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<div class="page-header" > <h1>Federation through Images</h1> </div>
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<div class="page-header" > <h1>Federation through Ideograms</h1> </div>
  
 
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  <div class="col-md-3"><h2>Reimaging the Enlightenment</h2></div>
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<div class="col-md-3"><font size="+1">– We’ve entered an age of information glut. And this is something no culture has really faced before. The typical situation is information scarcity. [] Lack of information can be very dangerous. [] But at the same time too much information can be dangerous, because it can lead to a situation of meaninglessness [].</font>
<div class="col-md-7"><h3>Enlightening the everyday</h3>
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<br>
<p>Can our society's capability to comprehend be enhanced in the degree that marked the Enlightenment?</p>
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(Neil Postman in a televised interview to <em>Open Mind</em>, 1990)
<p>Can we experience a similar dispelling of prejudices and illusions in our understanding of love, happiness, religion, social justice and democracy?</p>
 
<p>In these detailed pages of our presentation we provide food for this line of thought. </p>
 
<p>In the first story of Federation through Stories we show how the developments in modern physics, and in science and philosophy at large, disrupted our notions of what knowledge and pursuit of knowledge are about. The notions that the 19th century science gave our popular culture, which still persist.</p>
 
<p>The [[giants|<em>giants</em>]] of modern science saw that what they were discovering was not only the behavior of small quanta of matter, or the social mechanisms by which the idea of reality is constructed, or the neurological mechanisms that govern awareness – but that the bare foundations of our creation of truth and meaning were emerging from the ground. </p>
 
<p>Having thus lost its innocence, its "objective observer" self-image, science acquired a new capability – to self-reflect. And through self-reflection to understand the limitations of its own approach to knowledge. </p>
 
<p>Here, in Federation through Images, we shall depict the academic and human situation that resulted – and propose how to  continue.</p> 
 
<p>We shall see why what we've learned, and the situation we are in, empower us to extend the extent of scientific knowledge to <em>any</em> theme that matters.</p>
 
 
 
<h3>Our giant in residence</h3>
 
</div> </div>
 
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<div class="col-md-6">
 
<p>
 
<blockquote>
 
In spite of all the fruitfulness on particulars, dogmatic rigidity prevailed on the matter of principles:
 
In the beginning (if there was such a thing), God created Newton's laws of motion together with the necessary masses and forces. This is all; everything beyond this follows from the development of appropriate mathematical methods by means of deduction.
 
</blockquote>
 
While we build on ideas of a whole generation of [[giants|<em>giants</em>]], in this condensed presentation they will all be represented by a single one – Albert Einstein. Einstein will here appear in his usual role, as a modern science icon.</p> </div>
 
  <div class="col-md-3"> [[File:Einstein.jpg]] <br><small><center>[[Albert Einstein]]</center></small></div>
 
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<p>The just quoted lines from Einstein's Autobiographical Notes, where he described physics at the point when he entered it as a graduate student, around the turn of last century, will set the stage for our inquiry. It is a daring change <em>on the matter of principles</em> that made modern physics possible. We'll now see how this change can percolate further.</p></div>
 
</div>
 
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  <div class="col-md-3"><h2>These images are ideograms</h2></div>
 
  <div class="col-md-7"><h3>Pictures that are worth one thousand words</h3>
 
<p>Not all pictures are worth one  thousand words; but these [[ideograms|<em>ideograms</em>]] are!  </p>
 
<p>Each of them will not only summarize for us the insights of a some of the last century's most original minds – but also allow us to "stand on their shoulders" and see beyond. What we'll then be able to see is a creative frontier that their combined insights reveal; and breath-taking opportunities for contribution and achievement, both fundamental and pragmatic, that this frontier offers. </p>
 
<p>By using [[ideograms|<em>ideograms</em>]] we shall at the same time <em>demonstrate</em> big-picture science and its power. Recall that the philosophical systems of  Hegel and Husserl took thousands of <em>pages</em>! Here only a handful of [[ideograms|<em>ideograms</em>]] will prove sufficient. </p>
 
<p>Our purpose being to ignite a conversation, this concise presentation will serve us best.</p> 
 
</div></div>
 
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  <div class="col-md-3"><h2>Invitation to academic self-reflection</h2></div>
 
 
 
<div class="col-md-7"><h3>Mirror ideogram</h3>
 
<p>We use this metaphorical image, of the academic [[mirror|<em>mirror</em>]], to point to the nature of the academic condition to which the insights reached in 20th century science and philosophy have brought us.</p>
 
<p>Just as the case was in Lewis Carrol's story from which this metaphor has been borrowed, the academic [[mirror|<em>mirror</em>]] will turn out to be a trapdoor into a whole <em>new</em> academic reality.</p> 
 
<p> </p>
 
[[File:Magical_Mirror.jpg]] <br><small><center>Mirror ideogram</center></small>
 
<p> </p>
 
<p>You may imagine that every university campus has one – although we are normally much too busy to see it.</p>
 
<p>If we <em>would</em> stop and take a look, we would see in this [[mirror|<em>mirror</em>]] the same world that we see around us. But we would also see <em>ourselves</em>! </p>
 
 
 
<h3>Seeing ourselves in the mirror</h3>
 
<p>As a symbol, the [[mirror|<em>mirror</em>]] is an invitation to reconsider our conventional academic self-conception.</p>
 
<p>Seeing ourselves in the [[mirror|<em>mirror</em>]] symbolizes that we've understood and internalized the fact that we are not the "objective observers" we believed we were – hovering above the world, and by looking at it through the objective lense of "the scientific method", seeing it as it truly is. </p>
 
<p>In a moment we'll give you a chance to stop and reflect. How much is our academic ethos, and culture, and our general culture, marked by this self-image that we must now grow beyond? </p>
 
<p>And what <em>is</em> beyond?</p>
 
<p> In just a moment we'll let you pause and think about this.</p>
 
<p> But before we do that, let's hear Einstein. A couple of short excerpts, two words of wisdom, will suffice to see what needs to be seen. </p>
 
<p>The first one will explain why "the correspondence with reality" is a shaky foundation indeed.</p>
 
</div></div>
 
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<div class="col-md-6">
 
<p><blockquote>
 
Physical concepts are free creations of the human mind, and are not, however it may seem, uniquely determined by the external world. In our endeavor to understand reality we are somewhat like a man trying to understand the mechanism of a closed watch. He sees the face and the moving hands, even hears its ticking, but he has no way of opening the case. If he is ingenious he may form some picture of a mechanism which could be responsible for all the things he observes, but he may never be quite sure his picture is the only one which could explain his observations. He will never be able to compare his picture with the real mechanism and he cannot even imagine the possibility or the meaning of such a comparison.</blockquote>
 
</p></div>
 
  <div class="col-md-3"> [[File:Einstein.jpg]] <br><small><center>[[Albert Einstein]]</center></small></div>
 
</div>
 
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  <div class="col-md-3"></div>
 
  <div class="col-md-7"><p>Einstein's second note will suggest that "the correspondence with reality" is a product of  illusion.
 
<blockquote>
 
During  philosophy’s  childhood  it  was  rather  generally  believed that it is possible to find everything which can be known by means of mere reflection. (...) Someone, indeed,  might even raise the question whether, without something  of this illusion, anything really great can be achieved in the  realm of philosophical thought – but we do not wish to ask  this question. This  more  aristocratic  illusion  concerning  the  unlimited  penetrative power of thought has as its counterpart the more  plebeian illusion of naïve realism, according to which things  “are” as they are perceived by us through our senses. This  illusion dominates the daily life of men and animals; it is also  the point of departure in all the sciences, especially of the  natural sciences.
 
