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<p>The second <em><b>point</b></em> of Jantsch's "evolutionary vision" is the different self-perception that's emerging; Jantsch outlined it in his seminal 1975 book <em>Design for Evolution</em>; by inviting us to see ourselves as passengers (not in a bus but) in a boat on a river. The traditional science would then look at the boat and the river from above—aiming to describe both "objectively"; the traditional systems science would position itself <em>on</em> the boat—and aim to steer it safely. The emerging evolutionary <em><b>paradigm</b></em> invites us to see ourselves as—the river! So that <em>the way we present ourselves</em> to evolution is what determines its course. This thoroughly changes the value set of <em><b>materialism</b></em>—when we realize that the "self-interest" is taking us toward disaster. This is also the context in which the <em><b>Liberation</b></em> book's subtitle "Religion beyond Belief" can be comprehended; in the book <em><b>religion</b></em> is introduced as that <em><b>aspect</b></em> of <em><b>culture</b></em> that liberates us from <em><b>self-centeredness</b></em> and helps us acquire this <em>new</em> evolutionary competence—to see ourselves as part in a larger <em><b>whole</b></em>; and to collaborate (instead of competing), and self-organize accordingly.</p>  
 
<p>The second <em><b>point</b></em> of Jantsch's "evolutionary vision" is the different self-perception that's emerging; Jantsch outlined it in his seminal 1975 book <em>Design for Evolution</em>; by inviting us to see ourselves as passengers (not in a bus but) in a boat on a river. The traditional science would then look at the boat and the river from above—aiming to describe both "objectively"; the traditional systems science would position itself <em>on</em> the boat—and aim to steer it safely. The emerging evolutionary <em><b>paradigm</b></em> invites us to see ourselves as—the river! So that <em>the way we present ourselves</em> to evolution is what determines its course. This thoroughly changes the value set of <em><b>materialism</b></em>—when we realize that the "self-interest" is taking us toward disaster. This is also the context in which the <em><b>Liberation</b></em> book's subtitle "Religion beyond Belief" can be comprehended; in the book <em><b>religion</b></em> is introduced as that <em><b>aspect</b></em> of <em><b>culture</b></em> that liberates us from <em><b>self-centeredness</b></em> and helps us acquire this <em>new</em> evolutionary competence—to see ourselves as part in a larger <em><b>whole</b></em>; and to collaborate (instead of competing), and self-organize accordingly.</p>  
 
<p>The third <em><b>point</b></em> is the piece in the puzzle that made it click to Jantsch that "evolutionary vision" truly <em>is</em> a comprehensive emerging <em><b>paradigm</b></em>; which happened in 1972, when Ilya Prigogine visited U.C. Berkeley where Jantsch was a perpetual "adjunct assistant professor" and gave a talk; which showed Jantsch that <em>even physical systems</em> follow the evolutionary <em><b>paradigm</b></em> (five years later Prigogine got the Nobel Prize for this work). The point of it all is that while <em>technical</em> systems good or vital condition or technically "homeostasis" is maintained by holding on to a certain "equilibrium"—to living systems equilibrium is <em>death</em>; they exist in a state that is far from equilibrium—so that <em>creativity</em>, the capability to <em>change</em> course, is their key resource and mode of evolving. The <em>Liberation</em> book describes this creative human condition precisely; the "liberation" is from a condition where—caught into <em><b>power structure</b></em>, keeping busy to survive in competitive world—we've all but completely lost our ability to think creatively and see things differently. Which is what the keyword <em><b>logos</b></em> is about—a banner to revive this all-important evolutionary quest, and capability.</p>
 
