant or "real", as Heisenberg pointed out)–and considers those things and only those things that appear attractive to our senses as real and worth pursuing (technical science here won't be of much help); and in this way decides or circumvents the larger issue of know-what, so that know-how (how to acquire the things we "need") is all that remains.

"Doxa" is the keyword that Pierre Bourdieu used (he adopted it from Max Weber, but its usage dates as far back as Aristotle) to point to corresponding phenomenology: The more familiar word "orthodoxy" means believing that one's own worldview or paradigm is the only "right" one; doxa ignores even the existence of alternatives; it means believing that the existing social reality is in a similar way immutable and real as the physical world is. You may comprehend doxa as an addiction—which results when the mind's adaptive function (which evolved to help us adapt and function in the natural world) is applied so that the social world is experienced as "the reality" to which we must adapt. In Liberation book's Chapter Nine I point out how Socrates demonstrated that we humans tend to be victims of doxa and have belief instead of knowledge; and how Plato instituted the Academia to help his fellow humans evolve knowledge-based, by creating general insights and principles.

Once again the (evolution of) academic tradition, and the human mind, must be liberated.

Just as the case was in Galilei's time.

From the movie The Matrix I'll adopt the world as keyword—and use it to point to this so enticing yet sinister addiction that materialism thrives on—the addiction to "reality"; to "success"; which compels us to reproduce the dysfunctional habits and systems all the way until the bitter end; and to point to the urgent duty we have as generation.

Transdisciplinarity and holotopia are conceived as steps toward liberating our next generation from the world.

– [T]he nineteenth century developed an extremely rigid frame for natural science which formed not only science but also the general outlook of great masses of people.
(Werner Heisenberg, Physics and Philosophy, 1958.)

Design epistemology

You'll comprehend the category from which this foundational of holotopia's five points stems if you think of the subtle ambiguity in the word "foundation", as it's been used in this context: What Descartes was searching for, when he used that word, was the Archimedean point for acquiring "objectively true" knowledge—of "reality" as it "truly is"; which (he took this for granted) would be revealed to the mind as the sensation of absolute certainty; and which, when found (he and his colleagues also believed) would remain the lasting truth forever.

What I call foundation is what information is founded on; and culture as a whole; which—just as information—needs to be seen as a human-made thing for human purposes; so that when the foundation changes (as it did in Darwin's time)—we need to deliberately secure that the new foundation is still suitable for the all-important function it needs to perform.

I'll use ontological and pragmatic as keywords to pinpoint the nature of the fundamental error I've been telling you about, and how I propose to correct it; and say that a foundation is ontological if it rests upon the intrinsic nature of things or "reality"; that a certain way to (found) knowledge is the right one because it gives us "objective" knowledge, of the world as it truly is. My point is that we (the institution in control of this matter, the academia) must urgently develop a significant part of our activity on a pragmatic foundation—because science as it is does not tell us how to solve "the huge problems now confronting us".

And because the foundation we have is not a one on which the cultural evolution can continue.

When Nietzsche diagnosed, famously, that "Got ist tot!" (God is dead), he did not of course mean that God physically died; but that religion no longer had a foundation to stand on, that it was about to be eroded; which was needless to say true not only of religion—but of culture at large.

In the late 1990s, when this line of work was still beginning to take shape, I drafted a book manuscript titled What's Going on? and subtitled "A Cultural Renewal". The book was conceived as an information holon; whose point (pointed to by its title and an ideogram on its cover—which was a house about to collapse, with a large crack extending from its foundation to its top) was what I'm telling you here—namely that "the huge problems now confronting us" are consequences of the foundation of it all being inadequate for holding the huge edifice it now supports; and that the way to solution is not fixing but rebuilding; and that this rebuilding must begin from the foundation up. And it had, of course, also this other point—that what's really going on (i.e. what we above all need to know to consider ourselves informed) is this overall gestalt; not the fine details of 'cracks in walls' that our media informing brings us daily.

As I said—the 19th century change of foundation was not done for pragmatic reasons, but for ontological ones.

People began to believe that science (not the Bible) was the right way to truth.

You'll fully comprehend the anomaly that I am proposing to unravel (and here design epistemology is a concrete proposal pointing out that this can be done, and showing how)—when you see that the ontological argument for the present foundation has been proven wrong and disowned—by science itself!

When scientists became able to zoom in on small quanta of energy-matter—they found them behaving in ways that could not be explained in the "classical" way (as Descartes and his Enlightenment colleagues demanded); and that they even contradicted the common sense (as J. Robert Oppenheimer pointed out in Uncommon Sense)! Just as the case was at the time of Copernicus—a different way to see the world, and use the mind, was necessary to enable the physical science to continue evolving.

A careful reading of Werner Heisenberg's Physics and Philosophy will show that this book is conceived as a rigorous disproof of materialism's fundamental premises; and a call to action—to reconfigure and replace and revive culture, on a new foundation. His point was that—based on certain fundamental assumptions—science created a certain way to knowledge and experimental machinery; and when this machinery was applied to small quanta of matter-energy—the results contradicted the fundamental assumptions that served as departure point; so the whole thing has the logical structure of a proof by contradiction—which, in the present paradigm is a legitimate way of proving assumptions wrong.

Seeing that what they had uncovered had profound implications for our "edifice of knowledge" and culture at large—the giants of physics wrote popular books and essays to clarify or federate it. In Physics and Philosophy, in 1958, Werner Heisenberg pointed out that the foundation that our general culture imbibed from 19th century science was "so narrow and rigid that it was difficult to find a place in it for many concepts of our language that had always belonged to its very substance, for instance, the concepts of mind, of the human soul or of life." Since "the concept of reality applied to the things or events that we could perceive by our senses or that could be observed by means of the refined tools that technical science had provided", whatever failed to be founded in this way was considered impossible or unreal. This in particular applied to those parts of our culture in which our ethical sensibilities were rooted, such as religion, which "seemed now more or less only imaginary. [...] The confidence in the scientific method and in rational thinking replaced all other safeguards of the human mind."

The experience of modern physics constituted a rigorous disproof of this approach to knowledge, Heisenberg explained; and concluded that "one may say that the most important change brought about by its results consists in the dissolution of this rigid frame of concepts of the nineteenth century." Heisenberg wrote Physics and Philosophy anticipating that the most valuable gift of modern physics to humanity would be a cultural transformation; which would result from the dissolution of the narrow frame.

So what is to be done?

You already know my answer—it's what the Modernity ideogram points to; namely to fist identify the function or functions that need to be served; and then create a prototype by federating whatever points of reference or evidence may be relevant to that function; just as one would do to create the lightbulb.