</blockquote></p>
 
<p>If the purpose of our pursuit of knowledge is to distinguish truth from illusion – how can we base it on a criterion that is impossible to verify? And which is itself a product of illusion?</p>
 
 
 
<h3>Seeing ourselves in the world</h3>
 
<p>So what <em>is</em> really the purpose of our (academic) pursuit of knowledge? </p>
 
<p>Or better said – <em>what should our purpose be</em>?</p>
 
<p>The space in front of the [[mirror|<em>mirror</em>]] is a space for academic self-reflection.</p>  
 
<p>By seeing ourselves in the [[mirror|<em>mirror</em>]], we see that the self-image of objectivity (where our task is to give to the world only that which is undeniably and unshakably solid and true; and where our inherited, disciplinary procedures give us that ability, and prerogative) can no longer be rationally maintained.</p>
 
<p>By seeing ourselves in the world, we see a world in dire need. We see ourselves as <em>obliged</em> to answer to our society's needs. We consider ourselves liable.</p>
 
<p>But self-reflection – however necessary it might be – is not an end in itself. It is only a beginning.</p>
 
</div></div>
 
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<div class="col-md-3"><h2 style="color:red">Reflection</h2></div>
 
<div class="col-md-6"><h3>Academia quo vadis</h3>
 
<p>So here we are! This space, in front of the [[mirror|<em>mirror</em>]], is exactly where we need to be. </p>
 
<p>It took us 25 centuries to come here. And so much will depend on how we'll continue!</p>
 
<p>Let's not rush ahead. Before we continue, let us make sure we understand where we are and what exactly is going on.</p>
 
<p>You may consider this whole website as an invitation to self-reflect in front of the [[mirror|<em>mirror</em>]]. And to develop the academic reality on the other side.</p>
 
<p>In Federation through Stories we'll share the stories of four ignored [[giants|<em>giants</em>]], who each in his own way pointed to the [[mirror|<em>mirror</em>]] and the reality beyond. </p>
 
<p>And in Federation through Applications you'll find a down-to-earth description of most <em>wonderful</em> opportunities that await in that creative realm. </p>
 
<p>In Federation through Conversations we'll see how our civilization's evolution, and our <em>understanding</em> of that evolution (still, of course, only in the writings of [[giants|<em>giants</em>]]) brought us to this turning point.</p>
 
<p>But <em>here</em>, our theme is <em>academic</em> evolution. </p>
 
<p>This evolution has its own logic, and its own <em>intrinsic</em> course! The academia has its own standards of excellence. Those standards have been evolving for at least 25 centuries. We cannot just turn around, we cannot just abandon them!</p>
 
<p>Our point here is that <em>both</em> the <em>intrinsic</em> and the <em>extrinsic</em> or pragmatic concerns are now urging us to take the single next step in the evolution of knowledge. </p>
 
<p>What <em>is</em> that step?</p></div>
 
 
</div>  
 
</div>  
----
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<div class="col-md-6"><p>"[...] of people not having any basis for knowing what is relevant, what is irrelevant, what is useful, what is not useful, where they live in a culture that is simply committed, through all of its media, to generate tons of information every hour, without categorizing it in any way for you", Postman continued.</p>
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<h3><em>Knowledge federation</em> is a social process whose function is to <em>connect the dots</em>.</h3>
  <div class="col-md-3"><h2>We can go through!</h2></div>
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<p>And <em>complement</em> publishing and broadcasting by adding meaning or <em><b>insights</b></em> to overloads of data; and by ensuring that <em><b>insights</b></em> are <em>acted</em> on.</p>  
 
+
<p>Among various sorts of <em><b>insights</b></em>, of especial importance are <em><b>gestalts</b></em>; of which "Our house is on fire" is the canonical example: You may know all the room temperatures and other data; but it is only when you <em><b>know</b></em> that your house is on fire that you are empowered to <em>act</em> as your situation demands. A <em><b>gestalt</b></em> can ignite an <em>emotional</em> response; it can inject <em>adrenaline</em> into your bloodstream.</p>
  <div class="col-md-7"><h3>The next step</h3>  
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<h3>I use the word <em>gestalt</em> to pinpoint what the word <em>informed</em> means.</h3>
<p>This metaphorical act, of stepping through the [[mirror|<em>mirror</em>]], points to a surprising, nearly magical resolution to our quest for self-identity and purpose.</p>  
+
<p>Our traditions have instructed us how to handle situations and contingencies by providing us a repertoire of <em><b>gestalt</b></em>–action pairs. But what about those situations that have <em>not</em> happened before?</p>
</div></div>
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<p><em><b>Knowledge federation</b></em> uses <em><b>ideograms</b></em> to create and communicate <em><b>gestalts</b></em> and other <em><b>insights</b></em>.  An <em><b>ideogram</b></em> can condense one thousand words into an image; and make the point of it all recognizable at a glance; and communicate <em><b>know-what</b></em> in ways that incite action.</p>
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<p>The existing <em><b>knowledge federation ideograms</b></em> are only a placeholder—for a variety of techniques that will be developed through artful and judicious use of media technology.</p> </div>
  <div class="col-md-3"></div>
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<div class="col-md-3 round-images"> [[File:Postman.jpg]] <br><small><center>[[Neil Postman]]</center></small></div>
  <div class="col-md-6">
 
<p>What makes this apparent violation of basic laws of nature academically possible is what Villard Van Orman Quine called  [[truth by convention|<em>truth by convention</em>]].
 
<blockquote>
 
The less a science has advanced, the more its terminology tends to rest on an uncritical assumption of mutual understanding. With increase of rigor this basis is replaced piecemeal by the introduction of definitions. The interrelationships recruited for these definitions gain the status of analytic principles; what was once regarded as a theory about the world becomes reconstrued as a convention of language. Thus it is that some flow from the theoretical to the conventional is an adjunct of progress in the logical foundations of any science.
 
</blockquote>
 
If this is how the sciences progress – why not allow our knowledge work at large to progress similarly?</p></div>
 
  <div class="col-md-3"> [[File:Quine.jpg]] <br><small><center>[[Willard V.O. Quine]]</center></small></div>
 
 
</div>
 
</div>
 
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  <div class="col-md-3"></div>
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<div class="col-md-3"><h2>    </h2>
  <div class="col-md-7"><h3>Truth becomes a convention</h3>  
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<font size="+1">Modernity ideogram explains the error that is the theme of this proposal.</font></div>
<p>Truth by convention is the kind of truth that is common in mathematics: "Let <em>x</em> be... Then..." It is meaningless to question whether <em>x</em> "really is" as stated.</p>  
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<div class="col-md-7"><h2>Modernity ideogram</h2>
<p>It is the truth by convention that makes the [[mirror|<em>mirror</em>]] academically penetrable.</p>  
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<p>By depicting our society as a bus and our [[information|<em><b>information</b></em>]]  as its candle headlights, Modernity ideogram renders the <em><b>gestalt</b></em> of our contemporary condition in a nutshell.</p>  
<p>All manner of departures from the tradition – not only the departure from the <em>scientific</em> traditional interests and methods but also all others, including the departure from the traditional use of language (where we are obliged to inherit the meaning of words) – are made possible by truth by convention. </p>
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<p> [[File:Modernity.jpg]] <br><small><center>Modernity ideogram</center></small></p>
<p>There is a basic convention that states this; the convention that makes all other conventions possible. We call it [[methodology|<em>methodology</em>]]. </p>
+
<p>Imagine us as passengers in this bus—as it rushes at accelerating speed toward certain disaster; I imagine it <em>already</em> off track, struggling to dodge trees; and that dodging trees is its <em>only</em> way to choose directions.</p>
 