<p>The third <em><b>point</b></em> is the piece in the puzzle that made it click to Jantsch that "evolutionary vision" truly <em>is</em> a comprehensive emerging <em><b>paradigm</b></em>; which happened in 1972, when Ilya Prigogine visited U.C. Berkeley where Jantsch was a perpetual "adjunct assistant professor" and gave a talk; which showed Jantsch that <em>even physical systems</em> follow the evolutionary <em><b>paradigm</b></em> (five years later Prigogine got the Nobel Prize for this work). The point of it all is that while <em>technical</em> systems good or vital condition or technically "homeostasis" is maintained by holding on to a certain "equilibrium"—to living systems equilibrium is <em>death</em>; they exist in a state that is far from equilibrium—so that <em>creativity</em>, the capability to <em>change</em> course, is their key resource and mode of evolving. The <em>Liberation</em> book describes this creative human condition precisely; the "liberation" is from a condition where—caught into <em><b>power structure</b></em>, keeping busy to survive in competitive world—we've all but completely lost our ability to think creatively and see things differently. Which is what the keyword <em><b>logos</b></em> is about—a banner to revive this all-important evolutionary quest, and capability.</p>
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<h3>Acknowledging that <em><b>information</b></em> is <em>the</em> 'weapon' by which our impending revolution needs to be fought; and the <em><b>paradigm</b></em> shift enabled.</h3>
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<p>Our existing <em><b>information</b></em> is <em>not only</em> inadequate for its function. Noam Chomsky has <em>repeatedly</em> warned us that its <em>actual</em> function is to manufacture <em>consent</em> (and hence be an instrument of <em><b>power structure</b></em>); and Murray Edelman has made it clear <em>as a political scientist</em> that that's also the actual function of those more formal instruments of "democracy", including the elections.</p>
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<p>Neither can science claim neutrality; in Chapter Nine of the <em>Liberation</em> book, which has "Liberation of Science" as title theme, I quote from Peter Berger and Thomas Luckmann's 1966 book <em>The Social Construction of Reality</em>: “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>
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<p>The institutionalized science indeed holds the <em>key</em> to the impending revolution of awareness—because science and science alone has the power to liberate us from "the world" that has been pulled over our eyes to blind us from the truth; by establishing an independent reference system that will empower us to <em>comprehend</em> the world; and to handle it and to <em>be</em> in it differently. In Chapter Nine I talk about the <em><b>dialog</b></em> in front of the (metaphorical, academic) <em><b>mirror</b></em>; the liberation of science—and <em>our</em> liberation—needs to begin as an academic self-reflective dialog. I thought that "<em>academia quo vadis</em>" might suit it as a title. Chapter Nine concludes with this curiosity: <em>Already Descartes</em>, presented a case for <em><b>transdisciplinarity</b></em>; in <em>his</em> last and unfinished work <em>Règles pour la direction de l'esprit</em> (Rules for the Direction of the Mind)! So yes—it's about time we give due attention to this all-important theme.</p>
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<h3>The <em>dialog</em> is conceived as a practical way to change our <em>collective mind</em>.</h3>
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<p>Where the academic tradition returns to its point of origin; and then handles things differently! In re-creating the <em><b>dialog</b></em> we have twenty-five centuries of developments to work with; to <em><b>federate</b></em>.</p>
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<p>Notably David Bohm's <em><b>dialog</b></em>-related work. As the next-generation modern physicist (a student of Oppenheimer and a protege of Einstein)—who applied his physics to a study of creativity, and his creativity-related insights to a study and a <em>redesign</em> of communication—Bohm clearly saw that communication as we have it tends to be just another way to engage in power struggle; and that if communication is to be an instrument of recovery and revival—it will need to be <em>thoroughly</em> revised. </p>
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XXX rules of the game and acting accordingly; doing what "works" in "practical reality". It is from the <em><b>homo ludens</b></em> to the <em><b>homo sapiens</b></em> evolutionary course that we now must find a way to make an evolutionary turn.</p>
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<p>Here Jantsch's "evolutionary vision" is most relevant. I'll use it to summarize the <em><b>holotopia</b></em> vision—which is of course just <em><b>federated</b></em> from Jantsch and 20th century <em><b>giants</b></em>. Once again—it's what we'll see when we 'turn on the light' on our situation. Three <em><b>points</b></em>.</p>
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<p>The first is that <em><b>materialism</b></em> as way of evolving <em>cannot</em> continue; Ervin Laszlo pointed this out in the very title of his book <em>Choice: Evolution or Extinction</em>. Complicity in devolution toward self-destruction is <em>not</em> anyone's interest; it's just what we do when we are caught up in <em><b>power structure</b></em>.</p>
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<p>The second <em><b>point</b></em> of Jantsch's "evolutionary vision" is the different self-perception that's emerging; Jantsch outlined it in his seminal 1975 book <em>Design for Evolution</em>; by inviting us to see ourselves as passengers (not in a bus but) in a boat on a river. The traditional science would then look at the boat and the river from above—aiming to describe both "objectively"; the traditional systems science would position itself <em>on</em> the boat—and aim to steer it safely. The emerging evolutionary <em><b>paradigm</b></em> invites us to see ourselves as—the river! So that <em>the way we present ourselves</em> to evolution is what determines its course. This thoroughly changes the value set of <em><b>materialism</b></em>—when we realize that the "self-interest" is taking us toward disaster. This is also the context in which the <em><b>Liberation</b></em> book's subtitle "Religion beyond Belief" can be comprehended; in the book <em><b>religion</b></em> is introduced as that <em><b>aspect</b></em> of <em><b>culture</b></em> that liberates us from <em><b>self-centeredness</b></em> and helps us acquire this <em>new</em> evolutionary competence—to see ourselves as part in a larger <em><b>whole</b></em>; and to collaborate (instead of competing), and self-organize accordingly.</p>
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<p>The third <em><b>point</b></em> is the piece in the puzzle that made it click to Jantsch that "evolutionary vision" truly <em>is</em> a comprehensive emerging <em><b>paradigm</b></em>; which happened in 1972, when Ilya Prigogine visited U.C. Berkeley where Jantsch was a perpetual "adjunct assistant professor" and gave a talk; which showed Jantsch that <em>even physical systems</em> follow the evolutionary <em><b>paradigm</b></em> (five years later Prigogine got the Nobel Prize for this work). The point of it all is that while <em>technical</em> systems good or vital condition or technically "homeostasis" is maintained by holding on to a certain "equilibrium"—to living systems equilibrium is <em>death</em>; they exist in a state that is far from equilibrium—so that <em>creativity</em>, the capability to <em>change</em> course, is their key resource and mode of evolving. The <em>Liberation</em> book describes this creative human condition precisely; the "liberation" is from a condition where—caught into <em><b>power structure</b></em>, keeping busy to survive in competitive world—we've all but completely lost our ability to think creatively and see things differently. Which is what the keyword <em><b>logos</b></em> is about—a banner to revive this all-important evolutionary quest, and capability.</p>
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<p>A side-effect of this academic update is that it offers us a way to avoid the fragmentation in social sciences; which results when the social scientists disagree whether it's right to see the complex cultural and social reality in one way or in another. Here our explicit aim is to <em><b>see things whole</b></em>; which translates into the challenge of seeing things in a way that may best reveal their non-<em><b>whole</b></em> sides. The simple point here is that when our task is <em>not</em> producing an accurate description of an infinitely complex "reality", but a way to see it that "works" (in the sense of providing us evolutionary guidance)—then this fragmentation is easily seen as part of the problem, and avoided.</p>
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<p>With "Liberation of Body" as title, Chapter One zooms in on the experience of difficulty or effort; and by <em><b>federating</b></em> experiences and insights from the martial art tradition, with the ones reached in the schools that F. M. Alexander and Moshe Feldenkrais founded, points out that both the sensation of effort and our <em>ability</em> to move freely can be altered hugely by suitable training; and Chapters Two and Three do similarly with creativity (as the motility of mind) and emotions (as the motility of feeling). Vast <em>ranges</em> of freedom—and <em>obstacles</em> to freedom—are <em>embodied</em>; and it is there, <em>within</em> ourselves, that vast and ignored opportunities to improve our condition reside. Chapter Four offers a general model of inner <em><b>wholeness</b></em>; which makes it possible to comprehend the effects of a broad range of <em><b>human development</b></em> schools and traditions such as yoga and Rolfing; which is itself created by combining insights from the qigong tradition with the ones reached in the psychotherapy school that Wilhelm Reich founded.</p>
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<p>The <em>Liberation</em> book in this way produces an initial map of human inner <em><b>wholeness</b></em>; and an initial template for reviving and empowering culture-transformative experiences and insights or <em><b>memes</b></em>. The book is <em>conceived</em> (more precisely <em>it can be read</em>) as a case for a single culture-transformative <em><b>meme</b></em>—the legacy of Buddhadasa, Thailand's holy man and Buddhism reformer. Chapters Five and Six are dedicated to <em><b>federating</b></em> his message. Chapter Five, which has "Liberation from Tension" as title, explores a point of view and a realm of experience according to which "the pursuit of happiness" as <em><b>materialism</b></em> conceived it is <em>exactly</em> exactly the way to <em>suffering</em> (more precisely to a specific <em>kind of</em> suffering called <em><b>dukkha</b></em>, which is <em>the</em> focal point of Buddhism, as Buddhadasa interpreted it); and in Chapter Six, which has "Liberation from Oneself" as title, we see why also the liberation from <em><b>self-centeredness</b></em> (which, roughly, means letting the "What's in it for me?" question decide the <em><b>know-what</b></em>), which Buddhadasa saw as <em>the</em> shared essence of the great world religions—is also part and parcel of our <em><b>wholeness</b></em>.</p>
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<h3>You can now see how "a great cultural revival" may <em>realistically</em> happen.</h3>
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<p>Once we've liberated ourselves from "the deception of the senses", and claimed back our <em><b>know-what</b></em> from all that advertising—we'll be free to explore the <em><b>pivotal</b></em> themes <em>evidence-based</em>. But this is only a new <em>beginning</em>; that single step with which a journey of one thousand miles begins—where we'll <em>rebuild</em> our <em><b>culture</b></em>; so that it <em>effortlessly</em> elevates us to the heights whose very <em>existence</em> we ignore; to the condition we call <em><b>wholeness</b></em>; which gave <em><b>holotopia</b></em> that name. <em>Then</em> and only then will the pursuit of this new evolutionary <em><b>course</b></em>—that will elevate our humanness and culture to new heights—be natural and easy.</p> 
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<p>This explains the <em>Liberation</em> book's subtitle, "Religion beyond Belief"; which invites you to see the history of religion in three phases:
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<ul>
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<li>where in the first, the beliefs and mores of religion <em>compelled</em> people to do (ethically, in an <em>evolutionary</em> sense) the right thing</li>
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<li>and in the second, the <em><b>beliefs</b></em> and mores of of <em><b>materialism</b></em> made us 'free' to do the <em>wrong</em> thing;</li>
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<li>until we developed <em><b>knowledge</b></em> about <em><b>pivotal</b></em> themes.</li>
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<p>The <em>Liberation</em> book shows that—once this is achieved, once we've learned to <em><b>federate</b></em> what's of value in the heritage of religious and other <em><b>human development</b></em> traditions (instead of ignoring it, because it failed to fit into the <em><b>narrow frame</b></em>)—the resulting <em>improvement</em> of our condition will be <em>truly</em> beyond belief!</p>
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<p>Finally, and importantly, by creating <em><b>keywords</b></em> we can create the ways of looking or <em><b>scopes</b></em> that constitute the (metaphorical) <em><b>mountain</b></em>; and use it <em>as an independent reference system</em> (which is not "the world") for theorizing and comprehending the world—in new and <em>functional</em> ways.</p>
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<h3>Substituting the lightbulb for the candle symbolizes the <em>paradigm</em> change.</h3>
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<p>And points to the creative challenge that's involved in it—to create and put in play a <em>social process</em> by which the <em><b>paradigm</b></em> <em>can</em> be changed.
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<div class="page-header"><h1>Federation through Keywords</h1></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>
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(Ulrich Beck,  <em>The Risk Society and Beyond</em>, 2000)
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<div class="col-md-6"><p>To orient ourselves in the "post-traditional world" (where the traditional recipes no longer work), to step <em>beyond</em> "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 step <em>beyond</em> our inherited or <em><b>traditional</b></em> "frameworks of reference", which keep us confined to the proverbial "box"; 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> in general? <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>
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<p><em><b>Keywords</b></em> are concepts defined by <em><b>convention</b></em>. 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"; but creating a <em>way of looking</em> at an endlessly complex real thing; and <em>projecting</em> it, as it were, onto a plane—so that we may look at at it from a specific <em>angle</em>; and see it and talk about it <em>precisely</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>
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<p><em><b>Keywords</b></em> enable us to ascribe to old words like "science" and "religion" a clear new meaning; and give to old institutions a clear function, and a new life.</p>
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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 class="col-md-3 round-images">[[File:Beck.jpeg]] <br><small><center>[[Ulrich Beck]]</center></small></div>
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<div class="col-md-6"><h2>Paradigm</h2>
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<div class="col-md-7"><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" that motivates this proposal—which is to <em>enable</em> the <em><b>paradigm</b></em> to change. <em><b>Holotopia</b></em> is a <em><b>paradigm</b></em>; and so is <em><b>transdisciplinarity</b></em>, as <em><b>prototyped</b></em> by <em><b>knowledge federation</b></em>.</p>
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<p>[[File:Elephant.jpg]]<br><small><center>We see the emerging <em><b>paradigm</b></em> when we connect the dots.</center></small></p>
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<p>I use the keyword <em><b>elephant</b></em> as a nickname to <em><b>holotopia</b></em> when I want to be even more informal—and highlight that in a <em><b>paradigm</b></em> everything depends on everything else, as the organs of an <em><b>elephant</b></em> do; and to motivate the strategy I just mentioned, by pointing to what might seem as a paradox—namely that comprehensive change, of a <em><b>paradigm</b></em> as a whole, can be natural and easy even when small and obviously necessary changes may have proven impossible: It is <em>useless</em> to try to fit an elephant's ear onto a mouse; but a <em><b>paradigm</b></em> can change effortlessly, almost all by itself—when the circumstances for such a change 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 for seeing the <em><b>paradigm</b></em> we have as dysfunctional and obsolete, and for manifesting a new and radically better one are already there; so that all that remained to be done is—to connect the dots; or more precisely—to restore our collective <em>capability</em> to connect the dots.</p>
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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 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 tradition 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 still ignore! </p>
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<p>The <em>Liberation</em> book undertakes to facilitate the <em><b>paradigm</b></em> change by drafting an analogy between our contemporary situation and the times and conditions when Galilei was in house arrest, when a landslide paradigm change was about to take place; and by giving the reader a glimpse of the emerging <em><b>paradigm</b></em>; and by diagnosing the problem—<em>what</em> exactly hinders us from connecting the dots; and by <em>fostering</em> a social process that will empower us to remedy this problem; and <em>continue</em> cultural evolution.</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> at large. </p>
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<div class="col-md-6"><h2>Knowledge federation</h2></div>
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<div class="col-md-3"><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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(René Descartes,  <em> Meditations on First Philosophy</em>, 1641)
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<div class="col-md-6"><p>The natural and perhaps the <em>only</em> way a <em><b>paradigm</b></em> can change is by changing the way people think; or the way we use our <em><b>minds</b></em>, as I prefer to see it; because by and large—the way we use the mind <em>is</em> our <em><b>paradigm</b></em>. So I turned "knowledge federation" into a <em><b>keyword</b></em>; intending to use it as a banner, to demarcate the creative frontier where we'll be empowered to do as Descartes and his colleagues did at the point of inception of science—start all the way from the <em><b>foundation</b></em>; and <em>rebuild</em> the <em><b>foundation</b></em>; and use the new <em><b>foundation</b></em> to be creative as <em>they</em> were—and <em>re-create</em> the way we go about pursuing <em><b>knowledge</b></em>; so that <em>all the rest</em> can change based on <em><b>knowledge</b></em>-based.</p>
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<p>"In the beginning was logos and logos was with God and logos was God." I use the word <em><b>logos</b></em> to <em>motivate</em> this step; by pointing to the <em>historicity</em> of the way we use the <em><b>mind</b></em>; that it <em>has</em> changed in the past and <em>will</em> change again. 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>
 +
<p>But "logos" faired poorly in the post-Hellenic world; neither Latin nor the modern languages provided a suitable translation. For about a millennium the Europeans 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 constitute the deadly sin of pride, and a heresy.</p>
 +
<p>The scientific revolution unfolded as a reaction to earlier "teleological" or theological 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 workings of a clockwork. </p>
 +
<p>Science assumed its contemporary <em><b>pivotal</b></em> social role—of "the Grand Revelator of modern Western culture" as Benjamin Lee Whorf called it in <em>Language, Thought and Reality</em>—"without intending to"; that was a side-effect of <em>historical</em> and accidental developments. 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>
 +
<p>The key to comprehending how exactly I propose to <em>correct</em> the error I've been telling you about, and <em>modernize</em> the way we think or use the <em><b>mind</b></em>, and <em>rebuild</em> the <em><b>foundation</b></em>—is in the rather amusing ambiguity of the word "foundation"; which I turned into a <em><b>keyword</b></em> in order to give it an entirely <em>different</em> meaning than what Descartes intended in the sentence I just quoted. Because to Descartes and his colleagues the aim was to build the "edifice" of knowledge that is "true" in an objective sense—which would allow us to know "reality" as it truly <em>is</em>; so that—once it's been established so solidly and firmly—this knowledge will last <em>forever</em>. And so <em>naturally</em>—given this mindset—they conceived and instituted science as a way to find this solid and unchanging truth; and to gradually <em>expand</em> this solid and ever-lasting edifice of knowledge.</p>
 +
<h3>It was in <em>this</em> way that we ended up with 'candles' as 'headlights'.</h3>
 +
<p>Their actual <em>function</em> was never even <em>considered</em>; and this function anyhow subsequently expanded and changed beyond recognition.</p>
 +
<h3>It was in <em>this</em> way that we ended up with 'candles' as 'headlights'.</h3>
 +
<p>What I mean by <em><b>foundation</b></em> is what our pursuit of <em><b>knowledge</b></em> is founded on; and what the continuities in cultural evolution <em>depend</em> on; so that when this <em><b>foundation</b></em> changes—we need to secure that the new <em><b>foundation</b></em> is <em><b>broad</b></em> enough to hold <em>all</em> cultural heritage—and support its continued evolution; and <em><b>solid</b></em> enough so that we may rely on it, while doing this all-important work.</p>
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</div>
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<div class="col-md-3 round-images"> [[File:Descartes.jpg]] <br><small><center>[[Rene Descartes]]</center></small></div>
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</div>
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<div class="row">
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<div class="col-md-3"></div>
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<div class="col-md-6"><h2>Design epistemology</h2></div>
 +
<div class="col-md-3"></div>
 +
</div>
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<div class="row">
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<div class="col-md-3"><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>
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<br>
 +
(Werner Heisenberg, <em>Physics and Philosophy</em>, 1958.)
 +
</div>
 +
<div class="col-md-6"><p>You'll comprehend the <em><b>anomaly</b></em> that this <em><b>fundational</b></em> of <em><b>holotopia</b></em>'s <em><b>five points</b></em> undertakes to resolve, if (in addition to what I just said) you consider the fact that the <em><b>belief</b></em> on which "the whole edifice" was founded (that the true and lasting knowledge of reality is revealed to the mind as <em>sensation</em> of absolute clarity and certainty; which Descartes immortalized by his epitaph "I think, therefore I am")—was subsequently disproved and disowned <em>by science itself</em>. When scientists became able to zoom in on the 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 even that they <em>contradicted</em> contradicted our common sense (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 to evolve.</p>
 +
<p>Which now constitutes a compelling academic or <em>fundamental</em> reason (in addition to the pragmatic reasons I've been telling you about) to revisit the <em><b>foundation</b></em> (on which we pursue <em><b>knowledge</b></em> and secure that <em><b>culture</b></em> evolves)! And this was precisely what Werner Heisenberg undertook to point out—when he wrote <em>Physics and Philosophy</em>, in 1958: 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." He 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>
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<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 following the approach (<em><b>knowledge federation</b></em>) that is the subject of this proposal.</p>
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<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, as his testament, 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—which I've been telling you about all along.</p>
 +
<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 communicate and make comprehensible), the <em><b>design epistemology</b></em> gives us a way to overcome the <em><b>narrow frame</b></em> handicap that Heisenberg was objecting to: All cultural artifacts, including rituals, mores and beliefs, can be <em><b>seen as</b></em> embodying human experience; instead of simply ignoring what fails to fit our worldview—<em><b>design epistemology</b></em> empowers us and even obliges 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>
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<p>By <em><b>convention</b></em>, human experience has no a priori 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 always possible; and our task is to identify and produce those that will <em><b>correct</b></em> our comprehension and action.</p>
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<h3><em>Design epistemology</em> as <em>foundation</em> is <em>broad</em>.</h3>
 +
<p>Furthermore, the <em><b>design epistemology</b></em> expresses also the <em><b>constructivist</b></em> position (that we are <em>constructing</em> interpretations of experience, not "discovering" objectively pre-existing ones) as a <em><b>convention</b></em>; and adds to it a purpose (to provide us "evolutionary guidance", or <em><b>know-what</b></em>). </p>
 +
<h3><em>Design epistemology</em> as <em>foundation</em> is also <em>solid</em>.</h3>
 +
<p>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—<em>not only</em> because doing what's necessary to avoid civilizational collapse is hard to argue against; but also because <em>this too</em> is a <em><b>convention</b></em>; a <em>different</em> convention, and an altogether different way to knowledge can be created by this approach; to suit a <em>different</em> function.</p>