What I call epistemology is the result of applying this procedure (where we first federate the way we use the mind or logos; and then use it to federate a new foundation for it all.

As an insight, design eistemology shows that a broad and solid foundation for truth and meaning, and for knowledge and culture, can be developed by this approach.

The design epistemology originated by federating the state-of-the-art epistemological findings of the giants of 20th century science and philosophy; which I'll here illustrate by quoting a single one—Einstein's "epistemological credo"; which he left us in Autobiographical Notes:

“I see on the one side the totality of sense experiences and, on the other, the totality of the concepts and propositions that are laid down in books. […] The system of concepts is a creation of man, together with the rules of syntax, which constitute the structure of the conceptual system. […] All concepts, even those closest to experience, are from the point of view of logic freely chosen posits, just as is the concept of causality, which was the point of departure for [scientific] inquiry in the first place.”

Design epistemology turns Einstein's "epistemological credo" into a convention.

And adds to it a purpose or function—the one we've been talking about all along.

Design epistemology as foundation is broad.

Since it expresses the phenomenological position (that it is human experience and not "objective reality" that information needs to reflect and communicate), the design epistemology gives us a foundation not only overcomes the narrow frame handicap that Heisenberg was objecting to—but also allows us to treat all cultural heritage, including cultural artifacts and even the rituals, mores and beliefs of traditions on an equal footing; by seeing it all as just records of human experience, in a variety of media; and finding similarities and patterns, and reaching insights or points. Instead of simply ignoring what fails to fit our "scientific" worldview or the narrow frame—the design epistemology empowers us and even obliges us to carefully consider and federate all forms of human experience that could be relevant to a theme or task at hand.

By convention, human experience has no a priori "right" interpretation or structure, which we can or need to "discover"; rather, experience is considered as something to which we assign meaning (as one would assign the meaning to an inkblot in Rorschach test). Multiple interpretations or insights or gestalts are possible.

Design epistemology as foundation is also solid.

Since it expresses (as a convention) the "constructivist credo"—that we are not "discovering objective reality" but constructing interpretations and explanations of human experience—the design epistemology turns the epistemological position that the Modernity ideogram expresses into a convention; it empowers us to do as Modernity ideogram calls upon us to do—and design the ways in which we see the world, and pursue knowledge. The resulting foundation is solid or "academically rigorous"—because it represents the epistemological state of the art; and because it's a convention. The added purpose can hardly be debated—because (from a pragmatic point of view) evolutionary guidance has become all-important; and because (from a theoretical point of view) a foundation of this kind is incomplete unless it has a purpose (which we can use to distinguish useful "constructions" from all those useless ones). This added function too is only a convention; a different one, and an altogether different way to knowledge can be created by the same approach to suit a different function.

Appeals to legitimate transdisciplinarity academically—if they were at all considered—have been routinely rejected on the account that they lacked "academic rigor". I'm afraid it will turn out that the contemporary academic conception of "rigor" is based on not much more than the sensation of certainty and clarity we experience when we've followed a certain prescribed procedure to the letter—as Stephen Toulmin suggested in his last book Return to Reason. It was logos Toulmin was urging us to return to; and that's been my proposal and call to action too.

– I suppose it is tempting, if the only tool you have is a hammer, to treat everything as if it were a nail.
(Abraham Maslow, Psychology of Science, 1966)

Polyscopic methodology

You'll comprehend the anomaly this holotopia's insight points to, if you see method—the category the polyscopic methodology pillar in the Holotopia ideogram stems from—as the toolkit with which we construct truth and meaning, and knowledge; and consider that—as Maslow pointed out—this method is now so specialized, that it compels us to be specialized; and choose themes and set priorities (not based on whether they are practically relevant or not, but) according to what this tool enables us to do.

As an insight, the polyscopic methodology points out that a general-purpose methodology, which alleviates this problem, can be created by the proposed approach (by applying logos or knowledge federation to method); by federating the findings of giants of science and the very techniques that have been developed in the sciences—with an aim to preserve the advantages of science, and alleviate its limitations.

Design epistemology mandates such a step: When we on the one hand acknowledge that (as far as we know) there is no conclusive truth about reality; and on the other hand, that our very existence depends on information and knowledge—we are bound to be accountable for providing knowledge about the most relevant themes (notably the ones that determine our society's evolutionary course) as well as we are able; and to of course continue to improve both our knowledge and our ways to knowledge.

As long as "reality" and its "objective" descriptions constitute our reference system and provide it a foundation—we have no way of evaluating our paradigm critically. The polyscopic methodology empowers us to develop the realm of ideas as an independent reference system; where ideas are founded (not on "correspondence with reality" but) on truth by convention; and then use clearly and academically defined ideas to develop clear and academically well-founded theories—in all walks of life; as it has been common in natural sciences. Suitable theoretical constructs, notably the patterns (defined as "abstract relationships", which have in this generalized science a similar role as mathematical functions do in traditional sciences) enable us to formulate general results and theories, including the gestalts; suitable justification methods (I prefer the word "justification" to the commonly used word "proof", for obvious reasons) can then be developed as social processes; as an up-to-date alternative to "peer reviews" (which have, needless to say, originated in a world where "scientific truth" was believed to be "objective" and ever-lasting).

The details of polyscopic methodology or polyscopy are beyond this brief sketch; and I'll only give you this hint: Once it's been formulated and theorized in the realm of ideas, a pattern can be used to justify a result; since (by convention) the substance of it all is human experience, and since (by convention) experience does not have an a priori "real" structure that can or needs to be "discovered"—a result can be configured as the claim that the dots can be connected in a certain specific way (as shown by the pattern) and make sense; and its justification can be conceived in a manner that resembles the "repeatable experiment"—which is "repeatable" to the extent that different people can see the pattern in the data. This social social process can then further be refined to embody also other desirable characteristics, such as "falsifiability"; I'll come back to this in a moment, and also show an example.

– The future will either be an inspired product of a great cultural revival, or there will be no future.
(Aurelio Peccei, One Hundred Pages for the Future, 1981)

Convenience paradox

How do you raise a child in a culture whose values are in significant dimensions opposite from yours?