+
<h3>Modernity ideogram points to the <em>fundamental</em> root of this error.</h3>  
<h3>Truth becomes rigorous</h3>  
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<p>Nobody in his right mind would <em><b>design</b></em> this vehicle; surely the people who created it must have simply <em><b>reified</b></em> the source of illumination they had as headlights, without giving it a thought.</p>  
<p>It stands to reason that the foundation on which we create truth and meaning must itself be as solid as possible.</p>  
+
<p>In <em>One Hundred Pages for the Future</em>, in 1981, based on a decade of The Club of Rome's research into the future prospects of mankind, Aurelio Peccei—this global think tank's leader and co-founder—concluded: “It is absolutely necessary to find a way to change course.” How can we <em>possibly</em> <em><b>change course</b></em> while our 'headlights' are as they are?</p>  
<p>The foundation we've just outlined is that for three reasons:
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<h3><em>Information</em> must intervene between us and the world.</h3>  
<ul>
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<p>And between us and our choices; and not just <em>any</em> information—but <em><b>information</b></em> that has been conscientiously <em>designed</em> for its <em><b>pivotal</b></em> function (I qualify something as <em><b>pivotal</b></em> if it decisively influences our society's evolutionary <em><b>course</b></em>; and as <em><b>correct</b></em> if it corrects it).</p>
<li>It is a convention – and what's stated in that way is true by definition</li>
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<p>In <em>Guided Evolution of Society</em>, in 2001, systems scientist Béla H. Bánáthy <em><b>federated</b></em> relevant academic sources, and concluded in a genuinely <em><b>holotopian</b></em> tone:</p>  
<li>It is an expression of the epistemological state-of-the-art, as represented by the writings of [[giants|<em>giants</em>]] – their insights are simply turned into conventions</li>
+
<p>“We are the first generation of our species that has the privilege, the opportunity, and the burden of responsibility to engage in the process of our own evolution. We are indeed chosen people. We now have the knowledge available to us and we have the power of human and social potential that is required to initiate a new and historical social function: conscious evolution. But we can fulfill this function only if we develop evolutionary competence by evolutionary learning and acquire the will and determination to engage in conscious evolution. These are core requirements, because what evolution did for us up to now we have to learn to do for ourselves by guiding our own evolution.</p>
<li>It (or more precisely the convention or [[methodology|<em>methodology</em>]] that defines it) is conceived as a [[prototypes|<em>prototype</em>]]; and as all [[prototypes|<em>prototypes</em>]], it has provisions for updating itself when new insights are reached</li>
+
<p>Modernity ideogram points to this new <em>communication</em> challenge we are facing—to foster "evolutionary competence"; and the "will and determination to engage in conscious evolution" to begin with.</p>  
</ul></p>
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<h3><em>Knowledge federation prototypes</em> "evolutionary guidance".</h3>  
 
+
<p>Or metaphorically—the society's new 'headlights'.</p>
<h3>Knowledge becomes useful</h3>  
+
</div> </div>  
<p>Just as the case is in Lewis Carrol's story, by stepping through the [[mirror|<em>mirror</em>]] we find ourselves in an academic reality that is in many ways a reverse image of the one we've grown accustomed to.</p>  
 
<p>On the other side of the [[mirror|<em>mirror</em>]] we can <em>assign</em> a purpose to knowledge, and to our work, by stating it as a convention!</p>  
 
<p>Notice that this convention is not making any claim to reality, or universality. Someone else can make <em>another</em> convention – and give knowledge a <em>different</em> purpose. </p>
 
<p>We, however, give our work the purpose we've already explained on our front page – the one pointed to by the Modernity [[ideograms|<em>ideogram</em>]], and the [[design epistemology|<em>design epistemology</em>]]. According to this convention, knowledge is conceived of and handled simply as a means to an end – which is a well-informed post-traditional and post-industrial society. Or to be more precise or academic – as a functional element in a larger system, which is our civilization, or society or democracy... Knowledge can then be created, evaluated and used accordingly.</p>  
 
<p>By creating an [[epistemology|<em>epistemology</em>]] by convention, we liberate knowledge and knowledge work from its age-old subservience to "reality" (and therewith also from the age-old traditional procedures and methods which presumably secured that knowledge would correspond with reality).</p>  
 
<p>And by the same sleight of hand, we assign to knowledge <em>another</em> purpose – of helping us, contemporary people, orient ourselves in the reality we've created.</p>
 
 
 
<h3>Knowledge work changes sides</h3>  
 
<p>By combining truth by convention with the creation of a [[methodology|<em>methodology</em>]] (which is an organized system of fundamental conventions), knowledge work becomes solidly established on the academic ground that Herbert Simon called "the sciences of the artificial". Those are mostly new sciences, such as computer science and economics, which do not study what objectively exists in nature but man-made things, with the goal of adapting them to their purpose.</p>
 
<p>Our [[prototypes|<em>prototype</em>]] [[methodology|<em>methodology</em>]] – by which all this is made concrete – is called [[Polyscopic Modeling]]. What we call [[polyscopy|<em>polyscopy</em>]] is the [[praxis|<em>praxis</em>]] this [[methodology|<em>methodology</em>]] fosters. Usually, however, we simply refer to both as [[polyscopy|<em>polyscopy</em>]]. </p>
 
 
 
<h3>Knowledge federation becomes basic research</h3>  
 
<p>Take a moment to savor the depth and breadth of the creative frontier that is opening up. See how thoroughly our present academic order of things is allowed to change!</p>  
 
<p>When our purpose is to <em>inform</em> the people and society, then <em>we choose our questions according to relevance</em> – and <em>we answer them as well as we can</em>, making provisions, of course, for improving those answers further.</p>
 
<p>The development of methods, technical tools and social processes that can give us the knowledge we need becomes a legitimate new notion of "basic research". So do the creative steps toward the improvement of actual knowledge-work systems. </p>  
 
<p>The ignored insights and calls to action of the [[giants|<em>giants</em>]] you'll meet in Federation through Stories  acquire academic status, and the institutional anchoring they need and deserve.</p>
 
</div>
 
</div>
 
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  <div class="col-md-3"><h2>We can liberate knowledge</h2></div>
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<div class="col-md-3"><h2>   </h2>
 