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<p>Appeals to legitimate <em><b>transdisciplinarity</b></em> academically—if they were at all considered—were 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 what <em><b>knowledge federation</b></em> initiative undertakes to enable.</p>
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</div>
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<div class="col-md-3 round-images"> [[File:Heisenberg.jpg]] <br><small><center>[[Werner Heisenberg]]</center></small></div>
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</div>
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<div class="row">
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<div class="col-md-3"></div>
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<div class="col-md-6"><h2>Polyscopic methodology</h2></div>
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<div class="col-md-3"></div>
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</div>
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<div class="row">
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<div class="col-md-3"><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>
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<br>
 +
(Abraham Maslow,  <em>Psychology of Science</em>, 1966)
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</div>
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<div class="col-md-6"><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 consider that—as Maslow pointed out—this method is now so specialized, that it compels <em>us</em> to be specialized; and choose our themes and set our 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>
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<p>As an <em>insight</em>, the <em><b>polyscopic methodology</b></em> points out that a general-purpose <em><b>methodology</b></em> (where <em><b>logos</b></em> is applied to method), which alleviates this problem, can be created by the proposed approach; 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; so as to preserve the advantages of science—and alleviate its limitations.</p>
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<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>
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<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 rigorously defined ideas to develop clear and rigorous <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>
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<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 dots <em>can</em> be connected in a 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>
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</div>
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<div class="col-md-3 round-images">[[File:Maslow.jpg]]<br><small><center>[[Abraham Maslow]]</center></small></div>
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</div>
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<div class="row">
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<div class="col-md-3"></div>
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<div class="col-md-6"><h2>Convenience paradox</h2></div>
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<div class="col-md-3"></div> </div>
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<div class="row">
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<div class="col-md-3"><font size="+1">“The future will either be an inspired product of a great cultural revival, or there will be no future.” </font>
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<br>
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(Aurelio Peccei,  <em>One Hundred Pages for the Future</em>, 1981)
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</div>
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<div class="col-md-6"><p>You'll appreciate the relevance of the <em><b>convenience paradox insight</b></em> if you consider the <em><b>category</b></em> it stems from, <em><b>values</b></em>—in the context of our contemporary condition: The pursuit of material production and consumption (our society's evolutionary <em><b>course</b></em> that the word <em><b>materialism</b></em> here designates) needs to be <em>urgently</em> changed; but to what; and in what way? It seems that everyone who has looked into this question a bit more carefully 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>And you'll see the <em>anomaly</em> this <em><b>point</b></em> points to if you consider that <em><b>materialism</b></em>'s way to use the mind considers as possible or relevant or "real" 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", as Heisenberg pointed out; which in the realm of values translates into <em><b>convenience</b></em>—whereby those things and <em>only</em> those things that appear attractive to our senses are considered as <em>really</em> worth pursuing (technical science here won't be of much help); and notice that this way ('in the light of a candle') of conceiving 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>
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<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 question for more than four decades—condensed in a six-minute trailer)—how Dennis Meadows, while of course pointing in the right direction, was searching for words that would do it justice; and came up with little more than "knowledge", and "music"?</p>
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<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 private lives and in culture, revolves around it); and let me ask <em>What sort of "love"</em>—or what <em>quality</em> of love—is a human being <em>capable of experience</em>? In the third chapter of the <em>Liberation</em> book, which has "Liberation of Emotions" as title, the <em><b>phenomenological</b></em> evidence for illuminating this and related 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 awareness; and that certain kinds of practice, which combine poetry and music with meditation and ethical behavior, can make us, in the long run, <em>capable of experiencing</em> far more than we do; so that the experience <em>of poetry and music too</em> can become considerably deeper and 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 awareness, to give it the sortof status and treatment that "Newton's Laws" enjoy today) 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; whose <em><b>rectangle</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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</div>
 +
<div class="col-md-3 round-images"> [[File:Peccei.jpg]] <br><small><center>[[Aurelio Peccei]]</center></small>
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</div> </div>
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<div class="row">
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<div class="col-md-3"></div>
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<div class="col-md-6"><h2>Knowledge federation</h2></div>
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<div class="col-md-3"></div>
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</div>
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<div class="row">
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<div class="col-md-3"><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>
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<br>
 +
(Doug Engelbart, "Dreaming of the Future*, <em>BYTE Magazine</em>, 1995)
 +
</div>
 +
<div class="col-md-6"><p>You'll comprehend the <em>relevance</em> of this <em><b>holotopia</b></em>'s <em><b>point</b></em> if you think of communication—the <em><b>category</b></em> from which it stems—as the technology-enabled social process by which relatively autonomous individuals are organized into a 'collective organism' of society; which <em>determines</em> this collective organism's capabilities for dealing with complex, urgent problems. You'll see the anomaly it undertakes to unravel 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—in 1951 already!)  and developed (by his SRI-based team, and publicly demonstrated in 1968) to sere as "a collective nervous system" and <em>enable</em> a quantum leap in the evolution of our social organisms (by giving them a <em><b>collective mind</b></em> , and hence vision, and awareness); and 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. You'll have a glimpse of the <em>depth</em> of this anomaly if you consider that our most creative and best qualified minds are <em>still</em> busy producing pages and pages of text—even though it's been diagnosed <em>very</em> long ago that a <em>different</em> social process must be in place to make this production <em>useful</em> (but needless to say, those warnings too got lost in "information glut").</p>
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<p>Our 2010 workshop—where we <em>began</em> to self-organize as a <em><b>transdiscipline</b></em>—was called "Self-Organizing Collective Mind"; we invited a couple of dozen of hand-picked experts—to represent the spectrum of expertise that a <em><b>transdiscipline</b></em> of this kind may require—and asked them to self-organize in a way that would enable <em><b>collective mind</b></em> re-evolution in <em>other</em> society's <em><b>systems</b></em>. The creative leaders of Program for the Future—the R & D community that Mei Lin Fung initiated in Palo Alto to continue and complete the work on implementing Engelbart's vision—were part of this initiative since its inception.</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>As an insight, <em><b>knowledge federation</b></em> stands for the fact that a <em>radically</em> better communication is possible; which will make the sort of difference the Modernity ideogram points to. We made this <em><b>point</b></em> transparent by developing a portfolio of <em><b>prototypes</b></em>—real-life models of socio-technical systems in communication; which I'll here illustrate by briefly showing our Tesla and the Nature of Creativity 2015 prototype; where a result of an academic researcher, Dejan Raković of the University of Belgrade, was <em><b>federated</b></em> in three phases:
 +
<ul>
 +
<li>the first phase made the result <em>comprehensible</em> to lay audiences; by turning this technical research article into a multimedia object (by <em><b>knowledge federation</b></em>'s communication design team) where its main <em><b>points</b></em> were extracted 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>
 +
<li>the second phase made the result <em>known</em> and at the same time discussed in space—by staging a televised high-profile <em><b>dialog</b></em> at Sava Center Belgrade</li>
 +
<li>the third phase constituted a technology-enabled global social process (we used DebateGraph) by which the result was processed further, .</li> 
 +
</ul> </p>
 +
<p>Also the <em>theme</em> of Raković's result was relevant to our purpose: He first demonstrated <em><b>phenomenologically</b></em> (by referring to Nikola Tesla's own descriptions of his creative process) that the "outside the box" creativity we now vitally need requires a <em>different</em> way to use the mind and different <em><b>ecology of mind</b></em> from what's become usual; and then theorized this creative process within the paradigm of quantum physics. Just <em>imagine</em> if the way we (teach the young people how to) think at our schools and universities is the kind that the machines are now capable of doing—and <em>unlike</em> what we humans <em>out to</em> be doing at this <em><b>pivotal</b></em> moment of our history!  "So you are developing a <em>collective</em> Tesla", Serbian TV anchor commented while interviewing our representative; and rendered the gist of our initiative better than I have been able to.</p>
 +
</div>
 +
<div class="col-md-3 round-images"> [[File:Engelbart.jpg]] <br><small><center>[[Doug Engelbart]]</center></small></div>
 +
</div>
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<div class="row">
 +
<div class="col-md-3"></div>
 +
<div class="col-md-6"><h2>Systemic innovation</h2></div>
 +
<div class="col-md-3"></div>
 +
</div>
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<div class="row">
 +
<div class="col-md-3"><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>
 +
<br>
 +
(Erich Jantsch,  <em>Integrative PLanning for the "Joint Systems" of Society and Technology—the Emerging Role of the University</em>, MIT Report,1969)
 +
</div>
 +
<div class="col-md-6"><p>You'll see the <em>relevance</em> of that this <em><b>insight</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—whether the <em>effects</em> of our work will be problems, or solutions. We had a professional photographer at our Tesla and the Nature of Creativity 2015 event in Belgrade; and she photographed me showing my smartphone to the people in the <em><b>dialog</b></em>; which I did to point to the <em>surreal</em> contrast between the dexterity that went into to creation of the minute little thing I was holding in my hand—and the complete <em>negligence</em> of those incomparably larger and equally more important <em><b>systems</b></em> we now vitally depend on—to give us <em>vision</em>! You'll begin to see the <em><b>anomaly</b></em> this <em><b>point</b></em> points to, if you—considering that the <em><b>system</b></em> whose function is to (help us) give <em>direction</em> to our creative efforts (by providing us <em><b>know-what</b></em>) is still a 'candle'—ask <em>What about all others</em>? How suitable are our financial system, our governance, our international corporation and our education for <em>their</em> all-important roles? Don't <em>they too</em> need to be adapted to the exigences of the post-traditional cosmopolitan world we live in?</p>
 +
<p>In Chapter Seven of the <em>Liberation</em> book I introduced Erich Jantsch's legacy and vision most briefly (and left the details to Book Two of <em><b>holotopia</b></em> series) by qualifying them as environmental movement's forgotten history; and its ignored theory; which we need to be able to <em>act</em> instead of only reacting. And I introduced <em><b>systemic innovation</b></em> (where we update the <em><b>systems</b></em> in which we live and work)—whose name I adopted from Jantsch and turned into a <em><b>keyword</b></em>—by outlining most briefly my 2013 talk "Toward a Scientific Comprehension and Handling of Problems"; where I drafted a parallel between <em><b>systemic innovation</b></em> and scientific medicine—which distinguishes itself by comprehending and handling unwanted symptoms in terms of the <em>anatomy and pathophysiology</em> that underlie  them!</p>
 +
<p>Bánáthy wrote in <em>Designing Social Systems in a Changing World</em>: “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.” For a while I contemplated calling this <em><b>insight</b></em> "The systems, stupid!"—and paraphrasing Bill Clinton's 1992 winning electoral slogan "The Economy, stupid!" Well, of course—in a society where the survival of businesses depends on their ability to sell people things—you <em>have to</em> keep the economy growing if you want to keep business profitable and people employed. But economic growth is <em>not</em> "the solution to our problem"! <em><b>Systemic innovation</b></em> is—being (by definition) what makes us capable of adapting <em><b>systems</b></em> to their <em>function</em>; instead of letting <em>them</em> shape and dictate what <em>we</em> do and how—all the way to the bitter end.</p>
 +
<p>At <em><b>knowledge federation</b></em>'s  2011 workshop at Stanford University, within the Triple Helix IX international conference, I introduced <em><b>systemic innovation</b></em> as an emerging and necessary or <em>remedial</em> trend in <em><b>innovation</b></em>; and (the organizational structure developed and represented by) <em><b>knowledge federation</b></em> as an (institutional or <em><b>systemic</b></em>) <em>enabler</em> of <em><b>systemic innovation</b></em>. We work by creating a <em><b>prototype</b></em> of a <em><b>system</b></em> and organizing a <em><b>transdiscipline</b></em> around it—to update it according to the state-of-the-art insights that its members bring from their disciplines; and to strategically <em>change</em> the corresponding real-life <em><b>system</b></em> or <em><b>systems</b></em>.</p>
 +
</div>
 +
<div class="col-md-3 round-images"> [[File:Jantsch.jpg]] <br><small><center>[[Erich Jantsch]]</center></small></div>
 +
</div>
 +
<div class="row">
 +
<div class="col-md-3"></div>
 +
<div class="col-md-6"><h2>Holoscope</h2></div>
 +
<div class="col-md-3"></div>
 +
</div>
 +
<div class="row">
 +
<div class="col-md-3"><font size="+1"><em><b>See things whole</b></em>.</font>
 +
<br>
 +
The <em><b>holoscope principle</b></em>.
 +
</div>
 +
<div class="col-md-7"><p>Let's look at an even bigger picture; go higher up the <em><b>mountain</b></em>; by <em>combining</em> the <em><b>five points</b></em> and taking advantage of their <em>synergy</em>. Here two of the <em><b>ten themes</b></em> have special roles, ad they are highlighted. The first (going upward) has the label <em><b>information</b></em>; and connects <em><b>polyscopic methodology</b></em> (and <em><b>method</b></em> as <em><b>category</b></em>) on its left with <em><b>knowledge federation</b></em> (and communication as <em><b>category</b></em>) on its right.</p>
 +
<p>But let's begin all the way from the root or <em><b>foundation</b></em> of it all and ask—<em>how</em> should we see? <em>How</em> should we use our minds? In the <em>Liberation</em> book's introduction I introduce this theme by talking about "flat Earth" as quintessential <em><b>belief</b></em>; yes, we may <em><b>believe</b></em> in any sort of odd things like that; but as soon as we account for <em>evidence</em>—we are <em>compelled</em> to change our mind. On the front page of my blog <em>Holoscope.info</em> you'll find the Holoscope ideogram; which is a hand-held cup and its three projections; the point of which is that (to aspire to <em><b>knowledge</b></em> and dispel dangerous and unwarranted <em><b>belief</b></em>) we must <em>deliberately</em> aim to see things <em><b>whole</b></em> which means from <em>all</em> sides; and if any of them shows that the cup's been cracked—then it <em>is</em> cracked!</p>
 +
<p>It is only when we've did our job on the <em>theory</em> or <em><b>methodology</b></em> side, and explained what <em><b>information</b></em> needs to be like—including both its structure and its methods and processes—that we become capable of <em>implementing</em> the corresponding social process and recreate our communication. And furthermore, and most importantly—it is the combination of this <em>theoretical</em> act (and of course all the empowerment that goes with it, through education etc.) with the actual <em>creation</em> of (processes of) <em><b>information</b></em>—that provides us a uniquely powerful basis for solving "the huge problems now confronting us"; by changing an obsolete <em><b>paradigm</b></em>.</p> 
 +
 +
 +
-------
 +
 +
<p>If we, "our species" or global society will be fortunate enough to survive this chaotic, unguided, unconscious and risky transition to guided or conscious evolution—the future generations might look back at our time and see the way we handled information (in "the Age of Information"!) in a similar light as we now see how all those poor and innocent women were treated by Inquisition—as an epitaph of an era; and of a <em><b>paradigm</b></em> in urgent need of change.</p>
 +
<h3><em>What do we need to do</em>—to substitute 'the lightbulb' for 'the candle'?</h3>
 +
<p>I now invite you to revisit the Holotopia ideogram; and to now take a step 'up' the metaphorical <em><b>mountain</b></em> and look at an even larger picture than what those <em><b>five points</b></em> present—and look at the <em>synergy</em> between <em><b>polyscopic methodology</b></em> and <em><b>knowledge federation</b></em>; and at the horizontal line labeled "information" that joins them. It is only when we've done the necessary work on the theory side—and explained to each other <em>and</em> to the world what <em><b>information</b></em> needs to be like, to serve us the people in this moment of need—that we'll also be able to use the new technology to <em>implement the processes</em> that this <em><b>information</b></em> requires.</p>
 +
<p>In the <em><b>holotopia</b></em> context this larger-than-life opportunity is pointed to by the coined idiom <em><b>make things whole</b></em> as the missing guiding principle or rule of thumb—which will <em>direct</em> (how we handle) <em><b>information</b></em>; and by <em><b>holoscope</b></em> as <em><b>keyword</b></em> met aphorizing information as the 'instrument' that will result and enable us to <em><b>see things whole</b></em>.</p>
 +
</div> </div>
 +
<div class="row">
 +
<div class="col-md-3"></div>
 +
<div class="col-md-6"><h2>Holotopia</h2></div>
 +
<div class="col-md-3"></div>
 +
</div>
 +
<div class="row">
 +
<div class="col-md-3"><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"><p>One more horizontal line comes forth to meet the eye on the Holotopia ideogram—the one that has "action" as label; and joins <em><b>convenience paradox</b></em> on the left with <em><b>systemic innovation</b></em> on the right; which points to <em>another</em> all-important synergy: It is only when we've comprehended <em>how vast</em> are the opportunities to improve our inner or personal  <em><b>wholeness</b></em>—that we'll be ready to reconfigure our <em><b>systems</b></em>, so that they make the pursuit of <em><b>human development</b></em> possible (instead of compelling us to pursue profit and convenience); so that they provide us the <em><b>ecology of mind</b></em> that the pursuit of inner <em><b>wholeness</b></em> necessitates. </p>
 +
<p>"A way to change course" is now as simple as one-two-three-go; where
 +
<ul>
 +
<li>One is to update the way we use the mind; to correct the <em><b>foundation</b></em> on which we are building the edifice of knowledge</li>
 +
<li>Two is to update <em><b>information</b></em>—to enable us to<em><b>see things whole</b></em></li>
 +
<li>Three is <em>act</em> differently—and <em><b>make things whole</b></em>.</li>
 +
</ul></p>
 +
</div></div>
 +
<div class="row">
 +
<div class="col-md-3"></div>
 +
<div class="col-md-6"><h2>Power structure</h2></div>
 +
<div class="col-md-3"></div>
 +
</div>
 +
<div class="row">
 +
<div class="col-md-3"><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>
 +
<br>
 +
(Zygmunt Bauman  <em>Life in Fragments: Essays in Postmodern Morality</em>, 1995)
 +
</div>
 +
<div class="col-md-6"><p>All this was "known" a half-century ago; and yet this simple and obvious "go" remained—a <em>no-go</em>!</p>
 +
<p>Before we can reasonably undertake to <em>solve</em> "the huge problems now confronting us"—we must <em>diagnose</em> them <em><b>correctly</b></em>.</p>
 +
<p><em><b>Power structure</b></em> is not one of <em><b>holotopia</b></em>'s <em><b>five points</b></em>; but it <em>is</em> a theme that permeates the <em>Liberation</em> book; one could say that the "liberation" is the liberation from <em><b>power structure</b></em>. The <em><b>power structure</b></em> theory in a fractal-like way displays the essence of <em><b>holotopia</b></em> as <em><b>paradigm</b></em> and the challenges and the nature of the impending <em><b>paradigm</b></em> change.</p>
 +
<p>Before I tell you more about it, it may be useful to bring all this down to earth by telling you how I became interested in this theme; how I <em>experienced</em> the <em><b>power structure</b></em>. When in 1995 I reconfigured my academic work all the way from algorithm theory, which was the theme of my dissertation, in order to focus fully to basic questions regarding information, and began to develop some of these ideas and see the depth and breadth of the frontier that was opening up in front of me—I expected a <em>completely</em> different reaction on the part of my academic friends and colleagues than what <em>actually</em> happened. I expected a spirited conversation; and perhaps disbelief to begin with. What I got instead was—silence; and a vague sense of discomfort; I was doing something I was not <em>supposed</em> to do, or so it seemed. The spirited conversation I expected <em>never</em> happened; not even with my closest academic friends! Having been trained as a theoretical scientist, ot was in this way that I realized that the reasoning mind has a certain (rather narrowly confined) domain of definition and application; just as mathematical functions do; beyond which is a vast <em>taboo</em> zone. At first this was a shocking and disconcerting experience. But then I realized that what I was witnessing and experiencing was <em>the</em> problem; which we'll have to overcome <em>before</em> we can reasonably expect to reason out solutions.</p>
 +
<p>So I undertook a systematic study of relevant areas, including of course the humanities, which I knew little about; and applied the <em><b>methodology</b></em> I was developing to developing a <em><b>high-level view</b></em> of the relationship between power and belief. The <em><b>power structure</b></em> theory resulted.</p>
 +
<p>As a <em><b>keyword</b></em>, the <em><b>power structure</b></em> is an update to the traditional ideas of political "enemy" and (as a) power monger or power holder (threat to our liberties). It is an invisible and unrecognized <em>contemporary</em> enemy that holds <em><b>logos</b></em> or evolution of <em><b>knowledge</b></em> and <em><b>culture</b></em> or (metaphorically) 'Galilei' in check. But <em><b>power structure</b></em> is not a conspiracy theory but the exact opposite: It is not a clique of conspirators somewhere out there scheming against us—but it's <em>all of us</em> working against our best interests, and even intentions; perfectly unaware that there might be a power problem in all of this.</p>
 +
<p>Technically, <em><b>power structure</b></em> is not a physical entity but a <em><b>pattern</b></em> (abstract relationship); comprising three identifiable entities—power interests, <em><b>information</b></em> (and our ideas and awareness) and <em><b>wholeness</b></em> (both outer or <em><b>systemic</b></em>, and inner or <em><b>human quality</b></em>)—and their subtle relationships. The relationships are not physical but <em>evolutionary</em>; basic insights from technical fields (stochastic optimization, artificial intelligence and artificial life) are used to establish the possibility or existence and the nature of those relationships; basic insights from humanities (work of Hannah Arendt, Zygmund Bauman; Pierre Bourdieu's work related to "symbolic power", and his "theory of practice" that explains its dynamic; and Antonio Damasio's revolutionary insights in cognitive neuroscience, expounded in his book appropriately titled <em>Descartes' Error</em>, are used to theorize and <em><b>justify</b></em> it. The <em><b>point</b></em> of it all is that the power interests, the condition of our world and our selves and in particular the condition and structure of our <em><b>systems</b></em> <em>and</em> importantly our society-and-culture's 'software", including our values, ideas, worldviews etc—are so closely related that we need to <em><b>see</b></em> them <em><b>as</b></em> one single entity. The <em><b>power structures</b></em> exist at distinct levels of generality or details—so that smaller <em><b>power structures</b></em> compose together those larger ones; the <em><b>power structure</b></em> theory shows (and explains why) they are all so closely related (because they co-evolve and by co-evolving adjust to each other) 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>Several metaphors can be used to make this new sort of entity comprehensible and palpable. One of them is cancer: The <em><b>power structure</b></em> is not a thing but a <em>deformation</em> of society's healthy organs and tissues; which—if allowed to grow uncontrolled, if the society's 'immune system' is not equipped to counteract it and handle it—can proliferate and be fatal. Here the <em><b>holoscope</b></em> fits right in—as 'instrument' that is necessary for diagnosing this problem (just as the microscope has been instrumental in comprehending and diagnosing human diseases).</p>