Noah and I have been having a series of dialogs whose shared theme or red thread is epistemology (when he was a baby, I joked that "epistemology" would be the first word he'd learn). It's late December in Oslo now, Christmas is in the air; so the other day I played to Noah versions of the "Oh Happy Day" gospel by several gospel choirs on YouTube; where "Oh happy day, when Jesus washed (...) my sins away" is emphatically and enthusiastically repeated. I asked Noah to imagine what a materialist might think about this message: "Jesus died centuries ago; these poor souls don't understand that he most certainly cannot do anything for them..." And yet when you look at the faces of the gospel singers, and listen to the way they sing—you cannot but conclude that the joyful experience they are singing about does exist; that there's an exquisite sort of "high" that people can reach through certain practice; and that music or chanting in quire can help both in reaching and in communicating this experience. And if you are in doubt—you may move on next door, to the Sufis; or to the Suan Mokkh forest monastery in Southern Thailand; where the language, the symbolism and the ritual may be in some ways different and in other ways similar—and yet have the same joyful-exuberant experience as result—with interesting variations.

A vast creative frontier opens up—for academic and personal.

As soon as we step beyond the belief system of materialism—and use logos to (create epistemology and methodology and ) explore in a systematic way such basic themes as "happiness" and "values"; and importantly—how they are related to each other. Which is—now you'll now easily comprehend that—what "Religion beyond Belief", the Liberation book's subtitle is hinting at.

What I've just described was quite accurately my own way into and through this creative frontier; convenience paradox was the very first prototype result of this line of work. I presented in 1995, at Einstein Meets Magritte (in addition to a parallel methodology "prospectus" paper); and I've been working on it off and on ever since.

Convenience paradox is one of holotopia's five insights.

You'll appreciate the relevance of the convenience paradox insight if you consider it in the context of our contemporary condition: The evolutionary course of materialism—marked by growth of material production and consumption—must be urgently changed (certainly in the "developed" parts of the world, and arguably in other parts too); but to what? It seems that everyone who has looked into this question concluded that the pursuit of humanistic or cultural goals and values will have to be the answer; you can hear this straight from the horse's mouth.

You'll begin to see the anomaly this point points to if you consider the obvious—desensitization; the more our senses are stimulated—the less sensitive they'll become; but where shall we draw the line? Could fasting (and making our senses more sensitive) could be a better way to gastronomic pleasure than eating until our stomach hurt? Already at the turn of the nineteenth century Nietzsche saw his contemporary "modern" human as so overwhelmed by "the abundance of disparate impressions", that he "instinctively resists taking in anything, taking anything deeply, to ‘digest’ anything"; so that "a kind of adaptation to this flood of impressions takes place: men unlearn spontaneous action, they merely react to stimuli from outside." What would Nietzsche say if he saw us today?

Convenience in the role of 'headlights' (or way to determine the know-what) leaves in the dark one whole dimension of physical reality—time; and also an important side or one could even say the important 'half' of the three dimensions of space—its inner or embodied part; I emphasize its importance because while "happiness" (or whatever else we may choose to pursue on similar grounds) appears to be "caused" by events in the outer world—it is inside us that our emotions materialize; and it is there that the difference that makes a difference can and needs to be made.

Did you notice, by the way—when you watched the video I've just shared (and if you haven't watched it, do it now; because it's the state of the world diagnosed by the world's foremost expert—who studied and federated this theme for more than four decades—condensed in a six-minute trailer)—how Dennis Meadows, while pointing in this new evolutionary direction, struggled to find the words that would do it justice; and came up with little more than "knowledge" and "music"?

This is where the Liberation book really takes off!

Its entire first half (its first five chapters) is dedicated to mapping not only specific opportunities, but five whole realms where we may dramatically improve our condition through inner development; whereby a roadmap to inner wholeness is drafted, as the book calls it. The Liberation book opens with an amusing little ruse—where a note about freedom and democracy is followed by the observation that we are free to "pursue happiness as we please"; and I imagined the reader would say "Sure—what could possibly be wrong about that?" But what do we really know about "happiness"? And whether "happiness" is at all what we out to be pursuing? Perhaps "love" could be a better choice? So let me for a moment zoom in on "love" as theme; which hardly needs an explanation—considering how much, both in our personal lives and in our culture, revolves around it: "My baby's gone, and I got the blues, It sure is awful to be lonsesome like me, Worried, weary up in a tree." The Liberation book invites us to look at this theme from a freshly different viewpoint: What sort of "love"—or what quality of love—are any of us really capable of experiencing? Can you imagine a world where we are culturally empowered to cultivate love; including our ability to experience love and importantly—to give love? In the third chapter of the Liberation book, which has "Liberation of Emotions" as title, phenomenological evidence for illuminating this realm of questions is drawn from the tradition of Sufism; in order to demonstrate that love has a spectrum of possibilities that reaches far beyond the outreach of our common experience and even awareness; and that certain kinds of practice, which combine poetry and music with meditation and ethical behavior, can make us, in the long run capable of experiencing the kinds of love whose very existence we as culture ignore; which can make our experience of poetry and music too incomparably more nuanced and rewarding.

Convenience paradox is the point of a very large information holon; which asserts (and invites us to turn it into shared and acted-upon fact, by giving it a similar visibility and credibility as what the "Newton's Laws" now enjoy) that convenience is a useless and deceptive "value", behind which a myriad opportunities to improve our lives and condition—through cultural pursuits—await to be uncovered. The rectangle of this information holon is populated by a broad range of—curated—ways to improve our condition through cultural pursuits or by human development (which Peccei qualified as the most important goal).

Originally, the convenience paradox result was conceived as a proof-of-concept application of polyscopic methodology; I showed preliminary versions of both in 1995, at the Einstein Meets Magritte conference that the transdisciplinary center Leo Apostel and Brussels Free University organized (this conference marked the turning point in my career); the corresponding articles were published in 1999 in the "Yellow Book" of the proceedings titled World Views and the Problem of Synthesis. My point was to show how the methodological approach to knowledge I've been telling you about here (which empowers us to consider all forms and all records of human experience as data; and to synthesize and justify general and overarching insights as patterns; and to communicate them and make them palpable through ideograms) can allow us to collect and combine culturally relevant experiences and insights across worldviews and cultural traditions; and to give them visibility and citizenship rights; and empower them to impact our culture. I've been working this so fascinating creative frontier ever since.

The Liberation book too is a fruit of this line of work. The entire book can be seen as a prototype of a system—for empowering or federating culture-transformative experiences and insights or memes. The book is conceived as a federation of a single such meme—the legacy and vision of Buddhadasa, Thailand's 20th century holy man and Buddhism reformer; who—anticipating that something essential may have been misunderstood—withdrew to an abandoned forest monastery near his native village Chaya, to practice and experiment as Buddha did in his day. Having seen what he found out as potential antidote to (the global onslaught of) materialism, and also as the (still widely ignored) shared essence of the great religions of the world—Buddhadasa undertook to do whatever he could to make his insight available to both Thai people and foreigners.