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<font size="+1">Information ideogram depicts the (principle of operation of the socio-technical) lightbulb.</font></div>
  <div class="col-md-7"><h3>Creating the way we look at the world</h3>  
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<div class="col-md-7"><h2>Information ideogram</h2>
<p>Our next image will point to a way to liberate academic knowledge work, or "science", from the terminology, methods and interests of traditional disciplines.</p>  
+
<p><em>What do we need to do</em> to correct this so ugly error?</p>  
<p> </p>
+
<p>Improving the candle won't do; that will <em>never</em> lead us to the lightbulb! So we must first of all design the <em>process</em>; and (you may need to reflect for a moment to see why) this process <em>must</em> include a <em><b>prototype</b></em>.</p>  
[[File:Polyscopy.jpg]] <br><small><center>Polyscopy ideogram</center></small>
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<h3><em>Knowledge federation</em> is both the process and the <em>prototype</em>.</h3>
<p> </p>  
+
<p>[[File:Information.jpg]] <br><small><center>Information ideogram</center></small></p>
<p>The Polyscopy [[ideograms|<em>ideogram</em>]] stands for the fact that once we've understood that our traditional concepts and methods are <em>human</em> creations, which both enable us to see certain things <em>and</em> hinder us from seeing others –  it becomes mandatory to <em>adapt</em> them so that we may see whatever <em>needs</em> to be seen. </p> </div>
+
<p>The Information ideogram depicts (the 'lightbulb' or) <em><b>information</b></em> (what it needs to be like to provide us evolutionary guidance) as an “i”  (for "information"), composed as a circle or dot or <em><b>point</b></em> on top of a <em><b>rectangle</b></em>. Think of the <em><b>rectangle</b></em> as (representing) a multitude of documents; and the <em><b>point</b></em> as the point of it all; then you may interpret this <em><b>ideogram</b></em> as a way to say the obvious—that without a <em><b>point</b></em>, a myriad of printed pages are <em><b>point</b></em>-less!</p>
 +
<p>The <em><b>information</b></em> "i" is inscribed in a triangle representing the metaphorical <em><b>mountain</b></em>; which you'll easily comprehend if you think about rising <em>above</em> those 'trees' and the proverbial "information jungle"—in order to see where the roads lead and which one we need to follow.</p>
 +
<h3>The (socio-technical) 'lightbulb' is created by <em>federating knowledge</em>.</h3>
 +
<p>As one would do to create the lightbulb, or any other technical object—we first identified the function or functions this new object will need to serve; and then <em><b>federated</b></em> the relevant sources—to find out what the thing that suits the function needs to <em>be</em> like. I'll illustrate a broad variety of sources we've consulted by a single one—the Object Oriented Methodology. And here too (as I always do in the <em>Liberation</em> book) I'll highlight the main <em><b>points</b></em> by sharing a <em><b>vignette</b></em>.</p>
 +
<p>When the first computers appeared on the market, and people saw the potential of this new machine, ambitious software projects were undertaken—which often resulted in chaos: Thousands of tangled up lines of "spaghetti code", which were impossible to comprehend and correct. The solution was found in the creation of "software design methodologies"; among which the Object Oriented Methodology constituted the solution of choice and a landmark. Ole-Johan Dahl (who co-created the Object Oriented Methodology with Kristen  Nygaard, and later received the Turing Award—the equivalent of the Nobel Prize in computing—for this work) wrote (with C.A.R. Hoare) in <em>Structured Programming</em> in 1972, in a chapter called “Hierarchical Program Structures”:</p>
 +
<p>“As the result of the large capacity of computing instruments, we have to deal with computing processes of such complexity that they can hardly be understood in terms of basic general purpose concepts. The limit is set by the nature of our intellect: precise thinking is possible only in terms of a small number of elements at a time. The only efficient way to deal with complicated systems is in a hierarchical fashion. The dynamic system is constructed and understood in terms of high level concepts, which are in turn constructed and understood in terms of lower level concepts, and so forth.”</p>
 +
<p>Think again of "information jungle"; and imagine it as an enormous mess of documents—all mixed up together; imagine the <em><b>mountain</b></em> rising from it and above it as a structure of viewpoints; each of which offers a <em><b>coherent</b></em> view (you can bend down and inspect a flower; or climb up the mountain and see the valley below; but the nature of our vision is such that we <em>cannot</em> see both at once).</p>
 +
<h3>Only <em>coherent</em> views can be comprehended.</h3> 
 +
<p>If computer programs are to be comprehensible, reusable and modifiable—they need to be <em>structured</em> in a way that conforms to the limits of our intellect, Dahl and his colleagues found out; and created the Object Oriented Methodology as a way to enable the programmers—or to even <em>compel</em> the programmers to achieve that; by programming in terms of "objects". </p>
 +
<p>The creators of Object Oriented Methodology considered themselves <em>accountable</em> for the tools they gave to programmers; at universities, <em>we too</em> must become accountable—for the <em><b>information</b></em> tools we gave to researchers! <em>And</em> to the people at large!</p>
 +
<h3>It is those tools that determine whether the result of humanity's (information-related) efforts will be chaos—or a new order!</h3>
 +
<p>I adapted the idea of the "object" and drafted the <em><b>information holon</b></em>; which is what the Information ideogram depicts. Arthur Koestler coined the keyword "holon" to denote something that is <em>both</em> a whole <em>and</em> a piece in a larger whole; and I applied it to information.</p>
 +
<p>The <em><b>information holon</b></em> is a structuring template and principle; it is composed of a manageable collection of <em><b>coherent</b></em> 'side views', which compose the <em><b>rectangle</b></em> (and allow us to see a subject matter 'from all sides'); which together allow us to see and <em><b>justify</b></em> (or 'prove') a <em><b>point</b></em>—on a still higher level of generality.</p>
 +
<p>The <em><b>mountain</b></em> is technically the <em><b>information holarchy</b></em>; it is composed of <em><b>information holons</b></em>—so that the <em><b>points</b></em> of a more detailed <em><b>holons</b></em> serve as <em><b>dots</b></em> to be connected to compose those more general or <em><b>high-level</b></em> ones.</p>
 +
<p>You may now comprehend <em><b>knowledge fedration</b></em> as the process of distilling <em><b>insights</b></em> or <em><b>points</b></em> from the 'information jungle'; and rendering them as <em><b>information holons</b></em>—to be readily comprehended and verified; and combining them into <em><b>information holarchy</b></em>—to enable us to collectively rise above 'the information jungle' and comprehend things clearly.</p>  
 
</div>
 
</div>
<div class="row">
 
  <div class="col-md-3"></div>
 
  <div class="col-md-6"><h3>From the pen of our giant</h3>
 
<p><blockquote>
 
Science is the attempt to make the chaotic diversity of our sense-experience correspond to a logically uniform system of thought.
 
</blockquote>
 
This, and the next quotation of our chosen [[giants|<em>giant</em>]], will give us a clue how exactly we may use the approach to knowledge we've just outlined to liberate our view of the world from disciplinary and terminological constraints.
 
<blockquote>
 
I shall not hesitate to state here in a few sentences my epistemological credo. 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 this inquiry in the first place.
 
</blockquote></p></div>
 
<div class="col-md-3"> [[File:Einstein.jpg]] <br><small><center>[[Albert Einstein]]</center></small></div>
 
 
</div>
 
</div>
 
<div class="row">
 
<div class="row">
  <div class="col-md-3"></div>
+
<div class="col-md-3"><h2>  </h2>
 
+
<font size="+1">Holotopia ideogram shows what we'll see when <em>proper</em> light's been turned on.</font></div>
  <div class="col-md-7"><h3>Generalizing science</h3>  
+
<div class="col-md-7"><h2>Holotopia ideogram</h2>
<p>Central in [[polyscopy|<em>polyscopy</em>]] is the notion of [[scope|<em>scope</em>]] – which is, by definition, whatever determines what we look at and how we see it. </p>  
+
<p><em><b>Holotopia</b></em> is the vision that resulted when we used 'the lightbulb' to 'illuminate the way': We chose five <em><b>pivotal categories</b></em> (five factors that decisively influence our society's evolutionary <em><b>course</b></em>); and for each of them collected and organized what's been academically published or otherwise reported; and condensed it all to a general <em><b>point</b></em> or <em><b>insight</b></em>. Those <em><b>five categories</b></em> are:</p>  
<p>Building on what we've just seen, [[polyscopy|<em>polyscopy</em>]] generalizes the traditional-scientific approach to knowledge in two steps.</p>  
+
<p><ul>
<p>The first step is to allow for free definition of concepts and methods. This is, of course, made possible by defining them <em>by convention</em>. </p>  
+
<li><em><b>innovation</b></em>—our technology-augmented capability to create and induce change</li>  
<p>As you might be guessing, that's what our [[keywords|<em>keywords</em>]] are – we have given them a specific meaning, by defining them in that way.</p>  
+
<li><em><b>information</b></em>—which by definition includes not only written documents, but <em>all other</em> forms of heritage or recorded human experience; and also <em>the social processes</em> by which information is created and put to use</li>
<p>The second step is to consider also our statements or models or pieces of information as no more than – ways of looking or [[scope|<em>scopes</em>]].</p>
+
<li><em><b>foundation</b></em>—on which we develop <em><b>knowledge</b></em> and <em><b>culture</b></em> at large; which by definition includes the principles and the criteria we use to decide what we'll collectively rely on and live by; and what in our heritage is worth preserving and developing further</li>  
<p>Just as in Einstein's "epistemological credo", in [[polyscopy|<em>polyscopy</em>]] too there is on the one side the human experience, which is not assumed to have any a priori form. And on the other side there are our own concepts and ideas and models. Our purpose becomes to organize experience so that it <em>sufficiently</em> fits the scope. </p>  
+
<li><em><b>method</b></em>—by which we create <em><b>knowledge</b></em>, and distinguish <em><b>knowledge</b></em> from <em><b>belief</b></em></li>
<p>We refer you to the Polyscopy [[prototypes|<em>prototype</em>]] in Federation through Applications, and the links provided therein, to see how exactly this may work in practice.</p>  
+
<li><em><b>values</b></em>—which direct "the pursuit of happiness" and our other pursuits.</li>  
 