 +
<p>Another metaphor is to see the subtle power as a magnetic field; and self-interest that stems from <em><b>self-centeredness</b></em> as 'magnetism'; which harmonizes with Pierre Bourdieu's notions "field" and "game", which he used to point to roughly the same dynamic and phenomenon. Here you may imagine us immersed in a magnetic field, which subtly orients our seemingly free movement and behavior; as iron chips may be aligned with the field of a magnet. But here it is better to imagine us the people as small magnets—where magnetism is our (narrowly perceived) self-interest. As we align our own power with the field—the field becomes stronger. The <em><b>power structure</b></em> also 'gamifies' our social existence.</p>
 +
<p>Arendt's "banality of evil" is here most useful as a concept; and the analogy with the Holocaust—which Bauman so thoroughly developed. His point being that Holocaust was not some odd thing that happened <em>to</em> modernity—but just an extreme symptom of its own pervasive problem and nature; which—by being so extreme—invites us and even obliges us to comprehend it and theorize it correctly.</p>
 +
<p>I am considering to use <em><b>geocide</b></em> as <em><b>keyword</b></em>; in order to energize this all-important consideration. The point being that we are about to commit a "banal evil" that vastly surpasses anything that happened in the past—just by being passive; just by "doing our job" within "adiaphorized" institutions (Bauman used this keyword "adiaphorized" to point to the way of thinking or using the mind that is the main point here; which is rational in a mechanistic way—i.e. devoid of any ethical or emotional content; we do something because it's "our job", or "good business" etc. The BIG point of it all is that to be culpable of <em><b>geocide</b></em>—it suffices to just think and act in this "adiaphorized" way. </p>
 +
<p>To be part of the <em><b>power structure</b></em>—and hence part of the problem—it suffices to "play the game"... </p>
 +
<p>The <em><b>power structure</b></em> theory can be used to explain and understood a spectrum of familiar phenomena in a new way; the relationship between <em>religious</em> belief and worldly power, which the Galilei metaphor (with which the <em>Liberation</em> book begins) points to. We may now see that the <em><b>beliefs</b></em> that kept the evolution of <em><b>knowledge</b></em> in check have nothing to do with <em><b>religion</b></em> as such; that they had everything to do with the social role that the <em>institutions</em> of religion had. Could something similar be happening today again, without us noticing? In Chapter Nine of <em>Liberation</em>, which has "Liberation of Science" as title, I quote from Berger and Luckmann's sociology classic <em>Social Construction of Realigy</em>; where they wrote:</p>
 +
<p> “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>You may now comprehend this proposal and initiative as a <em>political</em> act; whose aim is to liberate us from "reality"–based legitimations of <em>contemporary</em> "habitualization and institutionalization". </p>
 +
 +
-------
 +
 +
<p>"Know thyself" has been the battle cry of philosophers through the ages; there is something we the people must urgently get to <em><b>know</b></em> about ourselves; which—after having plowed this so field for nearly three decades—I am now ready to offer you as <em>the</em> first step with which the "solutionatique" to (what The Club of Rome called) the "world problematique" must begin; which is the reason why I postponed the <em>Systemic Innovation</em> book to be the second in the series, and decided that <em>Liberation</em> should be the first. It might be best to introduce to you this conclusion by outlining, however briefly, how I reached it.</p>
 +
<p>Before we can take care of "the huge problems now confronting us"—we need to <em>diagnose</em> them correctly; <em>that</em>'s the challenge the <em><b>power structure</b></em> as <em><b>keyword</b></em> points to.  While <em><b>power structure</b></em> is <em>not</em> one of the <em><b>five insights</b></em>, it is one of the core themes of the <em>Liberation</em> book; and it's also been one of the core themes of my work. In the <em>Liberation</em> book I introduce it by talking about Hannah Arendt; who studied Eichman when he was on trial in Israel; and to her surprise found him (not evil but) distinctly <em>ordinary</em>; Eichman did not hate Jews—he <em>followed orders</em>. Hannah Arendt coined "banality of evil" as keyword to pinpoint her insight.</p>
 +
<p>Here on the table in front of me I have Zygmunt Bauman's book <em>Modernity and the Holocaust</em>, which I'm re-reading; where Bauman explained how he reached a similar conclusion—although he expressed it in an entirely different way. The way his fellow sociologists theorized the Holocaust, his point was, contradicts what <em>actually</em> happened—and the historians documented. Bauman wrote this book—as he later explained—"to exort fellow social thinkers to [...] stop viewing the Holocaust as a bizzare and aberrant episode <em>in</em> modern history, and think it through instead as a highly relevant, integral part <em>of</em> that history; 'integral' in the sense of being indispensable for the understanding of what that history was truly about, what it was capable of and why—and the sort of society that has emerged from it, and which we all inhabit." But Bauman did not condense his all-important ideas to a <em><b>point</b></em>; it's tempting to think that a suitable <em><b>methodology</b></em> has been lacking.</p>
 +
<p>When in 1995 I found myself on this so exquisitely rich realm of creative opportunities, and already making some promising progress, I reconfigured my life and work entirely to be able to dedicate myself fully to its development—knowing that this wold be necessary, if I were to achieve on it anything that might have lasting value. But the reactions to this work that I encounterd—when I were to begin sharing these questions and ideas with my academic colleagues—waere the very <em>opposite</em> from what I anticipated: I expected a spirited conversation; or perhaps disbelief to begin with  ("But did you think about..."; or "No, I don't think this <em>can</em> be done in an academic way..."); but what I got was just—<em>silence</em>; and a sense of <em>discomfort</em>! Which I now pinpoint with the formula "You can do anything you like in your own home (office); just don't talk about it here among us normal people (academics)." To remain relatively sane—and be able to <em>complete</em> this project, in my own natural voice, which it necessitates—I withdrew into a virtual quarantine, for several years. I am now preparing to "come out".</p> 
 +
<p>And so this conclusion offered itself; which was later confirmed with 100% consistency; you know how mathematical functions have a <em>domain</em> where they are defined (you may divide any real number with any other real number except zero; division with zero is "undefined"):</p>
 +
<h3>The domain of application of <em>Logos</em> (presently) excludes <em>systems</em>.</h3>
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<p>I developed the <em><b>power structure</b></em> theory by combining the reported <em><b>phenomenology</b></em> I have just outlined with Antonio Damasio's insights in cognitive neuroscience (which he published in a book appropriately called <em>Descartes' Error</em>); and Pierre Bourdieu's "theory of practice" (where he explained how power in society <em>really</em> operates). The overall result was the <em><b>power structure</b></em> as an up-to-date model of the all-important notion of "power monger" or "enemy"; as <em>the</em> central subject toward which our all-important pursuit of social justice and <em>freedom</em> are directed; <em>and</em> of course of politics. The <em><b>point</b></em> here is to see the enemy (not necessarily as a dictator, or a powerful clique, or "the 1%", but) as a <em>structure</em>—comprising power interests <em>and</em> our <em><b>beliefs</b></em>, or <em><b>information</b></em>; <em>and</em> also <em><b>wholeness</b></em> or the lack of it—both institutional <em>and</em> human. I pointed to insights from technical fields—including stochastic optimization, artificial intelligence and artificial life—to demonstrate that those seemingly distinct entities <em>can</em> not only co-evolve together—but also devise strategies and act as if they were intelligent and alive. And that all this can happen without anyone's conscious intention, or even awareness!</p>
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<h3>The <em>power structure</em> theory sets the stage for <em>holotopian</em> politics.</h3>
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<p>Which is no longer "us against them" as it has been through history—but <em>all of us</em> against the <em><b>power structure</b></em>.</p>
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<p>That the revolution to which I'm inviting you will be pursued (not through confrontation but) through <em>collaboration</em>!</p>
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</div>
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<div class="col-md-3 round-images"> [[File:Bauman.jpg]] <br><small><center>[[Zygmunt Bauman]]</center></small></div>
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<div class="col-md-6"><h2>Materialism</h2></div>
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<div class="col-md-3"><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"><p><em><b>Polyscopic methodology</b></em> permits us to theorize our existing <em><b>paradigm</b></em>, in addition to <em><b>holotopia</b></em> as its further evolved alternative. Here <em><b>materialism</b></em> is not an actual but an "ideal" condition or <em><b>paradigm</b></em>; where (not ideas, nor ideals, but) the material "reality" serves as <em>the</em> reference system; where "success" in "the world" determines what's worth doing (and "idealism" is seen as an impediment to "realism" and mot much better than "impracticality"; and what <em>feels</em> attractive is assumed to "really be" that—and used as surrogate <em><b>know-what</b></em>; so that technological and social know-how can then be used in a perfectly rational way to provide a comprehensible and clear framework for one's life project.</p>
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<p>There is no point to dwell on <em><b>materialism</b></em> as such; we know it all too well—phenomenologically; and can truly comprehend it and evaluate it only when we have a different, <em>independent</em> frame of reference. Instead of telling you more about <em><b>holotopia</b></em>—I'll say a few words about how Erich Jantsch saw this alternative. Upon establishing (in theory, in any case) <em><b>systemic innovation</b></em> in late 1960s, Jantsch spent the following decade as <em><b>adjunct assistant professor</b></em> (the highest academic rank available to proponents of <em><b>transdisciplinarity</b></em> and other academic misfits and innovators; I adopted this <em><b>keyword</b></em> from Doug Engelbart, who used it to recount his own post-doctoral experiences) at U.C. Berkeley—supporting himself by working as a music critic; and researching and writing prolifically about the emerging <em><b>paradigm</b></em>; for which he used several different names, one of which is <em><b>evolutionary vision</b></em>. I'll give you a gist of it all by sharing two simple images or ideas from Jantsch's repertoire.</p>
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<p>In <em><b>Design for Evolution</b></em>,  his first (1975) book about this theme, Jantsch delineated the <em><b>evolutionary vision</b></em> (as a way of seeing and thinking and acting and being in the world, or in a word as a <em><b>paradigm</b></em>) by the metaphor of (not a bus, but) a boat on a river:</p>
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<ul>
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<li>Traditional science would position itself <em>above</em> it all—aiming to describe it "objectively"</li>
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<li>Traditional cybernetics (or systems science) would position itself <em>on</em> the boat—aiming to (find ways to) steer it in a stable and safe manner</li>
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<li><em><b>Evolutionary vision</b></em> would have us see ourselves as—(drops of) water; as the river.</li>
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</ul>
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<p>His point being that <em>the way we present ourselves</em> to the evolutionary stream is what decides its direction.</p>
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<p>Here you may see, in a more plastic or poetic way, what I've just told you—the evolutionary <em>ethics</em>; where there is nobody "out there" to blame—it's just <em>us</em>.
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So here we have a reference system to counteract (the magnetism of) <em><b>materialism</b></em>: To be part of the problem (<em><b>power structure</b></em>),  to be <em>culpable</em> of <em><b>geocide</b></em>—it suffices to just act as it is considered our privilege or even duty in <em><b>materialism</b></em>—to "mind our own business"; or just "do our job" within the existing <em><b>systems</b></em>. </p>
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<p>The second Jantsch's point I'll share was something that ignited his passion in this theme (which had, of course, been germinating and maturing until then); when, in 1972, Ilya Prigogine visited U.C. Berkeley and talked about his work (for which five years later Prigogine got the Nobel Prize); which showed Jantsch that <em>even physical and chemical</em>  systems conform to the <em><b>evolutionary vision</b></em> or <em><b>paradigm</b></em>! The distinguishing keyword here is "homeostasis", which in traditional (Norbert Wiener-style) cybernetics means the maintenance of an equilibrium; or a <em>stable</em> <em><b>course</b></em>. But as Jantsch saw it—to <em>living</em> systems (here Jantsch included also the physical universe) equilibrium is <em>death</em>! The living systems exist and function at a point that is <em>far</em> from equilibrium; and use <em>creativity</em> to adapt to changes in their environment.</p>
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<p>This is of course just a rough sketch; I am only sharing the <em>skeleton</em> of <em><b>knowledge federation</b></em> and of <em><b>holotopia</b></em>; but already here you may see how it all fits together. We may talk about Enlightenment 2.0. Now we have two notions of "enlightenment"—the historical revolution that Galilei represents in the <em>Liberation</em> book; and the "spiritual enlightenment" as a different <em>inner</em> condition, sought by "mystics". The <em><b>holotopia</b></em> is a condition where those two notions, and pursuits, are merged seamlessly into one.</p>
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<p>As soon as we resort to <em><b>phenomenology</b></em> (instead fo the <em><b>narrow frame</b></em>) to look at the world, this task becomes easy: It's just to find a person who's done the work, and reached the "liberate" or "enlightened" condition, and (instead of asking such silly questions like "how did the world originate?") ask "How do you feel when you wake up in the morning?" And then genuinely <em>listen</em> to what he has to say. And if you think he might be lying—find another one. But more—<em>incomparably</em> more can be done.</p>
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<p>The <em>Liberation</em> book can be read as the <em><b>federation</b></em> of an insight by Buddhadasa—Thailand's holy man and Buddhism reformer; who was in addition truly a man of the 20th century—with a <em>scientific</em> mind; who—as a young monk—felt that certain core elements of Buddhism may have been thoroughly misinterpreted and misunderstood; and withdrew from the world to live and experiment as Buddha did in his time; and developed a <em>method</em> for reaching the "liberated" condition; which was then tried and confirmed by other monks who joined him. Having seen that his re-discovery offered an antidote to <em><b>materialism</b></em>, which was spreading rapidly worldwide <em>and</em> in Thailand, Buddhadasa undertook to do whatever he was able to <em><b>federate</b></em> his insight; to make it available to everyone in the world. In the book's introduction I present the book as a "case" for Buddhadasa <em><b>meme</b></em> as a culture-transformative <em><b>meme</b></em>; which—if we develope a way to handle it—will provide us a template and a <em><b>system</b></em> for handling other culture-transformative <em><b>memes</b></em> too. And I invite the reader to join me in this act of <em><b>federation</b></em>—because this sort of system or process is a <em>social</em> process, not something I can create on my own.</p>
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<p>The point then is that (instead of trying to comprehend and evaluate the Buddhadasa meme by fitting it into our existing order of things, <em><b>materialism</b></em>, where it doesn't fit by virtue of being transformative) we first create a map of a <em><b>whole</b></em> human condition; and show that what Buddhadasa had to say is an essential piece in this <em>new </em> puzzle. So the <em>Liberation</em> book develops a map of a <em><b>whole</b></em> inner condition in its first four chapters; and a map of a <em><b>whole</b></em> societal and cultural condition in the last four chapters; and places the Buddhadasa meme onto this map in Chapter Five and Chapter Six. The theme of Chapter Five, which has "Liberation from Tension" as title, is the <em>method</em> that Buddhadasa rediscovered and polished up; which turns the usual "pursuit of happiness"—as pursuit of <em><b>convenience</b></em> exactly on its head—by showing that it leads to a certain specific kind of "suffering" called <em><b>dukkha</b></em>; which is so much part of our everyday experience that we don't even have a word for it!</p>
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<p> And in Chapter Six, whose title is "Liberation from Self", Buddhadasa's insight which he identified liberation from <em><b>self-centeredness</b></em> (the simplification of the complex world where we ask "What's in it for me?" and act accordingly) as the shared essence of the great world religions (although, for interesting reasons, he did not consider Buddhism a religion). </p>
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We may now comprehend the <em><b>traditional</b></em> way of being and culture as (in various obvious or subtle ways, which we have not yet processed) essentially oriented toward the <em><b>conditioning</b></em> of humans; so that we may stay put, as it were, in whatever social systems we happened to be in; whose basic motive is <em>stability</em>, and control.</p>
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<p>Liberation book presents a completely different human condition—which is <em>liberated</em> (I don't use the word "enlightened"). Which is characterized by a far larger freedom of creative and emotional and even <em>physical</em> range of motion! Here DR's notion of <em><b>direct creativity</b></em> (or "genius" creativity) is also hugely relevant—as the creativity that is all but impossible in the <em><b>ecology of mind</b></em> we live in; everyday <em>and</em> academic.</p>
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<p>Also the subtitle of the <em>Liberation</em> book, "Religion beyond Belief" may now be comprehended; we may now see <em><b>religion</b></em> (which, by definition, has the function of liberating us humans from narrowly defined self-interest or "egotism", which in the book I call <em><b>self-centeredness</b></em>) as evolving through three phases; where:</p>
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<ul>
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<li>in the first, the <em><b>beliefs</b></em> of tradition were used to compel people to do the right thing</li>
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<li>in the second, the <em><b>beliefs</b></em> of <em><b>materialism</b></em> were used to "liberate" people from the obligation to do the right thing; and to even compel them to do the <em>wrong</em> thing</li>
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<li>in the third, <em><b>knowledge</b></em> about this matter was created; and human <em><b>systems</b></em> including <em><b>culture</b></em> were adapted accordingly.</li>
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<p>I am prepared that you may consider all this as (not <em><b>holotopian</b></em> but) <em>utopian</em>. So let me tell you why it's not: I'll coin "geocide" as <em><b>keyword</b></em> and use it to point out that the "banal evil" is in our time reaching grotesque, surreal dimensions: We are not sending someone else's children in overcrowded trains on a journey of no return; unless we wake up—we'll be doing similar or worse to <em>our own</em> children; by doing no more than "our job" (within the <em><b>systems</b></em> as they've become). We'll be accomplices in the <em><b>geocide</b></em> by doing no more—than being <em>passive</em>; than remaining unengaged.</p>
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<p>When the light of awareness has been turned on—it will be crystal-clear that <em><b>geocide</b></em> is <em>not</em> in anyone's "interest"; and that the <em>only</em> way we'll be able to <em><b>change course</b></em> is by collaborating instead of competing.</p>
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<p>I use "the world" as metaphor, and <em><b>materialism</b></em> as <em><b>keyword</b></em>, to point to the spell that "reality" (as it presents to us by the <em><b>systems</b></em> in which we live and work) keeps us in; and the fact that we won't be able to liberate ourselves <em>unless</em> we develop an independent reference system; which is <em>not</em> a mere description of that "reality".</p>
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<p>It was tempting to turn "idealism" into a keyword and use it as antonym to <em><b>materialism</b></em>; and elevate the cultural condition that restores ideas and ideals to their function, and prominence; but I did something else instead. In Chapter Two I created <em><b>homo ludens</b></em> and <em><b>homo sapiens</b></em> as a pair of antonyms denoting two 'cultural species' and two distinct ways of evolving; where the <em><b>homo ludens</b></em> handles the overwhelming noise and complexity by learning his professional and other roles as one would learn the rules of a game; and by acting in them competitively; and where the <em><b>homo sapiens</b></em> is the 'cultural species' and the evolutionary course that constitute the gist of this proposal. I didn't say this in the book—but I'll leave it for you here to reflect on—why <em><b>homo ludens</b></em> and <em><b>homo sapiens</b></em> are indeed two coherent <em><b>paradigms</b></em>: Both see themselves as the future of human evolution; and the other one as going extinct; the <em><b>homo sapiens</b></em> looks at the data; the <em><b>homo ludens</b></em> simply looks around...</p>
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</div> </div>
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<div class="col-md-3"></div>
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<div class="col-md-6"><h2>Dialog</h2> </div>
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<div class="col-md-3"></div>
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</div>
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<div class="col-md-3"><font size="+1">“As long as a paradox is treated as a problem, it can never be dissolved.”</font>
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<br>
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(David Bohm,  <em>Problem and Paradox</em>.)
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</div>
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<div class="col-md-6"><p>When the way we use the <em><b>mind</b></em> is the root of our problems—then this is no longer a problem but a paradox; which turns <em>all</em> our "problems" into paradoxes!</p>
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<h3>The function of the <em><b>dialog</b></em> is to dissolve the paradox.</h3>
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<p>The point here is that the <em><b>dialog</b></em> is not a conversation; it is not even a <em><b>system</b></em>; it is a <em>function</em> in society or <em><b>culture</b></em> and an evolving <em><b>prototype</b></em> implementing this function. The function is the <em><b>liberation</b></em> of <em><b>logos</b></em> from <em><b>materialism</b></em> or <em><b>power structure</b></em>; and <em>our own</em> liberation through <em><b>logos</b></em>. The key to it all is to develop an entirely <em>different</em> way to <em>be</em> together; and communicate, and collaborate; which is <em>not</em> <em><b>self-centered</b></em> but on the contrary—where we <em><b>liberate</b></em> ourselves from the spell of "the world" in order to genuinely see and re-create the world.</p>
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<p>The <em>Liberation</em> book is <em>not</em> a book in the classical sense—a way to tell you some interesting things <em>about</em> the world and ourselves; it is part of the <em><b>dialog</b></em> whose function is to <em>prime</em> the <em><b>dialog</b></em>.</p>
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<p><em><b>Dialog</b></em> may also be seen as an antidote to the media "spectacle" that keeps us immersed in "the world"—which produces another, <em>real</em> spectacle; where real people collaborate to liberate themselves from nonsense and rise to the occasion—and be part of an evolutionary quantum leap; and evolve an <em><b>ecology of mind</b></em> or "public sphere" that gives <em>awareness</em> to democracy.</p> 
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<p>The <em><b>dialog</b></em> is an entirely <em>new</em> way to communicate. David Bohm called it "dialogue" and explained that "it [...] may well be one of the most effective ways of investigating the crisis which faces society, and indeed the whole of human nature and consciousness today. Moreover, it may turn out that such a form of free exchange of ideas and information is of fundamental relevance for transforming culture and freeing it of destructive misinformation, so that creativity can be liberated."</p>