It should go without saying that the Buddhadasa meme (as I call it in the book) makes no sense in the context of materialism—which it undertakes to transform. The Liberation book alleviates this problem by drafting a different context—so that Buddhadasa's transformative insights can be seen as an essential elements in a new and emerging order of things (envisioned as holotopia); or metaphorically—as a vital organ of the elephant.

– Many years ago, I dreamed that digital technology could greatly augment our collective human capabilities for dealing with complex, urgent problems.
(Doug Engelbart, "Dreaming of the Future*, BYTE Magazine, 1995)

Knowledge federation

David Graeber and David Wengrow wrote in The Dawn of Everything: A New History of Humanity: "There is no doubt that something has gone terribly wrong with the world. A very small percentage of its population do control the fate of almost everyone else, and they are doing it in an increasingly disastrous fashion." Why am I quoting (from a book that offers us a wealth of insights, emerging from scientific studies in ethnography, about latent opportunities for configuring human relations and society that are beyond materialism) something that "everyone knows"? Because I'm about to tell you why I passionately disagree with it! And in the same breath introduce to you communication as the category from which knowledge federation stems as point or insight; and also Norbert Wiener as yet another ignored giant. And a giant he manifestly was—having earned academic degrees in mathematics, zoology and philosophy, and then a doctorate in mathematical logic from Harvard while he was still a teenager! Wiener then went on to do seminal work in a variety of fields, one of which was cybernetics (but not alone; Margaret Mead was a member of the small transdisciplinary circle from which cybernetics emerged). Wiener's ignored point was already in the title of his seminal Cybernetics: Or Control and Communication in the Animal and the Machine: Control and communication are inextricably connected; control depends on right or correct communication. You'll see this if you just think of the bus with candle headlights: We who are in the bus do see someone sitting behind the steering wheel, and think he's in control; and there is, of course a fierce battle inside the buss for those "driver" positions (which are, indeed, available to only a few people, as Graeber & Wengrow observed). But in the larger picture—are they really in control? Will anyone benefit from steering the society in a "disastrous fashion"?

The word "cybernetics" is derived from Greek "kubernan (to steer); it is related to the English noun "government" and the verb "to govern". As an academic field, cybernetics is dedicated to the study of governability—or more precisely, what structure do systems need to have to be viably governable or "sustainable" (Wiener framed this question by using "homeostasis" as technical keyword—to point to an organism's or system's activities to maintain a stable or viable course). Wiener's all-important and still flagrantly ignored point was that "free competition" won't do (he called the belief that we can rely on it a "simpleminded theory" which contradicts the evidence). The point of it all is that to make our systems viable or "sustainable"—we must learn about the relationship between communication and control by studying living systems ("the animal") and technical systems ("the machine")—and apply the resulting insights there where they'll make the largest difference—in the design and control of society and its systems.

Isn't this what we've been talking about all along?

In social systems—composed of relatively autonomous individuals—communication is the system, Wiener pointed out in Cybernetics; and he talked about ants and bees to demonstrate that. You'll comprehend the anomaly that knowledge federation as holotopia's point points to if you consider that the "digital technology"—the interactive, network-interconnected digital media you and I use to read email and browse the Web—has been envisioned (by Doug Engelbart—already in 1951!) and developed (by his SRI-based team, and publicly demonstrated in 1968) to serve as "a collective nervous system" of a radically novel kind; and enable a quantum leap in the evolution of our "collective social organisms"—which would dramatically augment their—and our—"capabilities for dealing with complex, urgent problems". You'll easily see what all this means if you imagine us all traveling in that so horrid bus—rushing off-chart at an accelerating speed and dodging trees: We must be able to act fast; and if also we want to give the whole thing a viable direction—we must be able to synthesize a whole new view of the world (which shows us forests, not trees); and use it for steering. The key to grasping the gist of Engelbart's vision—which I'll refer to as collective mind—is his acronym CoDIAK; which stands for "concurrent development, integration and application of knowledge. Take a moment to reflect on his word "concurrent": Every other technology I can think of—including handwritten letters carried by caravans and books printed by Gutenberg—require that a physical object with the message be physically carried from its author to its recipient; only this Engelbart's technology provided the genuine functionality of the nervous system—which enables us, and indeed compels us to "develop, integrate and apply" knowledge concurrently, as cells in a single human mind do; but of course—to take advantage of this technology, to realize this possibility, our communication needs to be structured and organized in entirely new ways; which is, of course, what knowledge federation is all about. Imagine if your cells were using your nervous system to merely broadcast data—and you'll easily see what I'm talking about.

You'll see the related anomaly if you notice that this technology is still largely used to send back and forth messages and publish or broadcast documents—i.e. to implement and speed up the sort of processes that the old technologies of communication made possible (here Noah, my thirteen-year-old, would instantly object; so I must qualify that it's academic or "serious" communication I am talking about). Or to use knowledge federation's lead metaphor:

'Electrical technology' is still used to produce 'fancy candles'.

Substantial parts of the knowledge federation prototype have been developed by a community of knowledge media researchers and developers committed to continuing and completing the work on Engelbart's vision—by creating completely different systems that this technology enables; and taking part in the quantum leap in the evolution of humanity's core systems—which this technology enables, and our situation necessitates. I'll here illustrate this line of work by a single example—our Tesla and the Nature of Creativity 2015 prototype; where we showed how academic communication can be updated, to benefit the society far more than it presently does.

To begin, I'll invite you to see the academic system as a gigantic socio-technical 'machine' that takes as input gifted young people and society's resources; and produces creative people and ideas as output; and explore the question that follows—How suitable is this system for its all-important role? In a moment I'll show you the prototype where the result of an academic researcher has been federated; but before I do that let us zoom in even further, and examine how a researcher's result is handled in our present system—which first subjects it to "peer reviews" (which made sense in those good old days when it was academically legitimate to believe that conforming to a traditional disciplinary procedure and that alone would qualify a result as worthy of being included in "the edifice of knowledge"; that once it passed that test—if would remain part of this edifice forever; which today has as unhappy consequence that it keeps academic creativity all too narrowly confined—to so-called "safe" which means not-so-novel areas) and then—if it receives a passing grade—commits it to academic bookshelves; where nobody will ever find it—except those few specialists to whom it's addressed; who are anyhow the only ones who can comprehend what the result is all about.

TNC2015.jpeg

Knowledge Federation's Tesla and the Nature of Creativity 2015 workshop in Sava Center, Belgrade.