+
</ul> </p>  
<h3>Models are scopes</h3>  
+
<p> [[File:Holotopia-id.jpg]] <br><small><center>Holotopia ideogram</center></small></p>
<p>In this way [[polyscopy|<em>polyscopy</em>]] offers an answer to an interesting "philosophical" question – What do we really mean when we make a claim or state a result? (This question becomes interesting when we no longer presume that we are telling how the things "really are".)</p>
+
<p>The Holotopia ideogram comprises five pillars, each of which has a <em><b>pivotal category</b></em> as base and a <em><b>point</b></em> or <em><b>insight</b></em> as capital; think of a pillar as elevating us above "information jungle", so that we may comprehend a factor that determines our society's evolutionary <em><b>course</b></em> clearly and <em><b>correctly</b></em>.</p>  
<p>The answer provided by [[polyscopy|<em>polyscopy</em>]] is that our statements, and models, are (by convention) just [[scope|<em>scopes</em>]], just our own created ways of looking at experience and of organizing experience. They are a way of saying "See if you can see things (also) in this way;  if this may reveal to you something that you may have overlooked."</p>  
+
<h3>A <em>general</em> insight resulted from the <em>holotopia</em> experiment.</h3>  
<p>As Piaget pointed out, "Intelligence organizes the world by organizing itself"</p>
+
<p>Whenever we applied <em><b>knowledge federation</b></em> to a <em><b>pivotal category</b></em>, <em>in each case</em> the resulting <em><b>insight</b></em> toppled the "conventional wisdom"—by showing that the way the <em><b>category</b></em> is ordinarily comprehended and handled needs to be <em>thoroughly</em> revised and reversed; and that the effect of <em>each</em> of those reversals will be a <em>dramatic</em> improvement of our overall condition, personal <em>and</em> social.</p>
 
+
<p>The resulting <em><b>five points</b></em> or <em><b>five insights</b></em> elevate our comprehension of the world and our situation as a whole; so that when <em>other</em> similarly important themes such as creativity, religion and education are considered <em> in the context of</em> those <em><b>five points</b></em><em>their</em> comprehension and handling too ends up being revised and reversed; and we added <em><b>ten themes</b></em> to this <em><b>ideogram</b></em>—represented by the edges joining the <em><b>five insights</b></em>—to illustrate that.</p>  
<h3>Multiple scopes are needed</h3>  
+
<p>Furthermore, the courses of action or reversals those <em><b>five insights</b></em> point to turned out to be so inextricably co-dependent, that making one of them necessitates that we make them all; or in other words—that making <em>any</em> of the obviously necessary improvements of our condition necessitates changing this condition, or technically the <em><b>paradigm</b></em> as a whole.</p>
<p>Think about inspecting a cup you are holding in your hand, to see if it's whole or cracked. You must look at it from all sides, before you can give a conclusive answer. And if any of those points of view reveals a crack – then the cup <em>is</em> cracked!</p>  
+
<p>Each of those five reversals turned out to be a special case of this general principle:</p>  
<p>In [[polyscopy|<em>polyscopy's</em>]] technical language we say that to acquire a correct [[gestalt|<em>gestalt</em>]], all relevant [[aspects|<em>aspects</em>]] need to be considered.</p>  
+
<h3><em>Make things whole.</em></h3>  
 
+
<p>Which I can now offer you as <em><b>holotopia principle</b></em>—the simple rule of thumb pointing to a requisite new way in which we need to direct our creative efforts; and the resulting new evolutionary <em><b>course</b></em> and its corresponding 'destination' or order of things or <em><b>paradigm</b></em>.</p>  
<h3>No experiences are excluded</h3>  
+
<h3>To be able to <em>make things whole</em> we need to <em>see things whole</em>.</h3>
<p>Another consequence of this approach to knowledge is that no experience is excluded because it fails to fit into our "reality picture".</p>  
+
<p>So I now offer you <em><b>see things whole</b></em> as the <em><b>holoscope principle</b></em>—the rule of thumb pointing to a new and <em><b>informed</b></em> (creation and use of) <em><b>information</b></em>.</p>  
<p>On the contrary – since the substance of information, and of knowledge, is (by convention) human experience, then <em>all forms of experience are considered to be potentially valuable</em>. The method sketched here allows for combining a variety of heterogeneous insights and forms of experience to create a  [[high-level|<em>high-level</em>]] view. Examples of this are shared below.</p>  
+
<p>I can now invite you to take one more step up the metaphorical <em><b>mountain</b></em>—and consider this general conclusion:</p>  
 
+
<h3>We are not <em>informed</em>.</h3>  
<h3>Simplicity and clarity are in the eyes of the beholder</h3>  
+
<p>What we have—regarding <em>any</em> of the core themes of our lives and times—is not <em><b>knowledge</b></em> but <em><b>belief</b></em>.</p>  
<p>Since [[scope|<em>scopes</em>]] are human-made by convention, they can be as precise and rigorous as we desire – <em>on any level of generality</em>.</p>
+
<p>As soon as we substitute the 'lightbulb' for the 'candle', and <em><b>knowledge</b></em> for <em><b>belief</b></em>—our comprehension and handling of life's core issues will be <em>radically</em> transformed.</p>
<p>Simplicity and clarity, by convention, are "in the eyes of the beholder"; they are a consequence of our [[scope|<em>scope</em>]]! It is legitimate to make them clear and simple – even in a complex world. </p>  
+
<h3>And result in radical <em>improvement</em> of our condition.</h3>  
<p>This is legitimate because our models are never complete; they are never <em>the</em> reality. Anything we say is (by convention) a simplification, an angle of looking, and what that angle of looking reveals.</p>  
+
<p>The <em><b>holotopia</b></em> experiment showed that (not "success", nor "profit",  but) <em><b>making things whole</b></em> is the direction we need to follow; that (not self-centeredness and competition, but) collaborative self-organization is our—and <em>everyone</em>'s—enlightened interest.</p>  
</div></div>
+
<p>The stars in the Holotopia ideogram represent <em><b>prototypes</b></em>—which are the <em>results</em> of this enlightened course of action. <em><b>Prototype</b></em> are the <em><b>knowledge federation</b></em> technical tool that enables us to put the <em><b>make things whole</b></em> principle into practice; to turn <em><b>insights</b></em> into action and action into <em>real-life</em> effects, and concerted change.</p>  
<div class="row">
+
</div> </div>  
  <div class="col-md-3"></div>
 
 
 
  <div class="col-md-6"><h3>Descartes would agree</h3>
 
<p>The overall result is a general-purpose method which – like a portable flashlight – can be pointed at any phenomenon or issue.</p>  
 
<blockquote>
 
The objective of studies needs to be to direct the mind so that it brings solid and true judgments about everything that presents itself to it.
 