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<p>The meaning of this <em><b>keyword</b></em> is not "conversation", as the word "dialogue" has been commonly used—but the one that follows from the Greek <em>dialogos</em> (through <em><b>logos</b></em>). The function of the <em><b>dialog</b></em> is to first of all liberate <em><b>logos</b></em>; and to then apply it to rebuild our <em><b>collective mind</b></em>, or "public sphere" as Jürgen Habermans and his colleagues have been calling it; and make democracy capable of taking care of its negative trends or "problems"; or just simply <em>possible</em>.</p>
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<p>The <em>dialog</em> will recreate the way we use new media. [https://www.bohmdialogue.org Bohm's dialog] has been documented by some distinctly smart and knowledgeable people, including Bohm himself—so all we need is to click and explore.</p>
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<p>But that's only the beginning; what remains is to <em><b>federate</b></em> all that's relevant to this new way of communicating; and then <em>implement</em> it by using the arts, and the new information technology; and divise an ever-growing collection of <em><b>prototypes</b></em> (which we'll have an endless fun creating)—which will <em>engender</em> the <em><b>cultural revival</b></em>; which is, of course, <em><b>holotopia</b></em> initiative's very purpose.</p></div>
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<div class="col-md-3 round-images"> [[File:Bohm.jpg]] <br><small><center>[[David Bohm]]</center></small></div>
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<h3>Acknowledging that <em><b>information</b></em> is <em>the</em> 'weapon' by which our impending revolution needs to be fought; and the <em><b>paradigm</b></em> shift enabled.</h3>
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<p>Our existing <em><b>information</b></em> is <em>not only</em> inadequate for its function. Noam Chomsky has <em>repeatedly</em> warned us that its <em>actual</em> function is to manufacture <em>consent</em> (and hence be an instrument of <em><b>power structure</b></em>); and Murray Edelman has made it clear <em>as a political scientist</em> that that's also the actual function of those more formal instruments of "democracy", including the elections.</p>
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<p>Neither can science claim neutrality; in Chapter Nine of the <em>Liberation</em> book, which has "Liberation of Science" as title theme, I quote from Peter Berger and Thomas Luckmann's 1966 book <em>The Social Construction of Reality</em>: “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>
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<p>The institutionalized science indeed holds the <em>key</em> to the impending revolution of awareness—because science and science alone has the power to liberate us from "the world" that has been pulled over our eyes to blind us from the truth; by establishing an independent reference system that will empower us to <em>comprehend</em> the world; and to handle it and to <em>be</em> in it differently. In Chapter Nine I talk about the <em><b>dialog</b></em> in front of the (metaphorical, academic) <em><b>mirror</b></em>; the liberation of science—and <em>our</em> liberation—needs to begin as an academic self-reflective dialog. I thought that "<em>academia quo vadis</em>" might suit it as a title. Chapter Nine concludes with this curiosity: <em>Already Descartes</em>, presented a case for <em><b>transdisciplinarity</b></em>; in <em>his</em> last and unfinished work <em>Règles pour la direction de l'esprit</em> (Rules for the Direction of the Mind)! So yes—it's about time we give due attention to this all-important theme.</p>
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<h3>The <em>dialog</em> is conceived as a practical way to change our <em>collective mind</em>.</h3>
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<p>Where the academic tradition returns to its point of origin; and then handles things differently! In re-creating the <em><b>dialog</b></em> we have twenty-five centuries of developments to work with; to <em><b>federate</b></em>.</p>
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<p>Notably David Bohm's <em><b>dialog</b></em>-related work. As the next-generation modern physicist (a student of Oppenheimer and a protege of Einstein)—who applied his physics to a study of creativity, and his creativity-related insights to a study and a <em>redesign</em> of communication—Bohm clearly saw that communication as we have it tends to be just another way to engage in power struggle; and that if communication is to be an instrument of recovery and revival—it will need to be <em>thoroughly</em> revised. </p>
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XXX rules of the game and acting accordingly; doing what "works" in "practical reality". It is from the <em><b>homo ludens</b></em> to the <em><b>homo sapiens</b></em> evolutionary course that we now must find a way to make an evolutionary turn.</p>
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<p>Here Jantsch's "evolutionary vision" is most relevant. I'll use it to summarize the <em><b>holotopia</b></em> vision—which is of course just <em><b>federated</b></em> from Jantsch and 20th century <em><b>giants</b></em>. Once again—it's what we'll see when we 'turn on the light' on our situation. Three <em><b>points</b></em>.</p>
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<p>The first is that <em><b>materialism</b></em> as way of evolving <em>cannot</em> continue; Ervin Laszlo pointed this out in the very title of his book <em>Choice: Evolution or Extinction</em>. Complicity in devolution toward self-destruction is <em>not</em> anyone's interest; it's just what we do when we are caught up in <em><b>power structure</b></em>.</p>
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<p>The second <em><b>point</b></em> of Jantsch's "evolutionary vision" is the different self-perception that's emerging; Jantsch outlined it in his seminal 1975 book <em>Design for Evolution</em>; by inviting us to see ourselves as passengers (not in a bus but) in a boat on a river. The traditional science would then look at the boat and the river from above—aiming to describe both "objectively"; the traditional systems science would position itself <em>on</em> the boat—and aim to steer it safely. The emerging evolutionary <em><b>paradigm</b></em> invites us to see ourselves as—the river! So that <em>the way we present ourselves</em> to evolution is what determines its course. This thoroughly changes the value set of <em><b>materialism</b></em>—when we realize that the "self-interest" is taking us toward disaster. This is also the context in which the <em><b>Liberation</b></em> book's subtitle "Religion beyond Belief" can be comprehended; in the book <em><b>religion</b></em> is introduced as that <em><b>aspect</b></em> of <em><b>culture</b></em> that liberates us from <em><b>self-centeredness</b></em> and helps us acquire this <em>new</em> evolutionary competence—to see ourselves as part in a larger <em><b>whole</b></em>; and to collaborate (instead of competing), and self-organize accordingly.</p>
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<p>The third <em><b>point</b></em> is the piece in the puzzle that made it click to Jantsch that "evolutionary vision" truly <em>is</em> a comprehensive emerging <em><b>paradigm</b></em>; which happened in 1972, when Ilya Prigogine visited U.C. Berkeley where Jantsch was a perpetual "adjunct assistant professor" and gave a talk; which showed Jantsch that <em>even physical systems</em> follow the evolutionary <em><b>paradigm</b></em> (five years later Prigogine got the Nobel Prize for this work). The point of it all is that while <em>technical</em> systems good or vital condition or technically "homeostasis" is maintained by holding on to a certain "equilibrium"—to living systems equilibrium is <em>death</em>; they exist in a state that is far from equilibrium—so that <em>creativity</em>, the capability to <em>change</em> course, is their key resource and mode of evolving. The <em>Liberation</em> book describes this creative human condition precisely; the "liberation" is from a condition where—caught into <em><b>power structure</b></em>, keeping busy to survive in competitive world—we've all but completely lost our ability to think creatively and see things differently. Which is what the keyword <em><b>logos</b></em> is about—a banner to revive this all-important evolutionary quest, and capability.</p>
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<p>A side-effect of this academic update is that it offers us a way to avoid the fragmentation in social sciences; which results when the social scientists disagree whether it's right to see the complex cultural and social reality in one way or in another. Here our explicit aim is to <em><b>see things whole</b></em>; which translates into the challenge of seeing things in a way that may best reveal their non-<em><b>whole</b></em> sides. The simple point here is that when our task is <em>not</em> producing an accurate description of an infinitely complex "reality", but a way to see it that "works" (in the sense of providing us evolutionary guidance)—then this fragmentation is easily seen as part of the problem, and avoided.</p>
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<p>With "Liberation of Body" as title, Chapter One zooms in on the experience of difficulty or effort; and by <em><b>federating</b></em> experiences and insights from the martial art tradition, with the ones reached in the schools that F. M. Alexander and Moshe Feldenkrais founded, points out that both the sensation of effort and our <em>ability</em> to move freely can be altered hugely by suitable training; and Chapters Two and Three do similarly with creativity (as the motility of mind) and emotions (as the motility of feeling). Vast <em>ranges</em> of freedom—and <em>obstacles</em> to freedom—are <em>embodied</em>; and it is there, <em>within</em> ourselves, that vast and ignored opportunities to improve our condition reside. Chapter Four offers a general model of inner <em><b>wholeness</b></em>; which makes it possible to comprehend the effects of a broad range of <em><b>human development</b></em> schools and traditions such as yoga and Rolfing; which is itself created by combining insights from the qigong tradition with the ones reached in the psychotherapy school that Wilhelm Reich founded.</p>
 +
<p>The <em>Liberation</em> book in this way produces an initial map of human inner <em><b>wholeness</b></em>; and an initial template for reviving and empowering culture-transformative experiences and insights or <em><b>memes</b></em>. The book is <em>conceived</em> (more precisely <em>it can be read</em>) as a case for a single culture-transformative <em><b>meme</b></em>—the legacy of Buddhadasa, Thailand's holy man and Buddhism reformer. Chapters Five and Six are dedicated to <em><b>federating</b></em> his message. Chapter Five, which has "Liberation from Tension" as title, explores a point of view and a realm of experience according to which "the pursuit of happiness" as <em><b>materialism</b></em> conceived it is <em>exactly</em> exactly the way to <em>suffering</em> (more precisely to a specific <em>kind of</em> suffering called <em><b>dukkha</b></em>, which is <em>the</em> focal point of Buddhism, as Buddhadasa interpreted it); and in Chapter Six, which has "Liberation from Oneself" as title, we see why also the liberation from <em><b>self-centeredness</b></em> (which, roughly, means letting the "What's in it for me?" question decide the <em><b>know-what</b></em>), which Buddhadasa saw as <em>the</em> shared essence of the great world religions—is also part and parcel of our <em><b>wholeness</b></em>.</p>
 +
<h3>You can now see how "a great cultural revival" may <em>realistically</em> happen.</h3>
 +
 +
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 +
<p>Once we've liberated ourselves from "the deception of the senses", and claimed back our <em><b>know-what</b></em> from all that advertising—we'll be free to explore the <em><b>pivotal</b></em> themes <em>evidence-based</em>. But this is only a new <em>beginning</em>; that single step with which a journey of one thousand miles begins—where we'll <em>rebuild</em> our <em><b>culture</b></em>; so that it <em>effortlessly</em> elevates us to the heights whose very <em>existence</em> we ignore; to the condition we call <em><b>wholeness</b></em>; which gave <em><b>holotopia</b></em> that name. <em>Then</em> and only then will the pursuit of this new evolutionary <em><b>course</b></em>—that will elevate our humanness and culture to new heights—be natural and easy.</p> 
 +
<p>This explains the <em>Liberation</em> book's subtitle, "Religion beyond Belief"; which invites you to see the history of religion in three phases:
 +
<ul>
 +
<li>where in the first, the beliefs and mores of religion <em>compelled</em> people to do (ethically, in an <em>evolutionary</em> sense) the right thing</li>
 +
<li>and in the second, the <em><b>beliefs</b></em> and mores of of <em><b>materialism</b></em> made us 'free' to do the <em>wrong</em> thing;</li>
 +
<li>until we developed <em><b>knowledge</b></em> about <em><b>pivotal</b></em> themes.</li>
 +
</ul></p>
 +
<p>The <em>Liberation</em> book shows that—once this is achieved, once we've learned to <em><b>federate</b></em> what's of value in the heritage of religious and other <em><b>human development</b></em> traditions (instead of ignoring it, because it failed to fit into the <em><b>narrow frame</b></em>)—the resulting <em>improvement</em> of our condition will be <em>truly</em> beyond belief!</p>
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<p>Finally, and importantly, by creating <em><b>keywords</b></em> we can create the ways of looking or <em><b>scopes</b></em> that constitute the (metaphorical) <em><b>mountain</b></em>; and use it <em>as an independent reference system</em> (which is not "the world") for theorizing and comprehending the world—in new and <em>functional</em> ways.</p>
 +
 +
-------
 +
 +
</p>
 +
<h3>Substituting the lightbulb for the candle symbolizes the <em>paradigm</em> change.</h3>
 +
<p>And points to the creative challenge that's involved in it—to create and put in play a <em>social process</em> by which the <em><b>paradigm</b></em> <em>can</em> be changed.
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<div class="row">
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<div class="col-md-3"></div>
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<div class="col-md-6"><h2>Materialism</h2></div>
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<div class="col-md-3"></div>
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</div>
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<div class="row">
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<div class="col-md-3"><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>.)
 +
</div>
 +
<div class="col-md-7"><p><em><b>Polyscopic methodology</b></em> permits us to theorize our existing <em><b>paradigm</b></em>, in addition to <em><b>holotopia</b></em> as its further evolved alternative. Here <em><b>materialism</b></em> is not an actual but an "ideal" condition or <em><b>paradigm</b></em>; where (not ideas, nor ideals, but) the material "reality" serves as <em>the</em> reference system; where "success" in "the world" determines what's worth doing (and "idealism" is seen as an impediment to "realism" and mot much better than "impracticality"; and what <em>feels</em> attractive is assumed to "really be" that—and used as surrogate <em><b>know-what</b></em>; so that technological and social know-how can then be used in a perfectly rational way to provide a comprehensible and clear framework for one's life project.</p>
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<p>There is no point to dwell on <em><b>materialism</b></em> as such; we know it all too well—phenomenologically; and can truly comprehend it and evaluate it only when we have a different, <em>independent</em> frame of reference. Instead of telling you more about <em><b>holotopia</b></em>—I'll say a few words about how Erich Jantsch saw this alternative. Upon establishing (in theory, in any case) <em><b>systemic innovation</b></em> in late 1960s, Jantsch spent the following decade as <em><b>adjunct assistant professor</b></em> (the highest academic rank available to proponents of <em><b>transdisciplinarity</b></em> and other academic misfits and innovators; I adopted this <em><b>keyword</b></em> from Doug Engelbart, who used it to recount his own post-doctoral experiences) at U.C. Berkeley—supporting himself by working as a music critic; and researching and writing prolifically about the emerging <em><b>paradigm</b></em>; for which he used several different names, one of which is <em><b>evolutionary vision</b></em>. I'll give you a gist of it all by sharing two simple images or ideas from Jantsch's repertoire.</p>
 +
<p>In <em><b>Design for Evolution</b></em>,  his first (1975) book about this theme, Jantsch delineated the <em><b>evolutionary vision</b></em> (as a way of seeing and thinking and acting and being in the world, or in a word as a <em><b>paradigm</b></em>) by the metaphor of (not a bus, but) a boat on a river:</p>
 +
<ul>
 +
<li>Traditional science would position itself <em>above</em> it all—aiming to describe it "objectively"</li>
 +
<li>Traditional cybernetics (or systems science) would position itself <em>on</em> the boat—aiming to (find ways to) steer it in a stable and safe manner</li>
 +
<li><em><b>Evolutionary vision</b></em> would have us see ourselves as—(drops of) water; as the river.</li>
 +
</ul>
 +
<p>His point being that <em>the way we present ourselves</em> to the evolutionary stream is what decides its direction.</p>
 +
<p>Here you may see, in a more plastic or poetic way, what I've just told you—the evolutionary <em>ethics</em>; where there is nobody "out there" to blame—it's just <em>us</em>.
 +
So here we have a reference system to counteract (the magnetism of) <em><b>materialism</b></em>: To be part of the problem (<em><b>power structure</b></em>),  to be <em>culpable</em> of <em><b>geocide</b></em>—it suffices to just act as it is considered our privilege or even duty in <em><b>materialism</b></em>—to "mind our own business"; or just "do our job" within the existing <em><b>systems</b></em>. </p>
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<p>The second Jantsch's point I'll share was something that ignited his passion in this theme (which had, of course, been germinating and maturing until then); when, in 1972, Ilya Prigogine visited U.C. Berkeley and talked about his work (for which five years later Prigogine got the Nobel Prize); which showed Jantsch that <em>even physical and chemical</em>  systems conform to the <em><b>evolutionary vision</b></em> or <em><b>paradigm</b></em>! The distinguishing keyword here is "homeostasis", which in traditional (Norbert Wiener-style) cybernetics means the maintenance of an equilibrium; or a <em>stable</em> <em><b>course</b></em>. But as Jantsch saw it—to <em>living</em> systems (here Jantsch included also the physical universe) equilibrium is <em>death</em>! The living systems exist and function at a point that is <em>far</em> from equilibrium; and use <em>creativity</em> to adapt to changes in their environment.</p>
 +
<p>This is of course just a rough sketch; I am only sharing the <em>skeleton</em> of <em><b>knowledge federation</b></em> and of <em><b>holotopia</b></em>; but already here you may see how it all fits together. We may talk about Enlightenment 2.0. Now we have two notions of "enlightenment"—the historical revolution that Galilei represents in the <em>Liberation</em> book; and the "spiritual enlightenment" as a different <em>inner</em> condition, sought by "mystics". The <em><b>holotopia</b></em> is a condition where those two notions, and pursuits, are merged seamlessly into one.</p>
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<p>As soon as we resort to <em><b>phenomenology</b></em> (instead fo the <em><b>narrow frame</b></em>) to look at the world, this task becomes easy: It's just to find a person who's done the work, and reached the "liberate" or "enlightened" condition, and (instead of asking such silly questions like "how did the world originate?") ask "How do you feel when you wake up in the morning?" And then genuinely <em>listen</em> to what he has to say. And if you think he might be lying—find another one. But more—<em>incomparably</em> more can be done.</p>
 +
<p>The <em>Liberation</em> book can be read as the <em><b>federation</b></em> of an insight by Buddhadasa—Thailand's holy man and Buddhism reformer; who was in addition truly a man of the 20th century—with a <em>scientific</em> mind; who—as a young monk—felt that certain core elements of Buddhism may have been thoroughly misinterpreted and misunderstood; and withdrew from the world to live and experiment as Buddha did in his time; and developed a <em>method</em> for reaching the "liberated" condition; which was then tried and confirmed by other monks who joined him. Having seen that his re-discovery offered an antidote to <em><b>materialism</b></em>, which was spreading rapidly worldwide <em>and</em> in Thailand, Buddhadasa undertook to do whatever he was able to <em><b>federate</b></em> his insight; to make it available to everyone in the world. In the book's introduction I present the book as a "case" for Buddhadasa <em><b>meme</b></em> as a culture-transformative <em><b>meme</b></em>; which—if we develope a way to handle it—will provide us a template and a <em><b>system</b></em> for handling other culture-transformative <em><b>memes</b></em> too. And I invite the reader to join me in this act of <em><b>federation</b></em>—because this sort of system or process is a <em>social</em> process, not something I can create on my own.</p>
 +
<p>The point then is that (instead of trying to comprehend and evaluate the Buddhadasa meme by fitting it into our existing order of things, <em><b>materialism</b></em>, where it doesn't fit by virtue of being transformative) we first create a map of a <em><b>whole</b></em> human condition; and show that what Buddhadasa had to say is an essential piece in this <em>new </em> puzzle. So the <em>Liberation</em> book develops a map of a <em><b>whole</b></em> inner condition in its first four chapters; and a map of a <em><b>whole</b></em> societal and cultural condition in the last four chapters; and places the Buddhadasa meme onto this map in Chapter Five and Chapter Six. The theme of Chapter Five, which has "Liberation from Tension" as title, is the <em>method</em> that Buddhadasa rediscovered and polished up; which turns the usual "pursuit of happiness"—as pursuit of <em><b>convenience</b></em> exactly on its head—by showing that it leads to a certain specific kind of "suffering" called <em><b>dukkha</b></em>; which is so much part of our everyday experience that we don't even have a word for it!</p>
 +
<p> And in Chapter Six, whose title is "Liberation from Self", Buddhadasa's insight which he identified liberation from <em><b>self-centeredness</b></em> (the simplification of the complex world where we ask "What's in it for me?" and act accordingly) as the shared essence of the great world religions (although, for interesting reasons, he did not consider Buddhism a religion). </p>
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-------
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<p>
 +
We may now comprehend the <em><b>traditional</b></em> way of being and culture as (in various obvious or subtle ways, which we have not yet processed) essentially oriented toward the <em><b>conditioning</b></em> of humans; so that we may stay put, as it were, in whatever social systems we happened to be in; whose basic motive is <em>stability</em>, and control.</p>
 +
<p>Liberation book presents a completely different human condition—which is <em>liberated</em> (I don't use the word "enlightened"). Which is characterized by a far larger freedom of creative and emotional and even <em>physical</em> range of motion! Here DR's notion of <em><b>direct creativity</b></em> (or "genius" creativity) is also hugely relevant—as the creativity that is all but impossible in the <em><b>ecology of mind</b></em> we live in; everyday <em>and</em> academic.</p>
 +
<p>Also the subtitle of the <em>Liberation</em> book, "Religion beyond Belief" may now be comprehended; we may now see <em><b>religion</b></em> (which, by definition, has the function of liberating us humans from narrowly defined self-interest or "egotism", which in the book I call <em><b>self-centeredness</b></em>) as evolving through three phases; where:</p>
 +
<ul>
 +
<li>in the first, the <em><b>beliefs</b></em> of tradition were used to compel people to do the right thing</li>
 +
<li>in the second, the <em><b>beliefs</b></em> of <em><b>materialism</b></em> were used to "liberate" people from the obligation to do the right thing; and to even compel them to do the <em>wrong</em> thing</li>
 +
<li>in the third, <em><b>knowledge</b></em> about this matter was created; and human <em><b>systems</b></em> including <em><b>culture</b></em> were adapted accordingly.</li>
 +
</ul>
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 +
-------
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 +
<p>I am prepared that you may consider all this as (not <em><b>holotopian</b></em> but) <em>utopian</em>. So let me tell you why it's not: I'll coin "geocide" as <em><b>keyword</b></em> and use it to point out that the "banal evil" is in our time reaching grotesque, surreal dimensions: We are not sending someone else's children in overcrowded trains on a journey of no return; unless we wake up—we'll be doing similar or worse to <em>our own</em> children; by doing no more than "our job" (within the <em><b>systems</b></em> as they've become). We'll be accomplices in the <em><b>geocide</b></em> by doing no more—than being <em>passive</em>; than remaining unengaged.</p>
 +
<p>When the light of awareness has been turned on—it will be crystal-clear that <em><b>geocide</b></em> is <em>not</em> in anyone's "interest"; and that the <em>only</em> way we'll be able to <em><b>change course</b></em> is by collaborating instead of competing.</p>
 +
<p>I use "the world" as metaphor, and <em><b>materialism</b></em> as <em><b>keyword</b></em>, to point to the spell that "reality" (as it presents to us by the <em><b>systems</b></em> in which we live and work) keeps us in; and the fact that we won't be able to liberate ourselves <em>unless</em> we develop an independent reference system; which is <em>not</em> a mere description of that "reality".</p>
 +
<p>It was tempting to turn "idealism" into a keyword and use it as antonym to <em><b>materialism</b></em>; and elevate the cultural condition that restores ideas and ideals to their function, and prominence; but I did something else instead. In Chapter Two I created <em><b>homo ludens</b></em> and <em><b>homo sapiens</b></em> as a pair of antonyms denoting two 'cultural species' and two distinct ways of evolving; where the <em><b>homo ludens</b></em> handles the overwhelming noise and complexity by learning his professional and other roles as one would learn the rules of a game; and by acting in them competitively; and where the <em><b>homo sapiens</b></em> is the 'cultural species' and the evolutionary course that constitute the gist of this proposal. I didn't say this in the book—but I'll leave it for you here to reflect on—why <em><b>homo ludens</b></em> and <em><b>homo sapiens</b></em> are indeed two coherent <em><b>paradigms</b></em>: Both see themselves as the future of human evolution; and the other one as going extinct; the <em><b>homo sapiens</b></em> looks at the data; the <em><b>homo ludens</b></em> simply looks around...</p>