In our Tesla and the Nature of Creativity 2015 prototype we federated the result of a researcher—University of Belgrade's Dejan Raković—in three phases; where:

  • The first phase was to make the result comprehensible to lay audiences; which we (concretely knowledge federation's communication design team) did by turning this technical research article into a multimedia object; where its main points were extracted and connected and made comprehensible by explanatory diagrams or ideograms; and further clarified by (placing on them links to) recorded interviews with the author
  • In the second phase we made the result known and at the same time discussed in space, by leading international experts on Tesla—by staging a televised and streamed high-profile dialog at Sava Center Belgrade
  • The third phase constituted a technology-enabled global social process (we used DebateGraph) by which the result was processed further, .

This third stage is in particular illustrative of the vast difference the new media technology can make—once we use it to re-create our "social life of information"; here the points that were extracted and explained in the first phase were made available online as DebateGraph nodes; so that other experts or DebateGraph users—anywhere in the world—can add to them new nodes, corresponding to the sort of action they deem appropriate: They may add supporting evidence; or challenge the result by counterevidence and so on. Here (not the reviewers' verdict on an academic article, but) this connecting the dots—this new creative process of this new collective mind—is allowed to continue forever. Two MS theses were developed to complement and complete this prototype: One of them made it possible to create 'dialects' on DebateGraph (which determine what actions or moves can be applied to a certain kind of node, such as an idea, or an negative or positive evaluation of an idea); and effect program "the social life" of academic information. The other MS thesis prototyped two objects called domain map and value matrix; which enabled both authors and their contributions to be evaluated by multiple criteria.

Also the theme of Raković's result—the nature of the creative process that distinguishes "creative genius"—must be taken into consideration to fully comprehend this prototype: Raković first demonstrated phenomenologically (by referring to Nikola Tesla's own descriptions of his creative process) that there are two distinct kinds of creativity; and that the "outside the box" creativity necessitates an entirely different creative process, and ecology of mind, distinct from its common alternative; and he then theorized this creative process within the paradigm of quantum physics. Imagine if it turns out that the way we (teach the young people how to) think and use the mind, at schools and universities—which happens to be the kind of creative work that the machines are now doing quite well—inhibits this entirely different process that we ought to be using, and teaching! I open the "Liberation of Mind" chapter of the Liberation book by quoting Bob Dylan and Leonard Cohen, to hint that the evidence for it is everywhere, that it's staring us in the eye! And so the question—the key question—is by what social process are we handling this and other similar pivotal questions?

With this in mind, compare the federation process I've just outlined—which (1) models the phenomenology of Tesla's creative process; (2) submits this phenomenology outline to expert researchers and biographers of Tesla and (3) proposes an explanatory model of this process as a prototype—available online, with provisions to be indefinitely improved—to a peer review; which will say "yes" or "no" depending on whether the model is stated and "proven" by a certain hereditary procedure.

Isn't all this just a way to keep the humanity's creative powers in the proverbial 'box'?

"So you are creating a collective Tesla", Serbian TV anchor commented while conversing with our representative in the studio; and rendered the gist of our initiative better than I have been able to.

– The task is nothing less than to build a new society and new institutions for it. With technology having become the most powerful change agent in our society, decisive battles will be won or lost by the measure of how seriously we take the challenge of restructuring the ‘joint systems’ of society and technology.
(Erich Jantsch, Integrative Planning for the "Joint Systems" of Society and Technology—the Emerging Role of the University, MIT Report,1969)

Systemic innovation

You'll see the relevance of innovation—the category from which this insight stems—if you consider that it's both (whereby we use and direct our technology-augmented power to create and induce change, and hence) what drives the metaphorical bus forward and what needs to be redirected so that its headlights can be replaced.

You'll see the "different" way of looking at innovation, by which it can be comprehended in a new way and corrected, if you imagine the systems in which we live and work as gigantic machines, comprising people and technology; and acknowledge that they determine how we live and work; and importantly, what the effects of our work will be—whether they'll be problems, or solutions. Béla H. Bánáthy wrote in Designing Social Systems in a Changing World:

“I have become increasingly convinced that [people] cannot give direction to their lives, they cannot forge their destiny, they cannot take charge of their future—unless they also develop the competence to take part directly and authentically in the design of the systems in which they live and work, and reclaim their right to do so. This is what true empowerment is about.”

How suitable are our systems for the functions they need to perform "in a changing world"?

If the system whose function is to enable us to direct our efforts correctly is a 'candle'—what about all others? How suitable are our financial system, our governance, our international corporation and our education for what they need to be able to achieve?

In 2013 I was invited to give an online talk to a workshop of social scientists who convened at IUC Dubrovnik; who were interested in journalism, IT innovation and e-democracy. The title I gave my talk was "Toward a Scientific Comprehension and Handling of Problems", in order to draw attention to my main point—namely that there is an altogether different or "scientific" way to comprehend and handle the society's ills that journalism reports, and innovation and democracy aim to resolve. To explain and justify this point, I drafted a parallel between the society and the human organism—and invited my audience to see communication as the society's nervous system, finance as its vascular system, the corporation as its muscular system, education as reproductive system and so on; and I demonstrated, one by one, that what we see as society's problems are indeed (or need to be seen as) symptoms of systemic malfunction. Scientific medicine distinguishes itself by comprehending and handling symptoms in terms of the anatomy and pathophysiology that underlie them, my point was; why not comprehend and handle our society's issues in a similar, scientific way?

I ended my talk on a positive note; by showing a photo of an electoral victory, to which I added in Photoshop "The systems, stupid!" as featured winning electoral slogan; which was, of course, a paraphrase of Bill Clinton's winning 1992 slogan "The Economy, stupid!" In a society where the survival of businesses depends on their ability to sell people things—of course one needs to keep the economy growing if one wants the business to be profitable and the people employed. But economic growth is not "the solution to our problem".

Systemic innovation empowers us to change the system of our economy.

Instead of only adapting to it, until the bitter end.

In the Liberation book (where, as I said, I explain abstract ideas by telling people stories), I let Erich Jantsch iconize systemic innovation. I introduce Jantsch's legacy and vision by qualifying them as the environmental movement's forgotten history; and its ignored theory; which we'll have to comprehend to be able to act, instead of only reacting.

In the story we meet Jantsch at the point where he's just given his keynote to The Club of Rome's inaugural meeting in 1968 in Rome. Jantsch readily saw what needed to be done to pave the way to solutions; and right away convened a workshop of a hand-picked team of experts—to craft systemic innovation theory and methodology; and then—seeing that the university is the only institution capable of developing and spearheading this new way to think and act—spent a semester at MIT drafting a plan for the transdisciplinary university, from which I quoted the above excerpt; and lobbying with the MIT academic colleagues and administration to implement this necessary and so timely change.

