Holotopia summary

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H O L O T O P I A:    AN   A C T I O N A B L E    S T R A T E G Y



A challenge

"The future will either be an inspired product of a great cultural revival, or there will be no future."

This diagnosis of our civilization's condition was made in 1980 by Aurerelio Peccei, The Club of Rome's founding president, based on a decade of this international think tank's research into the future prospects of mankind.

That "our civilization is on a collision course with nature" was at that point a scientifically established fact. The Club of Rome researchers looked deeper, into the roots of our civilization's condition—and found that a misbalanced way of evolving was its cause, which made science and technology prosper, while culture and human quality decline.

On the morning of March 14, 1984, the day he passed away, Peccei dictated to his secretary from a hospital bed (as part of "Agenda for the End of the Century"):

"Human development is the most important goal."

Peccei.jpg
Aurelio Peccei

A vision

The holotopia is a realizable vision of a future that offers more than what Peccei called for—more than a way to "change course" by beginning "a great cultural revival".

This vision is made concrete in terms of five insights, which show that a comprehensive improvement of our condition is possible—analogous to, and yet deeper and broader than, the comprehensive wave of change that was germinating four centuries ago, when Galilei was held in house arrest:

  • In innovation (analogy with Industrial Revolution)
  • In communication (analogy with Copernican Revolution)
  • In foundation or epistemology (analogy with Enlightenment)
  • In method (analogy with Scientific Revolution)
  • In values (analogy with Renaissance)


Why this is possible

The reason why comprehensive, Renaissance-like change is now possible is that—just as the case was in Galilei's time—it is mandated for fundammental reasons. In the course of our modernization we've made a fundamental error—which has been uncovered and reported, but not corrected.

In 1952, in "Physics and Philosophy", Nobel Laureate Physicist Werner Heisenberg described this error and its consequences:

"[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. This frame (...) 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. (...) In the same way life was to be explained as a physical and chemical process, governed by natural laws, completely determined by causality. Darwin’s concept of evolution provided ample evidence for this interpretation. It was especially difficult to find in this framework room for those parts of reality that had been the object of the traditional religion and seemed now more or less only imaginary. (...). Confidence in the scientific method and in rational thinking replaced all other safeguards of the human mind."

Heisenberg's point was that the "narrow and rigid" way of looking at the world, which our general culture adopted from the 19th century science, was proven wrong a century later by science itself.

Heisenberg believed that the greatest gift of modern physics to humanity would be to unleash a cultural change—by discrediting the worldview that keeps culture in check.


A method

knowledge federation is a general-purpose methodology for handling information and knowledge, developed on the results of 20th century science and philosophy as foundation.

It provides methods for combining results from the sciences and the humanities with the heritage of the world traditions—to create insights and principles needed to provide orientation to contemporary people and society.

When knowledge federation is applied to our society's pivotal issues—the holotopia vision results.

As the case was in Galilei's time, when the knowledge we own is released from oblivion and used to illuminate our ways—a comprehensive change is the natural result.

It took us 25 years to develop a complete prototype of knowledge federation. It is composed of about 40 more detailed prototypes, which provide detailed answers to a full spectrum of questions ranging from epistemology and methods, to technology, community and social organization.

The holotopia prototype completes this comprehensive prototype, by providing a practical way in which the society's vision can be changed, and our self-destructive course reversed.


A strategy

The holotopia strategy is to focus our efforts on comprehensive and positive change.

The five insights show that such change may be easy—even when smaller and obviously necessary changes may be impossible.


A mission

The holotopia mission is to set in motion a comprehensive wave of change.


We implement this mission in two steps.

The first step is to institutionalize knowledge federation as an academic field.

Its purpose is to divert some of the vast resources of the world academia toward correcting the fundamental error, and providing our society the vision it needs.</blockquote>

The second step is to develop holotopia as a real-life extension of knowledge federation
<p>The vision is necessary, but not sufficient. The purpose of holotopia is to mobilize resources toward realizing its vision.


For more information

  • holotopia.info provides an overview of holotopia project etc.
  • holoscope.info is a blog providing the timeline and ideas for development. The blog post "White Is the New Black" is an interview where the holotopia project is explained.