Latest revision as of 14:02, 1 December 2023

– 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 step beyond "risk society" (where existential risks lurk in the dark), we must design how we see and speak; which is what the polyscopic methodology is about: The approach it enables is called scope design; where scopes are what determines what we look at and how we see it.

We can design scopes by crafting keywords.

Because keywords are defined as it's been common in mathematics—by making a convention. When I define for instance "culture" by convention, and turn it into a keyword—I am not saying what culture "really is"; but creating a way of looking at the endlessly complex real thing; and projecting it, as it were, onto a plane—so that we may look at its specific side, and comprehend it precisely; and I'm inviting you, the reader, to see culture as it's been defined. In knowledge federation's technical language, this simplified view of an object or theme as a whole is called its aspect.

Keywords enable us to ascribe to old words like "science" and "religion" a clear new meaning; and give old institutions a function, and a new life.

Keyword creation is a form for linguistic and institutional recycling.

Often but not always, keywords are adopted from the repertoire of a frontier thinker or an academic field; 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

Paradigm is the keyword I use to pinpoint the error that is the focal point of this proposal; and explain the way I propose to correct it.

Substituting the lightbulb for the candle symbolizes the paradigm change.

The Modernity ideogram points to remedial information, which enables us to see things wholeall things, and importantly, the systems in which we live and work; it also point to remedial action—which is to make things wholeall things, and most importantly those systems; including our society, or 'bus'.

I use the word paradigm informally, to point to the societal and cultural order of things as a whole; and to highlight that comprehensive change, of the whole paradigm can be natural and easy—even when small and obviously necessary changes may seem impossible; and to explain the strategy for solving "the huge problems now confronting us" that motivates this proposal—which is to enable the paradigm to change.

Elephant.jpg

We see the paradigm that's emerging when we connect the dots.

I use the keyword elephant instead of paradigm when I want to be even more informal—and highlight that in a paradigm everything depends on everything else; as the organs of an elephant do; and that it's useless to try to fit an elephant's ear onto a mouse. And importantly—to point out that a whole new paradigm is ready to emerge and already emerging; and that all we really need to do is to enable this new paradigm to unfold—by restoring our ability to connect the dots.