Then there was this wonderful turn of events—which spices up both the story of Jantsch and systemic innovation, and the story of Engelbart and knowledge federation I shared a moment ago: During the 1970s Jantsch and Engelbart were practically neighbors—separated only by the San Francisco Bay! But they never met or collaborated—even though each of them needed the other to fulfill his own larger-than-life mission: Engelbart was struggling to explain to Silicon Valley businesses and innovators that innovation needed to be directed in an entirely different way; that the technology he gave them was intended to serve as enabler for an quantum leap in evolution of humanity's systems. And just across the bay there was this other ignored giant, with the complementary message. Let me be blunt: Would you choose to leave your children loads and loads of dough—and a world about to collapsed on their heads? I mean—if you knew what was going on; and that you could make a difference.

But Jantsch didn't stop there; during the 1970s, until his premature death in 1980, Jantsch was earnestly and with all his power developing a different view of the elephant (and supporting himself by working as a music critic); he gave it different names in different publications, and I'll call it evolutionary vision; as Jantsch did in the last expert workshop he organized, and his corresponding last book he edited.

The turning point in Jantsch's creative process was the talk that Ilya Prigogine gave U.C. Berkeley (where Jantsch was an adjunct assistant professor; I adopted this keyword from Doug Engelbart to use it as he did—to point to the highest academic position available to system reformers) about his work (for which he received the Nobel Prize five years later); which showed Jantsch that even physical systems follow a certain peculiar evolutionary dynamic. You'll comprehend the gist of it if you think for a moment about the key point of cybernetics (in the context of the error I am inviting you to correct, and the challenge of making our society's evolutionary course governable or sustainable): Wiener's idea of control (he used "homeostasis" as keyword to pinpoint it) was the maintenance of a certain equilibrium state or condition; and using "communication and control" to avoid and eliminate the deviations. What Jantsch saw (and also Prigogine) was an entirely different evolutionary dynamic—where the system operates in a state that is far from equilibrium; in a manner that is in a fundamental sense creative.

In Design for Evolution, his 1975 seminal work, Jantsch introduced the evolutionary vision by inviting us to see ourselves as passengers (not in a bus but) in a boat on a river. The traditional sciences would have us look at the boat from above, Jantsch explained—and aim to describe it "objectively"; the traditional systems science would position us on the boat—and instruct us how to steer it safely. The evolutionary vision would have us to see ourselves as—the river! The point of it all being that the way we present ourselves to evolution is what determines its course!

Why am I telling you at length about these so technical themes?

Because we've just placed the Liberation book's overall main point into this website's all-important context (our quest or guiding light or know-what): According to evolutionary vision, the "liberated" or "enlightened" condition this book portrays is "the solution to our problem".

– Modernity did not make people more cruel; it only invented a way in which cruel things could be done by non-cruel people. Under the sign of modernity, evil does not need any more evil people. Rational people, men and women well riveted into the impersonal, adiaphorized network of modern organization, will do perfectly.
(Zygmunt Bauman Life in Fragments: Essays in Postmodern Morality, 1995)

Power structure

Before we can solve "the huge problems now confronting us", we need to diagnose them correctly.

Power structure is a social-and-cultural disease.

It is also an update or redesign of the traditional idea of the enemy. The power structure is not a physical entity but a pattern; it is not bacteria-like but cancer-like. It has similar effects on our minds and liberties as a dictator; but it remains invisible—as long as we look at freedom and justice in any of our inherited or traditional ways. The power structure is not a conspiracy theory but its exact opposite: The people who co-created it have no evil intentions; and indeed not a faintest idea that they might be part of the problem. Before I say more about it, let me bring this down to earth by sharing how I got to be aware of power structure.

When around 1995 I caught a glimpse of the vast and wondrous creative frontier I've been telling you about, and reconfigured my life and my work to be able to focus on it fully—I anticipated a completely different dynamic than what I actually encountered: I expected a spirited conversation; and perhaps some doubt and disbelief to begin with. What I got instead was—silence; accompanied with a vague sense of discomfort. Evidently, I was doing something wrong; but even that was only communicated in body language. Could it be that the academic culture is not steered by academic logos, as I took it for granted; but by something quite different, which I could not even name? The experience was disheartening; it's as if you put all your chips on being a painter; and work with all your power to manifest all those wonderful images you were carrying in intuition—only to realize that your fellow painters and gallerists are color blind! But when I explored this phenomenon a bit, I realized that what I was experiencing was not just some weird anomaly, but the problem—that's preventing us from solving "the grave problems now confronting us"; and so naturally, I undertook to research it thoroughly. It was at that point that I undertook to explore the related results humanities, about which I knew next to nothing.

Here in front of me on the table I have Zygmunt Bauman's book Modernity and the Holocaust; which—as I am now re-reading it—reflects back to me a closely similar message—namely that there is something essential we still ignore about ourselves and our society, and importantly—about the relationship between us and society (Bauman's "we" included his fellow sociologists). When we theorize the Holocaust while ignoring that all-important something—we see it as "an interruption in the normal flow of history, a cancerous growth on the body of civilized society, a momentary madness among sanity"; whereas when we look carefully at how it really developed (as documented by the historians)—we are bound to see it as just an extreme case of a pathology that permeates our society; which by being so extreme—invites us to comprehend that all-permeating pathology. Hannah Arendt left us a similar message when she talked about "banality of evil"; but her diagnoses too were ignored, and considered "controversial".

These warning we must urgently attend to.

Because the banal evil is acquiring grotesque proportions! I am considering to use geocide as keyword to rub it in; but perhaps you already got my point?

At InfoDesign 2000 conference in Coventry, GB, I presented the power structure theory alongside with polyscopic methodology; and introduced the former as a proof-of-concept application of the latter.

We must look through the holoscope to diagnose the society's deadly disease!

In Coventry I was invited to elaborate both ideas in Information Design Journal; which resulted in two publications: "Designing Information Design" introduced the methodological or design approach to information and gave (an early version of) the same call to action I am proposing here; "Information for Conscious Choice" introduced the power structure theory and a pragmatic argument for that call to action: "Free competition" and the related notion of "free choice" is what's breeding the power structure and driving us to extinction; our choices must be illuminated by suitable or designed information.

The Power Structure ideogram consists of three white entities joined together by three black arrows; and suggests that the power structure is not a distinct thing but a structure—comprising known entities and their subtle relationships. The entities are power (represented in the ideogram by a dollar sign), information (represented by a book), and our personal and socio-cultural wholeness (represented by a stethoscope). The point here is that "the enemy", that what really has the power over us the people is not any of those three things alone—but their combination; or more to the point—their synergy.

The reason why those relationships remained invisible and ignored is that they are not mechanical but evolutionary; it is (not deliberate scheming but) evolution that adjusts those three (obviously co-dependent) entities to each other; and turns them into something that for all practical purposes acts as an organism.