</blockquote>
 
<p>René Descartes is often "credited" as the philosophical father of the limiting (reductionistic) aspects of science. This Rule 1 from his manuscript "Rules for the Direction of the Mind" (unfinished during his lifetime and published posthumously) shows that also Descartes might have preferred to be remembered as a supporter of [[polyscopy|<em>polyscopy</em>]].</p>
 
</div>
 
  <div class="col-md-3"> [[File:Descartes.jpg]] <br><small><center>[[René Descartes]]</center></small></div>
 
</div>
 
----
 
<div class="row">
 
  <div class="col-md-3"><h2>Growing knowledge upward</h2></div>
 
<div class="col-md-7"><h3>Science on a crossroads</h3>
 
<p>The [[Science on a Crossroads ideogram]] points to the possibility to reverse the narrow and technical focus in the sciences – and create general insights and principles about any theme that matters.</p>
 
<p> </p>  
 
[[File:Crossroads.jpg]]<br><small><center>Science on a Crossroads ideogram</center></small>
 
<p> </p>  
 
<p>The [[Science on a Crossroads ideogram]] depicts the point in the evolution of science when it was understood that the Newton's concepts and "laws" were not parts of the nature's inner machinery, which Newton <em>discovered</em> – but his own creation, and an approximation. Two directions of growth opened up to science – downward, and upward.  The sequence of scientists "converging to zero" in the ideogram suggests that only the "downward" option was followed.</p></div>
 
</div>
 
 
<div class="row">
 
<div class="row">
  <div class="col-md-3"></div>
+
<div class="col-md-3"><h2>  </h2>
   <div class="col-md-6"><h3>The moment when this happened</h3>
+
<font size="+1">– A new type of thinking is essential if mankind is to survive and move toward higher levels.</font>
<p>It has turned out that the very moment when science reached those crossroads has been recorded!</p>
+
<br>
<p>In his "Autobiographical Notes", after describing how the successes of science that resulted from Newton's classical results led to a wide-spread belief that there wasn't really much more than that, as we saw above, Einstein discusses on a couple of pages the anomalies, results of experiments and observed phenomena that were not amenable to such explanation. He then concludes:
+
(Albert Einstein in an interview to <em>The New York Times</em>, 1946)
<blockquote>Enough of this. Newton, forgive me; you found just about the only way possible in your age for a man of highest reasoning and creative power. The concepts that you created are even today still guiding our thinking in physics, although we now know that they will have to be replaced by others further removed from the sphere of immediate experience, if we aim at a profounder
 
understanding of relationships.</blockquote></p></div>
 
  <div class="col-md-3"> [[File:Einstein.jpg]] <br><small><center>[[Albert Einstein]]</center></small></div>
 
</div>
 
<div class="row">
 
  <div class="col-md-3"></div>
 
  <div class="col-md-7"><h3>Why the direction "up" was ignored</h3>  
 
<p>The direction "up" is a natural direction for the growth of anything and of knowledge in particular. Hasn't the insight, the wisdom, the general principle, always been the very hallmark of knowledge? So why did science continue its growth only downward – toward more technical, more precise – and more obscure results?</p>
 
<p>The reason is obvious, and it is also suggested by Einstein: It had to be done, "if we aim at a profounder understanding of relationships" – that is, of natural phenomena. They turned out to be far more complex than it was originally believed.</p>  
 
<p>The bottom-level reality picture turned out to be retreating ever deeper – as the scientists aimed "at a profounder understanding of relationships".</p>  
 
<p>So why not do as Newton did <em>in all walks of life</em> i.e. wherever solid knowledge is needed – create <em>approximate</em> models that serve us <em>well enough</em>? </p>
 
<p>The answer is obvious. The disciplinary organization of knowledge had already taken shape. Einstein being "a physicist", his job was to study the physical phenomena, in terms of the masses and velocities and mathematical formulas. </p>
 
<p>The job of updating the whole production of knowledge – <em>and</em> the job of creating high-level insights  –  happened to be in nobody's job description. And hence they remained undone.</p>
 
<p>Think of [[knowledge federation|<em>Knowledge federation</em>]] as a road sign or banner, demarcating the creative frontier on which this oversight can be corrected.</p>
 
</div></div>
 
----
 
<div class="row">
 
  <div class="col-md-3"><h2>Redirecting knowledge work</h2></div>
 
<div class="col-md-7"><h3>Illuminating what's hidden</h3>
 
<p>[[polyscopy|<em>Polyscopy</em>]], as we've just outlined it, is like a flexible searchlight, which can be pointed in whatever direction we choose.</p>
 
<p>The [[methodology|<em>methodology</em>]] provides specific criteria (in place of the traditional "correspondence with reality")  to orient the all-important choice of [[scope|<em>scope</em>]] (what we'll be looking at, and in what way). One of them is the [[perspective|<em>perspective</em>]]. </p> 
 
<p> </p>
 
[[File:Perspective.jpeg]]<br><small><center>Perspective ideogram</center></small>
 
<p></p>
 
<p>The [[perspective|<em>perspective</em>]] criterion postulates that every thing or issue has a visible and a hidden side. And that the purpose of knowledge work is to illuminate what is hidden, and make the whole visible in correct shape and proportions.</p>
 
<h3>Gestalt criterion</h3>
 
<p>The criterion by which [[polyscopy|<em>polyscopy</em>]] reorients knowledge to grow upward is [[gestalt|<em>gestalt</em>]], as we have seen on the front page.</p>
 
<p>By convention, having a correct [[gestalt|<em>gestalt</em>]] is what "being informed" is all about. You may know the exact temperature i every room, and even the CO2 percentages in the air. But it is only when you know that your house is on fire that you know that you need to evacuate the house and call the fire brigade.</p>
 
 
</div>  
 
</div>  
 +
<div class="col-md-6"><h2>My point</h2>
 +
<p>It stands to reason that thinking "inside the box"—within the confines of our habitual and institutionalized patterns of thought and action, which (as Max Weber diagnosed at the point of inception of scientific study of society) keeps us confined to "the iron cage" of dysfunctional and obsolete institutions or <em><b>systems</b></em> (of which the <em><b>system</b></em> of <em><b>information</b></em>, our society's 'candle headlights', is the example at hand), which I'll designate as <em><b>conditioned</b></em>—won't do the job. The "liberation" in <em>Liberation</em> book's title is, of course all-inclusive or comprehensive—just as <em><b>wholeness</b></em> and <em><b>holotopia</b></em>, its results, are; but to make things simple you may just as well see it as the liberation of the <em><b>mind</b></em> from <em><b>conditioning</b></em>—which  is <em>the</em> key to comprehensive liberation.</p>
 +
<p>"The tie between information and action has been severed", Neil Postman warned in his keynote to German Informatics Society titled "Informing ourselves to Death", in 1990; the liberated <em><b>mind</b></em> <em>is</em> that tie. But the information we have today <em>cannot</em> liberate the <em><b>mind</b></em>; because it cannot be turned into action. The <em><b>information</b></em> that will liberate us and empower us must be different in outlook and structure; it must be created by a social process that is different from all institutionalized processes we have—as the <em><b>holotopia</b></em> experiment so convincingly confirmed.</p>
 +
<p>It is "widely known" that this <em>liberating</em> sort of <em><b>information</b></em> was what Plato undertook to foster when he created Academia; so I turned <em><b>academia</b></em> into a <em><b>keyword</b></em>, and use it to designate "the institutionalized academic tradition"; in order to point out that what we've institutionalized is <em>not</em> what this tradition's founding fathers had in mind.</p>
 +
<h3>But this is not my <em>point</em>.</h3>
 +
<p>I am not <em>telling</em> you how the world is—but <em>acting</em> in a new way; and inviting <em>you</em> to act. Because ironically—as long as we use our old and dysfunctional processes and <em><b>systems</b></em> to communicate and act—we remain part of those <em><b>systems</b></em>; and hence also <em>part of the problem</em>!</p>
 +
<h3>The error I am proposing to correct is an error of self-perception.</h3>
 +
<p>We've been taught to see ourselves as "objective observers"; and that "our job" is to report what we see in conventional publications; we need to see ourselves as <em>actors</em> caught up in a dysfunctional <em><b>system</b></em>—and liberate ourselves and update our <em><b>system</b></em> by <em>self-organizing</em> differently; so that <em><b>academia</b></em> can give its key contribution to continuing our culture's evolution; as it did in Galilei's time.</p>
 +
<h3>I invite you to partake in restoring the severed tie between information and action.</h3>
 +
<p>In this precarious moment of transition from one stable order of things to another, which has been called the Information Age, <em><b>information</b></em> is <em>the</em> transformative power and critical resource that we scientists, we academic researchers, can and <em>must</em> be accountable for; which we must use to empower <em>all of us</em> to be accountable for the viability of our species; and to continue our culture's evolution.</p>
 +
<p>You and I will truly begin to communicate when you'll no longer see me as trying to convince you of something—but as handing out a missing pieces of the puzzle that is <em>yours</em> to solve.</p>
 +
<p>My point is not <em>to tell you</em> how the world is or how to correct it. I am not here to <em>describe</em> anything but to act, and I'm inviting <em>you</em> to act; so that <em>together</em> we may foster the social process and <em>be</em> the social process that will supply the <em><b>information</b></em> we the people <em>vitally</em> need; the <em><b>information</b></em> that will restore <em>vision</em> to post-industrial democracy; and allow <em><b>culture</b></em> to continue evolving.</p>
 +
<h3>The <em>substance</em> of this proposal is a practical way to achieve that.</h3>
 