The elephant was in the room when the 20th century’s giants wrote or spoke; but we failed to see him because the paradigm we are in constitutes the proverbial "box" in which we live and think; and because of the jungleness of our information; and because of disciplinary and cultural fragmentation; and because our thinking and communication are still as the tradition 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 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!

We find paradigms at distinct levels of detail; you may see the candle as a paradigm in illumination and the lightbulb as a different one; this will help you comprehend the design of the process that will bring us from one paradigm in information to the next as a creative challenge of its own right and arguably the creative challenge we need to live up to. I coined a pair of keywords—tradition and design to point to the nature of this challenge, and process. Tradition and design are two ways in which wholeness can result in the human world; tradition relies on spontaneous evolution, where things are improved and adjusted to each other through many generations of use; design relies on comprehension and action. The point of this definition is that when tradition can no longer be relied on—design must be used.

You may now understand the point of the Modernity ideogram more precisely: We are no longer traditional; and we are not yet designing; we live in a (still unconscious, still unstable) transition from one stable way of evolving and being in the world or paradigm, which is no longer functioning—and another one; which is not yet in place.

You may comprehend the knowledge federation proposal as a way to enable this transition, by changing the 'headlights'; and the holotopia vision and initiative as the roadmap to the new social and cultural paradigm that will result.

The purpose of the Liberation book is to choreograph and streamline the paradigm change; by developing an analogy between the times and conditions when Galilei was in house arrest, when a landslide paradigm change was about to take place, and our own time; and by giving you, the reader, a glimpse of the emerging paradigm; and by fostering a process—the dialog—by which the emergence of the new paradigm is made possible; which, needless to say, needs to include a vision; because no matter how hard we try—we just won't produce the lightbulb by improving the candle; or by grappling with all those problems that driving in the dark has produced.

The Liberation book is about our liberation from the paradigm.

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 for 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 at large; and on a still larger scale—our society-and-culture, and its evolution.

Logos

“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)

A reason why a comprehensive or paradigm change is now natural and easy is that the very way we use our minds is ripe for change; just as it was in Descartes' and Galilei's time. So I lifted up the word logos as a banner; and use it to demarcate the most fertile creative frontier I can think of, which is opening up; where we'll engage in comprehensive change by changing the way we think to begin with.

"In the beginning was logos and logos was with God and logos was God." I chose the word "logos" as banner to point to the historicity of the way we think; that it has changed before and will change again. To Hellenic thinkers "logos" was the principle according to which God organized the world; which makes it possible to comprehend the world correctly—provided we align with it the way we use our minds. How exactly we should go about doing that—here the opinions differed; and gave rise to a multitude of philosophical schools and traditions.

But "logos" faired poorly in post-Hellenic world; Latin failed to offer a translation, and the modern languages too. For about a millennium our ancestors believed that logos had been revealed to us humans by God's own son; and considered questioning that to constitute the deadly sin of pride, and a heresy.

Enlightenment liberated and empowered the mind.

And at the same time made a fundamental error—from which the error I am proposing to correct naturally resulted; by assuming that the purpose of information and knowledge is the objective and unchanging truth (which is revealed to the mind as the sensation of absolute certainty); which Descartes immortalized by proclaiming "I think, therefore I am".

The early scientific revolution unfolded as a reaction to earlier "teleological" or "mystical" explanations of natural phenomena; as Noam Chomsky pointed out in his University of Oslo talk titled "The machine, the ghost, and the limits of understanding", its founding fathers conceived it as 'removing the ghost from the machine'—i.e. as explaining the natural phenomena in ways that are completely comprehensible to the mind; as one would explain how a clockwork operates. Which initially led to the great successes of science and technology, which everyone witnessed; and which culturally not yet problematic, because tradition and science coexisted side by side—the former providing the know-what and the latter the know-how; until—right around mid-19th century, when Darwin entered the scene—the way to use the mind that science brought along discredited the mindset of tradition.

The educated masses began to believe that science was the answer.

The final answer to the age-old quest for the correct way to use the mind. But the prospect of unraveling the 'clockwork of nature' retreated every time it appeared to be nearing success; the ("indivisible") atom split into one hundred "subatomic particles"; which—when the scientists examined them—turned out to defy not only causality but even the common sense itself (as J. Robert Oppenheimer pointed out in Uncommon Sense). Our "scientific worldview" is now like Humpty Dumpty—something that nobody can put back together again; and yet it continues to grow only downward—toward increased precision, detail and complexity.

The human world too became forbiddingly complex, owing to this accelerated yet unguided way of evolving; and impossible to comprehend correctly (in a way that points to correct action)—by thinking as we did when we created science and technology.

Also the level of noise and distraction (brought by unenlightened use of technology) made comprehension impossible. Already at the turn of the 19th century Nietzsche warned that the modern man is so overwhelmed by the tempo of change and influx of 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?

As Benjamin Lee Whorf pointed out in Language, Thought and Reality, science assumed its pivotal social role, of "the Grand Revelator of modern Western culture", without intending to; and so science never adjusted itself to its larger-than-life new role. On the contrary—having been conceived as the way to "objective" and unchanging "truth about reality"—the institution of science provides no way for changing the way in which science has been instituted; and more generally, and importantly—the university as institution provides no process for updating the way information is and knowledge are to be pursued; which is, once again, its core social function. On the contrary—one might say that questioning science in its absolute role, of "universal experts" as Peter Berger and Thomas Luckmann called it in The Social Construction of Reality role became a social taboo; just as questioning the Scripture had been in the earlier paradigm.

And so we got stuck with candle headlights.

The liberation of logos, and the renewal and continuation of this all-important and age-old quest—is our liberation from the the misconception that "logic" is the correct way to think; and that the suffix "logy" of scientific disciplines means that they embody the correct way to knowledge; that they are the final "right" way to use the mind.

Design epistemology

“[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.)

You'll easily comprehend the anomaly this third of holotopia's five insights points to and unravels, if you see the way we use the mind (and go about deciding what's true or false and relevant or irrelevant) as the foundation on which the edifice of our culture has been built; which enables some of its parts or sides to grow big and strong (those that are supported by this foundation), and abandons others to erosion. As Heisenberg pointed out, what we have as foundation—which our general culture imbibed from 19th century science—prevented cultural evolution to continue; being "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." He 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.

As an insight, design eistemology shows how a broad and solid foundation can be developed.

By following the approach that is the subject of this proposal.

The design epistemology originated by federating the state-of-the-art epistemological findings; by systematizing and adapting what the giants of science and philosophy have found out—and writing the result as a convention; such as Einstein's "epistemological credo"—his testament or "obituary", 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.”

The design epistemology takes the constructivist credo, which Einstein expressed succinctly (that we are not discovering but constructing a "reality picture") a couple of steps further—by writing it (no longer as a statement about reality, but) as a convention; and by assigning to it a purpose (so that instead of amassing "reality pictures"—we can prioritize those we actually need, or even necessitate).

This foundation is solid or "rigorous".

Because it represents the epistemological state of the art; and because it's a convention. The added purpose can hardly be debated—not only because doing what's necessary to avoid civilizational collapse is hard to argue against; but also because this too is a convention; a different convention, and an altogether different way to knowledge can be created, to suit a different purpose.

A side-effect of this academic update is that it offers us a way to avoid the fragmentation in social sciences; which results when the social scientists disagree whether it's right to see the complex cultural and social reality in one way or in another. Here our explicit aim is to see things whole; which translates into the challenge of seeing things in a way that may best reveal their non-whole sides. The simple point here is that when our task is not producing an accurate description of an infinitely complex "reality", but a way to see it that "works" (in the sense of providing us evolutionary guidance)—then this fragmentation is easily seen as part of the problem, and avoided.

This foundation is also broad.

In the sense that it removes the narrow frame barrier; and lets us build knowledge, and culture, on all forms of human experience. Another philosophical stream of thought that the design epistemology embodies is phenomenology; which Einstein pointed to by talking about "the totality of sense experiences" on the one side, and "the totality of the concepts and propositions" on the other side. The point here that when human experience (and not "objective reality") is considered to be the substance that information can and needs to be founded on, and convey—then we can treat not only the sciences, but indeed all cultural traditions and artifacts as 'data'; which in some way or other embody human experience. By convention, experience does not have any a priori structure; experience is considered to be like the ink blot in a Rorschach test—something to which we freely ascribe interpretation and meaning; as Einstein suggested in his "epistemological credo".

Transdisciplinarity is herewith made academically rigorous.

Appeals to legitimate transdisciplinarity academically—if they were at all considered—were 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 orderliness and clarity we experience when we've followed a certain 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 what knowledge federation initiative undertakes to enable.

Now you may also comprehend what I told you on the opening page of this website, why there is nothing here to quarrel about; ultimately, what I'm doing here is academic in a new sense of this word—the one the Modernity ideogram points to: I am not giving you "the objective reality picture" and trying to "prove" it; I am initiating a process, as well as I am able, by which we'll substitute the 'lightbulb' for the 'candle'; I am being and acting as part of that process.

Polyscopic methodology

“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)

You'll comprehend the anomaly this fourth of holotopia's five insights points to, if you see method—the category from which polyscopic methodology 'pillar' stems—as the toolkit with which construct truth and meaning, and our culture at large; and consider that—as Maslow pointed out—this method is now so specialized, that it compels us to be specialized; and choose our themes and set our priorities (not according to whether they are 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 (where logos is applied to method), which alleviates this problem, can be created by the proposed approach; by federating the findings of giants of science and the very techniques that have been developed in the sciences; so as 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 rigorously defined ideas to develop clear and rigorous 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 conventional science) enable us to formulate general results and theories, including the gestalts; suitable justification methods (I use "justification" instead of the more common 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).

Here 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 specific way (as shown by the pattern) and make sense; and its justification of this result 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. The 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 you an example.

Convenience paradox

“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)

You'll appreciate the importance of the convenience paradox result—the fifth of holotopia's five insights—if you think of the category, "values", it stems from in the context of our contemporary condition: The pursuit of material production and consumption (our society's evolutionary course that the word materialism here designates) needs to be urgently changed; but to what; and in what way? It seems that everyone who has looked into this question a bit more carefully concluded that the pursuit of humanistic or cultural goals and values will have to be the answer; and you may hear it straight from the horse's mouth.

And the anomaly itself you'll see if you think of materialism's way to use the mind—which considers as possible or relevant or "real" 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", as Heisenberg diagnosed; which in the realm of values translates into convenience—whereby those things and only those things that appear attractive to our senses are considered as really worth pursuing (technical science here won't help); and notice that this way ('in the light of a candle') of conceiving the know-what leaves in the dark one whole dimension of physical reality—time; and also an important side or one could say the important 'half' of the three dimensions of space—its inner or embodied side; because while "happiness" or whatever we may choose to "pursue" 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 question for more than four decades—condensed in a six-minute trailer)—how Dennis Meadows, while of course pointing in the right direction, was searching for words that would do it justice; and came up with little more than "knowledge, and music"?

This is where Liberation book really takes off!

Its entire first half—its first five chapters—is dedicated to mapping not only specific opportunities, but entire 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"? The fact of this matter is that "happiness" appears to be a consequence of external events; while it's our propensity to respond emotionally to external events that has by and large the deciding role; which develops only gradually—as a consequence of long-term environmental factors; which, needless to say, constitute the material with which a cultural revival can and needs to be built. Here "love" may be an even better theme to zoom in on; since so much of our culture—both everyday and more refined—revolves around it. The convenience paradox invites you to consider this as an interesting question: What qualify of love are you at all able to experience; or perhaps more importantly—to give? What do we really know about the nature and the outreaches of any of the emotions that are worth experiencing, such as joy, or gratitude? And what can we do to increase our emotional outreach? These questions are taken up in Chapter Three of the book; which has "Liberation of Emotions" as title; where the phenomenological data are drawn from the tradition of Sufism; and we see how the ability to feel all-consuming love develops through a certain kind of practice—which combines attitudes and values on the inner side with poetry and music on the outer side. We see how poetry and music can make us people capable of experiencing far more than we do now; and how—when we are truly able to experience them—poetry and music can become incomparably more valuable to us than they are now.

With "Liberation of Body" as title, Chapter One zooms in on the experience of difficulty or effort; and by federating experiences and insights from the martial art tradition, with the ones reached in the schools that F. M. Alexander and Moshe Feldenkrais founded, points out that both the sensation of effort and our ability to move freely can be altered hugely by suitable training; and Chapters Two and Three do similarly with creativity (as the motility of mind) and emotions (as the motility of feeling). Vast ranges of freedom—and obstacles to freedom—are embodied; and it is there, within ourselves, that vast and ignored opportunities to improve our condition reside. Chapter Four offers a general model of inner wholeness; which makes it possible to comprehend the effects of a broad range of human development schools and traditions such as yoga and Rolfing; which is itself created by combining insights from the qigong tradition with the ones reached in the psychotherapy school that Wilhelm Reich founded.

The Liberation book in this way produces an initial map of human inner wholeness; and an initial template for reviving and empowering culture-transformative experiences and insights or memes. The book is conceived (more precisely it can be read) as a case for a single culture-transformative meme—the legacy of Buddhadasa, Thailand's holy man and Buddhism reformer. Chapters Five and Six are dedicated to federating his message. Chapter Five, which has "Liberation from Tension" as title, explores a point of view and a realm of experience according to which "the pursuit of happiness" as materialism conceived it is exactly exactly the way to suffering (more precisely to a specific kind of suffering called dukkha, which is the focal point of Buddhism, as Buddhadasa interpreted it); and in Chapter Six, which has "Liberation from Oneself" as title, we see why also the liberation from self-centeredness (which, roughly, means letting the "What's in it for me?" question decide the know-what), which Buddhadasa saw as the shared essence of the great world religions—is also part and parcel of our wholeness.

You can now see how "a great cultural revival" may realistically happen.

Convenience paradox is the point of a very large information holon—which asserts 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; whose rectangle is populated by a broad range of—curated—ways to improve our condition through cultural pursuits or by human development (which according to Peccei is the most important goal).

Once we've liberated ourselves from "the deception of the senses", and claimed back our know-what from all that advertising—we'll be free to explore the pivotal themes evidence-based. But this is only a new beginning; that single step with which a journey of one thousand miles begins—where we'll rebuild our culture; so that it effortlessly elevates us to the heights whose very existence we ignore; to the condition we call wholeness; which gave holotopia that name. Then and only then will the pursuit of this new evolutionary course—that will elevate our humanness and culture to new heights—be natural and easy.

This explains the Liberation book's subtitle, "Religion beyond Belief"; which invites you to see the history of religion in three phases:

  • where in the first, the beliefs and mores of religion compelled people to do (ethically, in an evolutionary sense) the right thing
  • and in the second, the beliefs and mores of of materialism made us 'free' to do the wrong thing;
  • until we developed knowledge about pivotal themes.

The Liberation book shows that—once this is achieved, once we've learned to federate what's of value in the heritage of religious and other human development traditions (instead of ignoring it, because it failed to fit into the narrow frame)—the resulting improvement of our condition will be truly beyond belief!

Knowledge federation

“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)

You'll comprehend this second of holotopia's five points if you think of communication as the technology-enabled social process by which humanity's experiences and insights are turned into knowledge and action; and to the need and the possibility to thoroughly re-create communication in a manner that the new information technology enabled—and our new condition necessitates; which the Modernity ideogram suggested; and which knowledge federation stands for.

I cannot think of a better way to introduce this need-and-possibility—than by telling you The Incredible History of Doug Engelbart; which is my very favorite of all the stories told in the Liberation book; which I indeed drafted first, intending to make it a book of its own, and later condensed into a very brief version told in the Liberation book's seventh chapter; which has "Liberation of Society" as title.

The point of this "incredible history" is that the "digital technology"—the interactive, network-interconnected digital media, which you and I use to write emails and browse the Web—has been created, by Doug Engelbart and his SRI-based team, to serve as enabling technology for an entirely different paradigm in communication; different, that is, from broadcasting or publishing—which the old technology, the printing press, made possible. You'll see the corresponding anomaly if you consider that we still seem to take it for granted that when something is published it is also known; while this belief itself has a fascinatingly rich and long history of being reported as dangerously and outrageously false (but these reports too got lost in "information glut").