I used results and insights from multiple fields of science to elaborate the power structure as a pattern: The basic insights from stochastic optimization, artificial intelligence and artificial life—to show that co-dependent entities can co-evolve to form a coherent structure, which can behave as if it were intelligent and alive; Antonio Damasio's revolutionizing insights in cognitive neuroscience, explained in his book appropriately titled Descartes' Error—to point to the pre-conscious and embodied and hence 'programmable' nature of (what's believed to be) "free choice"; and Pierre Bourdieu's explorations of of "symbolic power" and his "theory of practice" to explain the power structure dynamic; and how it's related to economic and political power.

The power structures exist at distinct levels of generality or details; smaller power structures compose together larger ones; so that we are justified in seeing it all as just the (one single) power structure.

I used metaphors to make this invisible enemy comprehensible and palpable; one of which was cancer: The power structure is a cancer-like deformation of society's 'tissues and organs'; which—unless it's recognized and countered by society's 'immune system'—can proliferate and be fatal.

Bourdieu left us a pair of useful metaphors and keywords, "field" and "game"; which he used interchangeably to describe the dynamics of power structure. imagine us all as tiny magnets immersed in a large magnetic field; which subtly orients our seemingly free or random behavior; which—as we align ourselves with it—becomes stronger. The power structure, or "field", then gamifies the society; and reduces for each of us the disturbing complexity of our world to just learning a social role and performing in it; which gives us "ontological security" and eliminates the need for ethics and for knowledge, as Giddens pointed out.

Power structure is not a pejorative label but a way of looking.

As long as we live in a society—we are affected by power structure and we must see to it that this co-dependence is minimal; because both our freedom and our society's future depend on our liberation.

Power structure is not one of holotopia's five insights; it is, however, a theme that permeates all of them, and the Liberation book; which gives us a way to revisit and revise other themes including

  • Ethics; to be part of the societal 'cancer', and be culpable of geocide, we need to do no more than—"do our job"; in "the impersonal, adiaphorized network of modern organization" (Bauman used this keyword, "adiaphorized", to delineate the style of thinking I've asked you to associate with materialism—which is "purely rational", devoid of ethical or emotional concerns; we do something not because it's right or just—but because it is "our job", or "good for business"); or even more simply—act in materialism's characteristically self-centered way (which turns us into 'little magnets'...)
  • Politics; the geocide is not in anyone's "interest"; the holotopian politics is not conceived as "us against them", as it's been usual—but as all of us against the power structure
  • Religion; in Chapter Ten of the Liberation book, titled "Liberation of Religion", I defined religion as a function in culture—to help us counteract self-centeredness; and see ourselves as parts in a larger whole.

You may now comprehend the Liberation book's subtitle "Religion beyond Belief" a notch deeper; and see the evolution of religion as having three stages; so that in the first, the beliefs of tradition were used to coerce everyone to do the right thing (which, needless to say, didn't always work as intended); and in the second, the beliefs of materialism gradually made us do the wrong thing; so that we have a chance to bring religion into its third phase of evolution—by founding it on knowledge, not belief.

You may now also see science and the way the pursuit of knowledge has been institutionalized, and the ontological argument for our (lack of) foundation, in a completely new light. In their 1966 classic Social Construction of Reality, Berger and Luckmann told us that societies have a special category of people, suitably institutionalized, whose prerogative is to define "reality" for us; they called them "universal experts", and explained that "[t]his does not mean that they claim to know everything, but rather that they claim to know the ultimate significance of what everybody knows and does. Other men may continue to stake out particular sectors of reality, but they claim expertise in the ultimate definitions of reality as such." The social function of "ultimate definitions of reality as such" has been to maintain the given social order by inhibiting change: "Habitualization and institutionalization in themselves limit the flexibility of human actions. Institutions tend to persist unless they become ‘problematic’. Ultimate legitimations inevitably strengthen this tendency. The more abstract the legitimations are, the less likely they are to be modified in accordance with changing pragmatic exigencies. If there is a tendency to go on as before anyway, the tendency is obviously strengthened by having excellent reasons for doing so. This means that institutions may persist even when, to an outside observer, they have lost their original functionality or practicality. One does certain things not because they work, but because they are right – right, that is, in terms of the ultimate definitions of reality promulgated by the universal experts."

See things whole.
The holoscope principle.

Holoscope

René Descartes pointed out in his testament, his unfinished Règles pour la direction de l’esprit (Rules for the Direction of the Mind)—as Rule One: “The objective of studies needs to be to direct the mind so that it bears solid and true judgments about everything that presents itself to it.” And pointed to academic specialization as the impediment to practicing Rule One: “In truth, it surprises me that almost everyone studies with greatest care the customs of men, the properties of the plants, the movements of the planets, the transformations of metals and other similar objects of study, while almost nobody reflects about sound judgment or about this universal wisdom, while all the other things need to be appreciated less for themselves than because they have a certain relationship to it. It is then not without reason that we pose this rule as the first among all, because nothing removes us further from the seeking of truth, than to orient our studies not towards this general goal, but towards the particular ones.”

You have seen four independent arguments for developing knowledge on pragmatic foundation.

See them as four ways of looking, as four projection planes corresponding to the edges of the rectangle from which my main point follows as "the dot on the i"; which is, as I said, not a statement of fact but a course of action and an invitation to act: To enable knowledge-based evolution of culture and society by instituting academic transdisciplinarity.

Those four arguments are:

  • (Pragmatic argument) it stands to reason that our species will quite surely be eliminated from the evolutionary scene unless we learn to use information as guiding light, to provide us know-what; and vice-versa—(as I will demonstrate in a moment) developing knowledge on a pragmatic foundation will lead to comprehensive change of course in two natural and easy steps; the change that is the solution to "the huge problems now confronting us
  • (Fundamental argument) the ontological foundation rests upon historical beliefs about knowledge, reality and human mind that have been proven wrong and disowned by the giants of science; developing knowledge on pragmatic foundation is a way to restore to information and knowledge the quality that is most closely associated with the word "academic"; and to continue academic evolution
  • (Political and ethical argument) "the correspondence theory of truth" or reification, which underlies ontological foundation, is (needs to be seen as) an instrument of power structure; the change to pragmatic foundation is the way to liberation
  • (IT argument) It is only when we see information as something we humans make for human purposes, and learn to tailor it to the most vital among those purposes—that we'll be able to (stop reproducing old systems in new technology, and) take advantage of the intrinsic properties of new information technology to provide us new collective capabilities; on which our future depends.