</div>  
 
</div>  
<!-- XXXXXXX -->
+
<div class="col-md-3 round-images"><h2>  </h2>
----
+
  [[File:Einstein.jpg]] <br><small><center>[[Albert Einstein]]</center></small></div>
<div class="row">
 
  <div class="col-md-3"><h2>Knowledge federation in two pictures</h2></div>
 
  <div class="col-md-7"><h3>Information</h3>
 
<p> </p>
 
[[File:Information.jpg]] <br><small><center>Information ideogram</center></small>
 
<p> </p>
 
<p>At the risk of oversimplifying, we may now re-introduce to you the work of [[knowledge federation|<em>knowledge federation</em>]] as correcting the [[perspective|<em>perspective</em>]] to acquire a correct [[gestalt|<em>gestalt</em>]]. </p>
 
<p>The [[Information ideogram]] points to the structure of the information that [[knowledge federation|<em>knowledge federation</em>]] aims to produce. Or metaphorically, to the principle of operation of the 'light bulb'.</p>
 
<p>The “i” in this image (which stands for "information") is composed of a circle on top of a square. Think of the square as providing the [[perspective|<em>perspective</em>]]; and of the circle as depicting the [[gestalt|<em>gestalt</em>]]. </p>
 
<p>The square stands for the technical and detailed [[low-level|<em>low-level</em>]] information. The square also stands for examining a theme or an issue from all sides. The circle stands for the general and immediately accessible [[high-level|<em>high-level</em>]] information. This ideogram posits that  information must have both. </p>
 
<p>And that without the former, without the 'dot on the i', the information is incomplete and ultimately pointless.</p>
 
<p>This [[ideograms|<em>ideogram</em>]] also suggests how to establish or [[justification|<em>justify</em>]] the high-level views – by founding them on low-level ones. And by 'rounding off', by 'cutting corners'. </p></div></div>
 
 
 
<div class="row">
 
  <div class="col-md-3"></div>
 
  <div class="col-md-7"><h3>Knowledge</h3>
 
<p> </p>
 
  [[File:Holarchy.jpg]]<br><small><center>Knowledge ideogram</center></small>
 
<p> </p>
 
<p>The [[Knowledge ideogram]] depicts [[knowledge federation|<em>knowledge federation</em>]] as a process – and also the kind of knowledge that this process aims to produce.</p>
 
<p>It follows from the fundamentals we've just outlined that (when our goal is to inform the people) [[knowledge federation|<em>knowledge federation</em>]] will do its best to federate knowledge according to relevance – and adapt its choice of [[scope|<em>scope</em>]] to that task. The rationale is that "the best available" knowledge will generally be better than no knowledge at all. </p>
 
<p>Knowledge, and information, are envisioned to exist within a <em>holarchy</em> – where the [[low-level|<em>low-level</em>]]  "pieces of information" or <em>holons</em> serve as side views for creating [[high-level|<em>high-level</em>]] insights. Multiple and even contradictory views on any theme are allowed to co-exist. A core function of [[knowledge federation|<em>federation</em>]] as a process is to continuously negotiate and re-evaluate the relevance and the credibility of those views.</p></div>
 
</div>
 
----
 
<div class="row">
 
  <div class="col-md-3"><h2>Two examples</h2></div>
 
  <div class="col-md-7"><h3>Convenience paradox</h3>
 
<p> </p>
 
[[File:Convenience_Paradox.jpg]] <br><small><center>Convenience Paradox ideogram</center></small>
 
<p> </p>
 
<p>Redirecting our "pursuit of happiness" is of course a natural way to give a new direction to our 'bus'. Informing our "pursuit of happiness" is also a natural application where the ideas presented above can be put to test.</p>
 
<p>The [[Convenience Paradox ideogram]] depicts a situation where the pursuit of a more convenient direction (down) leads to an increasingly less convenient condition. The human figure in the ideogram is deciding which way to go. He wants his way (of life) to be more easy and pleasant, or more <em>convenient</em>. If he follows the direction that <em>seems</em> more convenient, he will end up in a less convenient <em>condition</em> – and vice versa. </p>
 
<p>By representing the way to happiness as yin (which stands for dark, or obscure) in the traditional yin-yang ideogram, it is suggested that the way to convenience or happiness must be illuminated by suitable information.</p>
 
<p>This ideogram is of course only the [[high-level|<em>high-level</em>]] part, the circle or the 'dot on the i'. Its [[low-level|<em>low-level</em>]] part or [[justification|<em>justification</em>]] consists of a variety of insights emanating from a broad variety of [[giants|<em>giants</em>]] and traditions. The rationale is to select the ones that resulted from the experience of working with large numbers of people – and which have something important to tell us about our civilized condition; and about ways in which this condition could be radically improved.</p>
 
</div></div>
 
<div class="row">
 
  <div class="col-md-3"></div>
 
  <div class="col-md-6">
 
<p><blockquote>
 
The  process  of  civilization,  according  to  Alexander,  has  contaminated man’s biological and sensory equipment, with  a resultant crippling in the responses of the whole organism.  Tension  and  conflict  are  more  and  more  substituted  for  coordination.
 
</blockquote>
 
An example is the above core insight of F. M. Alexander, the founder of a therapy school called "Alexander Technique", which is now being taught worldwide.</p>
 
</div>
 
  <div class="col-md-3 round-images"> [[File:Alexander.jpg]] <br><small><center>[[F. M. Alexander]]</center></small></div>
 
</div>
 
<div class="row">
 
   <div class="col-md-3"></div>
 
<div class="col-md-7">
 
<p>The world traditions pointed to the nature of "the way" (to happiness or fulfillment, represented by the dark Yin part of the ideogram) by giving it different names such as "Tao", "Do", "Yoga", "Dharma" and "Tariqat". Considered together, they enable us to model the most interesting range of possibilities we are calling "happiness between one and plus infinity" – which is a direction in which our civilization's "progress" may most naturally continue. </p>
 
<p>We'll say more about this theme in Federation through Conversations – where we'll also initiate a conversation to collectively refine it and develop it further.</p>
 
 
 
<h3>Power structure</h3>
 
<p> </p>  
 
  [[File:Power_Structure.jpg]] <br><small><center>Power Structure ideogram</center></small>
 
<p> </p>
 
<p>As a way of looking at the world or [[scope|<em>scope</em>]], the [[power structure|<em>power structure</em>]] empowers us to conceive of the traditional notions of "power holder" and "political enemy" in an entirely new way – and to reorient our ethical sensibilities and our political action accordingly.</p>
 
<p>The [[Power Structure ideogram]] depicts the [[power structures|<em>power structure</em>]] as a structure, where seemingly distinct and independent entities such as monetary or power interests, the ideas we have about the world, and our own condition or health are tied together with subtle links, so that they evolve and function in co-dependence and synchrony. </p> </div></div>
 
<div class="row">
 
  <div class="col-md-3"></div>
 
  <div class="col-md-6"><p>
 
In "A Century of Camps" Zygmunt Bauman explained how even massive and unthinkable cruelty (of which the Holocaust is an example) can happen as a result of no more than (what we are calling) the structure of the system – and people just "doing their jobs".</p>
 
<p>The [[power structures|<em>power structure</em>]] model explains in what way exactly malignant societal structures can evolve by the conventional "survival of the fittest".</p> </div>
 
  <div class="col-md-3"> [[File:Bauman.jpg]] <br><small><center>[[Zygmunt Bauman]]</center></small></div>
 