Think of our best, selected, trained and sponsored minds writing countless pages of esoteric and specialized academic texts—which have no way to impact our collective awareness by design (or more precisely because the lack of design of our communication system); think of all the media technology that's being used to compete for our attention—instead of treating it as the critical resource, in an age when the survival of our species depends on our awareness rising to a whole new level—and you'll have no difficulty understanding the knowledge federation as point, and as proposal. Communication is not only the pivotal social process; it is the social process—around which all other social processes are structured.

The fact that Engelbart was unable to communicate the nature of his vision to Silicon Valley's academics and entrepreneurs—regardless of how hard he tried, and even after they recognized him as the giant in residence behind "the revolution in the Valley"—is the most vivid testimony of the core issue I've been telling you about: How much we—including the best of us—are stuck in the "the world" that has been pulled over our eyes; and unable to think conceptually; and see the elephant in the room.

I use collective mind as keyword to pinpoint the gist of Engelbart's vision; which is that the technology that he envisioned and created is the enabling technology for the capability we need—the capability to handle complex and urgent problems; because it constitutes a 'collective nervous system' that enables us develop entirely new processes in communication; and process data and comprehend and act in a similar way in which the cells of an evolutionarily advanced organism co-create meaning and communicate. Imagine if your cells used your nervous system to merely broadcast data—and you'll have no difficulty comprehending the anomaly that knowledge federation undertakes to resolve.

Our 2010 workshop—where we began to self-organize as a transdiscipline—was called "Self-Organizing Collective Mind". Prior to this workshop I spent the school year on sabbatical in San Francisco Bay Area; and strengthened the ties with the R & D community that grew around Engelbart called Program for the Future, which Mei Lin Fung initiated in Palo Alto to continue and complete the work on implementing Engelbart's vision; and of course with Engelbart himself. At the University of Oslo Computer Science Department I later taught a doctoral course about Engelbart's legacy—to research it thoroughly, and develop ways to communicate it.

TNC2015.jpeg

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

As an insight, knowledge federation stands for the fact that a radically better communication is both necessary and possible; exactly the sort of quantum leap that the Modernity ideogram is pointing to. We made this possibility transparent by developing a portfolio of prototypes—real-life models of socio-technical systems in communication; which I'll here illustrate by our Tesla and the Nature of Creativity 2015 prototype as canonical example; where the result of an academic researcher, Dejan Raković of the University of Belgrade, has been federated in three phases; where

  • the first phase made the result comprehensible to a larger audience; by turning his highly technical research article into a multimedia object (this was done by knowledge federation's communication design team); where its main points were extracted and made comprehensible by explanatory diagrams or ideograms; and further clarified by (placing on them links to) recorded interviews with the author
  • the second phase made the result known and at the same time discussed in space—by staging a televised high-profile dialog at Sava Center Belgrade
  • the third phase constituted a social process around the result, by using DebateGraph.

As I explained in Chapter Two of the Liberation book, which has "Liberation of Mind" as title, also the theme of Raković's result was perfectly suited for our purpose: He showed phenomenologically (by recourse to Nikola Tesla's creative process, which Tesla himself described) that creativity (of the "outside the box" kind, which we the people now vitally need in order to step beyond this evolutionary entrapment and evolve further) requires the sort of process or ecology of mind that has become all but impossible to us the people—and then theorized it within the paradigm of quantum physics. Serbian TV anchor hit the nail on the head (while interviewing the knowledge federation's representative and the US Embassy's cultural attache who represented that sponsor) concluded "So you are developing a collective Tesla!". In this time when machines have become capable of doing the "inside the box" thinking for us—it has become all the more important for us to comprehend and develop the kind of creativity that only humans are capable of; on which our future will depend.

Systemic innovation

“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)

You'll comprehend the anomaly this first of the five points points to 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. The importance of this inquiry cannot be overrated, so let me be blunt: : If the systems whose function is to inform us are scandalously nonsensical—what about all others? How suitable are our financial system, our governance, our international corporation and our education for the all-important functions they need to fulfill in (this transition to) post-industrial age? We had a professional photographer at our Tesla and the Nature of Creativity 2015 event in Belgrade; and she photographed me showing my smartphone to the people in our dialog; which I did to point to the surreal contrast between the dexterity that went into to creation of the minute little thing I was holding—and the complete negligence of those incomparably larger and equally more important systems we now depend on—to give us vision.

You'll forget the point of this all if you have a look at the flip side of this coin—and see that a radically more effective way to our work will become possible when we adjust our systems to the functions they need to perform in larger systems, including our society or civilization at large; as the Modernity ideogram calls for.

In Chapter Seven of the Liberation book I introduced most briefly Erich Jantsch's legacy and vision (and left the details to Book Two) by qualifying them as the environmental movement's forgotten history; and its ignored theory; which we'll need in order to be able to act instead of only reacting. Then I introduced systemic innovation, the holotopia's first and main point, by sketching briefly my 2013 talk "Toward a Scientific Comprehension and Handling of Problems"; where I drafted a parallel between systemic innovation and scientific medicine—which distinguishes itself by comprehending and handling unwanted symptoms in terms of the anatomy and pathophysiology that underlie them!

Banathy 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.” For a while I contemplated calling this first insight "The systems, stupid!"; which was a paraphrase of Bill Clinton's 1992 winning electoral slogan "The Economy, stupid!" Well, of course—in a society where the survival of the businesses depends on their ability to sell people things—you have to keep the economy growing if you want to keep the business profitable and the people employed. But economic growth is not "the solution to our problem"! Systemic innovation is—as (by definition) the way to give us the people, and "democracy", the all-important capability to re-create systems; so that we are no longer compelled to do as our systems dictate; until the bitter end.

At knowledge federation's 2011 workshop at Stanford University, within the Triple Helix IX international conference, I introduced systemic innovation as an emerging and necessary or remedial trend; and (the organizational structure developed and represented by) knowledge federation as (an institutional or systemic) enabler of systemic innovation. We work by creating a prototype of a system and organizing a transdiscipline around it—to update it according to the state-of-the-art insights that its members bring from their disciplines; and to change the corresponding real-life system accordingly.

Holoscope

See things whole.


The holoscope principle.

If we, "our species" or global society are fortunate enough to survive this chaotic, unguided, unconscious and risky transition to guided or conscious evolution—the future generations may look back and see the way we handled information (in the "Age of Information"!) in a similar light as we now see how all those poor and innocent women were treated by Inquisition—as an epitaph of an era; and of a paradigm in urgent need of change.

What makes this urgent change also most natural and easy—is the synergy between holotopia's fourth and second point; which is highlighted on the Holotopia ideogram and labeled "information". It is only when we've done our homework on the theory side—and explained to each other and the world what information must be like, to serve us the people in this moment of need—that we'll be able to use the new technology to implement the processes that this information requires. In the holotopia context this larger-than-life opportunity is pointed to by the coined idiom holoscope; and by see things whole as the related vision statement. Indeed—any crazy beliefs can be, and have been throughout history, maintained by taking things out of their context; and by showing things from one side and hiding or ignoring the other. It is only when we are able to see things whole that knowledge will once again be possible.

In the movie The Matrix, "the world that has been pulled over your eyes to blind you from the truth" epitomized a situation where people live in a devastated and dying world ruled by machines—and in a falsified "reality" that makes the world appear to them as normal; in the Liberation book it epitomizes the situation where people live without guiding insights or principles; where their only reference system is the world itself and its various descriptions; which compels the people to adapt to the world, instead of comprehending it critically.

You may now begin to see the elephant from this specific angle:

The IT revolution, as it happened, has a radically better alternative.

Which knowledge federation undertakes to set in motion.

Holotopia

Make things whole.


The holotopia principle.

One more horizontal line comes forth to meet the eye in Holotopia ideogram—the one that has "action" as label; because acting in this new way—to consciously make things whole—is what "conscious evolution" and holotopia initiative are really all about!.

Here too the horizontal line points to the larger-than-life effects that are to be achieved through the synergy between two insights: It is only when we've comprehended how vast are the opportunities are to improve our inner or personal wholeness—that we'll be ready to reconfigure our systems, which now make this pursuit impossible; and vice-versa: It is only when through the pursuit of inner wholeness we've reached the level where it's obvious just how destructive is all that busy-ness and competition that goes on—that we'll be compelled to change those systems; to provide us the ecology of mind that the pursuit of our inner wholeness necessitates.

"A way to change course" is now as simple as one-two-three-go; where

  • Step One is to update the way we use the mind; we must correct the foundation;
  • Step Two is to update our information; we must be able to see things whole—to be able to see and follow a viable new course;
  • Step Three is to update the way we act; the new course we need to follow is make things whole.

Power structure

“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)

All this was "known" a half-century ago; and yet this simple and obvious "go" remained a no-go!

"Know thyself" has been the battle cry of philosophers through the ages; there is something we the people must urgently get to know about ourselves; which—after having plowed this so field for nearly three decades—I am now ready to offer you as the first step with which the "solutionatique" to (what The Club of Rome called) the "world problematique" must begin; which is the reason why I postponed the Systemic Innovation book to be the second in the series, and decided that Liberation should be the first. It might be best to introduce to you this conclusion by outlining, however briefly, how I reached it.

Before we can take care of "the huge problems now confronting us"—we need to diagnose them correctly; that's the challenge the power structure as keyword points to. While power structure is not one of the five insights, it is one of the core themes of the Liberation book; and it's also been one of the core themes of my work. In the Liberation book I introduce it by talking about Hannah Arendt; who studied Eichman when he was on trial in Israel; and to her surprise found him (not evil but) distinctly ordinary; Eichman did not hate Jews—he followed orders. Hannah Arendt coined "banality of evil" as keyword to pinpoint her insight.

Here on the table in front of me I have Zygmunt Bauman's book Modernity and the Holocaust, which I'm re-reading; where Bauman explained how he reached a similar conclusion—although he expressed it in an entirely different way. The way his fellow sociologists theorized the Holocaust, his point was, contradicts what actually happened—and the historians documented. Bauman wrote this book—as he later explained—"to exort fellow social thinkers to [...] stop viewing the Holocaust as a bizzare and aberrant episode in modern history, and think it through instead as a highly relevant, integral part of that history; 'integral' in the sense of being indispensable for the understanding of what that history was truly about, what it was capable of and why—and the sort of society that has emerged from it, and which we all inhabit." But Bauman did not condense his all-important ideas to a point; it's tempting to think that a suitable methodology has been lacking.

When in 1995 I found myself on this so exquisitely rich realm of creative opportunities, and already making some promising progress, I reconfigured my life and work entirely to be able to dedicate myself fully to its development—knowing that this wold be necessary, if I were to achieve on it anything that might have lasting value. But the reactions to this work that I encounterd—when I were to begin sharing these questions and ideas with my academic colleagues—waere the very opposite from what I anticipated: I expected a spirited conversation; or perhaps disbelief to begin with ("But did you think about..."; or "No, I don't think this can be done in an academic way..."); but what I got was just—silence; and a sense of discomfort! Which I now pinpoint with the formula "You can do anything you like in your own home (office); just don't talk about it here among us normal people (academics)." To remain relatively sane—and be able to complete this project, in my own natural voice, which it necessitates—I withdrew into a virtual quarantine, for several years. I am now preparing to "come out".

And so this conclusion offered itself; which was later confirmed with 100% consistency; you know how mathematical functions have a domain where they are defined (you may divide any real number with any other real number except zero; division with zero is "undefined"):

The domain of application of Logos (presently) excludes systems.

I developed the power structure theory by combining the reported phenomenology I have just outlined with Antonio Damasio's insights in cognitive neuroscience (which he published in a book appropriately called Descartes' Error); and Pierre Bourdieu's "theory of practice" (where he explained how power in society really operates). The overall result was the power structure as an up-to-date model of the all-important notion of "power monger" or "enemy"; as the central subject toward which our all-important pursuit of social justice and freedom are directed; and of course of politics. The point here is to see the enemy (not necessarily as a dictator, or a powerful clique, or "the 1%", but) as a structure—comprising power interests and our beliefs, or information; and also wholeness or the lack of it—both institutional and human. I pointed to insights from technical fields—including stochastic optimization, artificial intelligence and artificial life—to demonstrate that those seemingly distinct entities can not only co-evolve together—but also devise strategies and act as if they were intelligent and alive. And that all this can happen without anyone's conscious intention, or even awareness!

The power structure theory sets the stage for holotopian politics.

Which is no longer "us against them" as it has been through history—but all of us against the power structure.

That the revolution to which I'm inviting you will be pursued (not through confrontation but) through collaboration!

Materialism

– The Matrix is the world that has been pulled over your eyes to blind you from the truth.


(Morpheus to Neo, The Matrix.)

I am prepared that you may consider all this as (not holotopian but) utopian. So let me tell you why it's not: I'll coin "geocide" as keyword and use it to point out that the "banal evil" is in our time reaching grotesque, surreal dimensions: We are not sending someone else's children in overcrowded trains on a journey of no return; unless we wake up—we'll be doing similar or worse to our own children; by doing no more than "our job" (within the systems as they've become). We'll be accomplices in the geocide by doing no more—than being passive; than remaining unengaged.

When the light of awareness has been turned on—it will be crystal-clear that geocide is not in anyone's "interest"; and that the only way we'll be able to change course is by collaborating instead of competing.

I use "the world" as metaphor, and materialism as keyword, to point to the spell that "reality" (as it presents to us by the systems in which we live and work) keeps us in; and the fact that we won't be able to liberate ourselves unless we develop an independent reference system; which is not a mere description of that "reality". <p>It was tempting to turn "idealism" into a keyword and use it as antonym to materialism; and elevate the cultural condition that restores ideas and ideals to their function, and prominence; but I did something else instead. In Chapter Two I created homo ludens and homo sapiens as a pair of antonyms denoting two 'cultural species' and two distinct ways of evolving; where the homo ludens handles the overwhelming noise and complexity by learning his professional and other roles as one would learn the rules of a game; and by acting in them competitively; and where the homo sapiens is the 'cultural species' and the evolutionary course that constitute the gist of this proposal. I didn't say this in the book—but I'll leave it for you here to reflect on—why homo ludens and homo sapiens are indeed two coherent paradigms: Both see themselves as the future of human evolution; and the other one as going extinct; the homo sapiens looks at the data; the homo ludens simply looks around...

Dialog

“As long as a paradox is treated as a problem, it can never be dissolved.”


(David Bohm, Problem and Paradox.)

When the way we use the mind is the root of our problems—then this is no longer a problem but a paradox; which turns all our "problems" into paradoxes!

The function of the dialog is to dissolve the paradox.

The dialog is an entirely new way to communicate. David Bohm called it "dialogue" and explained that "it [...] may well be one of the most effective ways of investigating the crisis which faces society, and indeed the whole of human nature and consciousness today. Moreover, it may turn out that such a form of free exchange of ideas and information is of fundamental relevance for transforming culture and freeing it of destructive misinformation, so that creativity can be liberated."

The meaning of this keyword is not "conversation", as the word "dialogue" has been commonly used—but the one that follows from the Greek dialogos (through logos). The function of the dialog is to first of all liberate logos; and to then apply it to rebuild our collective mind, or "public sphere" as Jürgen Habermans and his colleagues have been calling it; and make democracy capable of taking care of its negative trends or "problems"; or just simply possible.

The dialog will recreate the way we use new media. Bohm's dialog has been documented by some distinctly smart and knowledgeable people, including Bohm himself—so all we need is to click and explore.

But that's only the beginning; what remains is to federate all that's relevant to this new way of communicating; and then implement it by using the arts, and the new information technology; and divise an ever-growing collection of prototypes (which we'll have an endless fun creating)—which will engender the cultural revival; which is, of course, holotopia initiative's very purpose.