Comprehensive paradigm shift follows from this change of foundation.

You'll see it if you take another look at Holotopia ideogram; and see its four side edges as forming a "V" for (our conclusive) "victory" (over power structure); which stems from design epistemology as root or foundation.

The bottom edge on the left, connecting design epistemology with polyscopic methodology, points to the first step that naturally follows from pragmatic foundation—where we specify (or more precisely federate) what information needs to be like (which includes, once again, the methods by which information is created and structured, and the ways it needs to be used) by creating a methodology.

The bottom edge on the right, connecting design epistemology with knowledge federation (as and up-to-date technology-enabled social process of communication), points to the other, parallel step that naturally follows from pragmatic foundation—where we (acknowledging that the use of new technology to publish or broadcast documents, and make the processes that have evolved based on the printing press as technology more effective, has given us overloads of documents that by many orders of magnitude exceed what any human mind can process, and made knowledge impossible) create processes and systems that complement document publishing by structuring information; and organize us in creating meaning; and restore the severed tie between information and action; or in a word—which federate knowledge.

Look now at the horizontal line (in Holotopia ideogram) that connects polyscopic methodology with knowledge federation; which has "information" as label; and points to the synergy between those two points of action: It is only when we develop an academic i.e. well-founded and relied on theory of what information needs to be like—that we'll be able to develop the corresponding communication (both academically, and in real-life practice). And vice-versa: It is only when we have knowledge federation as process that we'll be able to create and evolve this theory; because information is by its nature transdisciplinary; its informed creation and use need to draw insights from a number of disciplines, and other traditions.

I gave this new information the name holoscope.

In order to highlight that the university institution must give us the people (not only the likes of the microscope and the telescope, but also) a way to see the world that is functional by design; which makes us functional. And I coined a suitable rule of thumb, see things whole, and called it holoscope principle; to pinpoint the distinguishing character of this new way to see the world.

We need the holoscope, alias knowledge federation, to make knowledge possible.

I explained in Liberation: "It may seem to me that the Earth is flat and I might even believe that; but people have traveled around the Earth; and others saw it from outer space. When I take account of evidence—I cannot but change my mind."

Make things whole.
The holotopia principle.

Holotopia

Have a look now at the next level on Holotopia ideogram; see the edge connecting polyscopic methodology with convenience paradox on the left: When we adapt and apply (the method and the approach that distinguishes) science to life's core themes, and use it to orient our "pursuit of happiness" and inform our values—wholeness will be our value of choice; and the aim of our pursuits. And with such radical shift in orientation—the change of course will most naturally follow; as we'll evolve toward wholeness. And since guiding insights will be drawn (or federated) from all world traditions, including the disciplines of science—the continuities in cultural evolution too will be restored.

Look now at the edge connecting knowledge federation with systemic innovation on the right: It is only when we'll have knowledge federation in place, as instituted social process that empowers us to configure (prototypes of) systems evidence-based—that we'll be able to adapt systems to their function; and to the exigencies of our new situation; and it is only when we'll have knowledge federation as technology-enabled communication infrastructure or "collective nervous system" that we'll be able to give the society's systems the faculty of vision they necessitate; to be viable or "sustainable" or whole.

Look at the horizontal line connecting convenience paradox on the left and systemic innovation on the right; which has "action" as label: It is only we've become sufficiently whole, by pursuing "human development" or wholeness as value—that we'll have the moral strength to collaborate and co-create our systems; and it is only when our systems liberate us from struggle and competition, and afford us the free time—that we'll become capable of cultivating our inner wholeness.

I call this new informed action holotopia.

In order to highlight that it has all the "beyond belief" qualities of a utopian vision—in addition to this all-important distinguishing one: Holotopia is a realistic future scenario; the belief that we can continue to live without radical change is what's utopian.

I coined a suitable rule of thumb, make things whole, and called it holotopia principle; to pinpoint the distinguishing character of this new way to act.

And so to sum up: As soon as we develop information on a pragmatic foundation—it will be obvious that information must enable us to see things whole; and it is only when our course is illuminated by such information—that we'll be able to make things whole.

– As long as a paradox is treated as a problem, it can never be dissolved.
(David Bohm, Problem and Paradox.)

Dialog

Whenever the way we think is part of the problem—and this is clearly the case with "the huge problems now confronting us"—what we are up against is not a problem but a paradox. And yet we must conform to the common way to think to be able to communicate with people; and function in society.

To liberate myself sufficiently and be able to complete the knowledge federation prototype, I withdrew into a self-imposed quarantine; which lasted about five years. I am now coming out—and entering the next phase of this creative process; whose focus will be on communication, and collective action toward implementation and scaling. But I don't intend to come out of holotopia, where I've made myself a home during this period; why would I?

I invite you to meet me half way.

Which is what the dialog is about: Instead of thinking and speaking as we've been socialized to—we'll federate a suitable new way or a collection of new and better ways to think and communicate; and we'll use them to explore the core themes of our lives and times; and we'll rebuild our "public sphere" or collective mind as we go along.

The dialog is (a way to develop) our society's new 'headlights'.

I'll illustrate a broad range of resources we'll bring together to inform the dialog by a single one—David Bohm's related legacy. You'll find this on BohmDialogue.org: "Dialogue is really aimed at going into the whole thought process and changing the way the thought process occurs collectively. We haven't really paid much attention to thought as a process. We have engaged in thoughts, but we have only paid attention to the content, not to the process." This website further explains: "Dialogue, as David Bohm envisioned it, is a radically new approach to group interaction, with an emphasis on listening and observation, while suspending the culturally conditioned judgments and impulses that we all have. This unique and creative form of dialogue is necessary and urgent if humanity is to generate a coherent culture that will allow for its continued survival."

What I have in mind is not a single prototype but a broad variety of them; and it is this variety that attracts me most strongly; knowledge federation has been prototyping dialogs all along; some of them are described in Liberation book; others are outlined in the concluding ("conversations" or "action") page of this website.

In Chapter Nine of Liberation (which has "Liberation of Science" as title) I talk about the academic dialog in front of the (metaphorical) mirror; which is a self-reflective dialog whose goal to liberate us from the "objective observer" self-identity that now so narrowly confines academic thought and action; and to empower the academia to act in the guiding role it already has—and guide us the people to new thinking; and toward the emerging paradigm.

I see the larger, public dialog as up-to-date alternative and antidote to the media "infotainment" or "spectacle"; which will document and facilitate the emergence of the real spectacle—the elephant that has all too long remained the room unnoticed. It is by giving voice to the people who have knowledge, and by using knowledge to elevate us collectively to simple and empowering insights—that the dialog will give the new media technologies the function they can and must have.