</div>
 
<div class="row">
 
  <div class="col-md-3"></div>
 
  <div class="col-md-7">
 
<p>To legitimize the view in which <em>a complex structure</em> (and not a person or group endowed with intelligence and identifiable interests) is considered "the enemy", insights from a range of technical fields including combinatorial optimization, artificial intelligence and artificial life are combined with insights from the humanities – including Bauman's just mentioned one.</p>
 
<p>An effect of this model (central to the [[paradigm strategy|<em>paradigm strategy</em>]] we are presenting as our larger motivating vision) is that it entirely changes the nature of the political game, from "us against them" to "all of us against the [[power structures|<em>power structure</em>]]". </p>
 
<p>By revealing the subtle links between our ideas about the world and power interests, the [[power structures|<em>power structure</em>]] helps us understand further why a new phase of evolution of democracy, marked by liberation and conscious creation of the ways in which we look at the world, is a necessary part of our liberation from renegade and misdirected power.</p>
 
</div> </div>
 
-----
 
<div class="row">
 
<div class="col-md-3"><h2 style="color:red">Reflection</h2></div>
 
 
 
<div class="col-md-6"><h3>How to begin the next Renaissance</h3>
 
<p>What new insights may relish the next Renaissance-like change? What might be its battle cries?</p>
 
<p>In what way may the approach to knowledge we've just described help foster such insights?</p>
 
<p>The two examples we have just seen, described thus far rather dryly, betray exemplary answers to such questions.</p>
 
 
 
<h3>Happiness and culture</h3>
 
<p>Our theme is what Peccei called "a great cultural revival" – a radical improvement of "human quality" across the board.</p>
 
<p>Presently, our "pursuit of happiness" is conspicuously steered by what Einstein branded "plebeian illusion of naïve realism" – we <em>experience</em> something as attractive, and continue to consider it as such. Not only is the power of our technology directed toward amassing such "pleasurable" things – also is the power of our information directed toward <em>reinforcing</em> this error of perception!</p>
 
<p>The Convenience Paradox [[ideograms|<em>ideogram</em>]] points to a way to correct that. The [[gestalt|<em>gestalt</em>]] it fosters is that this naïve "pursuit of happiness" is as little sensible as always going downward, because that <em>feels</em> easier.</p>
 
<p>What needs to be illuminated to correct the [[perspective|<em>perspective</em>]] and reach this [[gestalt|<em>gestalt</em>]] is the long-term consequences of what we do. The <em>way</em> to happiness – and the nature of the  condition to which the way we are following is leading us.</p>
 
<p>It might be useful at this point (where we are connecting the dots) to look at the definition of [[culture|<em>culture</em>]] we presented in Federation through Application, which emphasizes <em>cultivation</em>. This definition is built on the metaphor of planting and watering a seed. Notice what this metaphor is saying between the lines: To have a culture, we cannot rely on mechanistic "scientific" explanations and reasoning (a dissection and analysis of a seed will not reveal that the seed should be planted and watered). To have a [[culture|<em>culture</em>]], we must rely on direct human experience (that certain kinds of cultivation lead to a certain effect). </p>
 
<p>In the [[justification|<em>justification</em>]] of the Convenience Paradox result a variety of insights are woven together, to show that <em>spectacularly</em> higher levels of wellbeing or "happiness" are reachable through certain kinds of cultivation.</p>
 
<p>We already own more than enough of such specific insights to reach this larger one.</p>
 
<p> Not being amenable to "scientific" explanation and interests, those insights have remained on a cultural margin called "alternative culture" – and with only a marginal effect on everyday reality.</p>
 
 
 
<h3>Social justice and democracy</h3>
 
<p>The second example points to a way to redirect another powerful drive – for power. And for justice. Can the <em>zoon politikon</em> perceive his interest in a new way – and change course?</p>
 
<p>The question here is (to go straight to the point) – If all the world's power is in the hands of the powerful, in what way can the balance of power change enough for <em>structural</em> change to become possible?</p>
 
<p>The key insight here is that the "the game" (or the [[power structures|<em>power structure</em>]] or system) determines not only who will be the winners and the losers, but also our very idea of what winning and losing is about! The  [[power structures|<em>power structure</em>]] as a way to looking at this issue reveals that when subtle relationships between our ideas, our wellbeing and the interests <em>of the power structure</em> we have internalized as our own – then we can in a real sense <em>choose</em> "what our purposes are to be"!</p>
 
<p>The [[power structures|<em>power structure</em>]] [[gestalt|<em>gestalt</em>]] points to pathological (cancer-like) growth of our systems. Our choice then becomes whether to be part of the disease – or the remedy.</p>
 
<p>A likely effect on our socialized notion of "success" is what the Adbusters called "decooling". Not long ago it was "cool" to smoke a big cigar in an airplane; it's not any more.</p>
 
 
 
<h3>Putting the two together</h3>
 
<p>An especially enlightening effect is reached by combining the above two insights.</p>
 
<p>Their combination is found in a vivid form in the history of the world religions – where a re-discovery of the way to liberation invariably led to a new institution – and a new [[power structures|<em>power structure</em>]]! This is what the Liberation book (the first in Knowledge Federation trilogy) is about. While this book is being written, the Garden of Liberation [[prototypes|<em>prototype</em>]] (in Federation through Applications) will provide the details.</p>
 
 
 
<h3>Discovery of ourselves</h3>
 
<p>We are now standing in front of another [[mirror|<em>mirror</em>]], larger than the previous one.</p>
 
<p>How do we feel? <em>Can we feel</em> deep love, or charity or awe? <em>We</em> are the instruments on which the melody of emotion is played. </p>
 
<p>The [[power structures|<em>power structure</em>]] brings a similarly shocking realization to our quest for justice – that "the enemy is us". And that our own behavior, and the values from which it stems, is the "enemy" we need to face.</p>
 
<p>All these are of course only hints. The details must be seen and digested before the hints can become guiding insights. </p>
 
<p>And yet you may <em>already</em> anticipate why also our <em>societal</em> anomalies may be resolved – unexpectedly, almost magically – by stepping through the [[mirror|<em>mirror</em>]]!</p>
 
</div>
 
 
</div>
 
</div>

Latest revision as of 12:18, 6 January 2024

– We’ve entered an age of information glut. And this is something no culture has really faced before. The typical situation is information scarcity. […] Lack of information can be very dangerous. […] But at the same time too much information can be dangerous, because it can lead to a situation of meaninglessness […].


(Neil Postman in a televised interview to Open Mind, 1990)

"[...] of people not having any basis for knowing what is relevant, what is irrelevant, what is useful, what is not useful, where they live in a culture that is simply committed, through all of its media, to generate tons of information every hour, without categorizing it in any way for you", Postman continued.

Knowledge federation is a social process whose function is to connect the dots.

And complement publishing and broadcasting by adding meaning or insights to overloads of data; and by ensuring that insights are acted on.

Among various sorts of insights, of especial importance are gestalts; of which "Our house is on fire" is the canonical example: You may know all the room temperatures and other data; but it is only when you know that your house is on fire that you are empowered to act as your situation demands. A gestalt can ignite an emotional response; it can inject adrenaline into your bloodstream.

I use the word gestalt to pinpoint what the word informed means.

Our traditions have instructed us how to handle situations and contingencies by providing us a repertoire of gestalt–action pairs. But what about those situations that have not happened before?

Knowledge federation uses ideograms to create and communicate gestalts and other insights. An ideogram can condense one thousand words into an image; and make the point of it all recognizable at a glance; and communicate know-what in ways that incite action.

The existing knowledge federation ideograms are only a placeholder—for a variety of techniques that will be developed through artful and judicious use of media technology.

Modernity ideogram explains the error that is the theme of this proposal.

Modernity ideogram

By depicting our society as a bus and our information as its candle headlights, Modernity ideogram renders the gestalt of our contemporary condition in a nutshell.

Modernity.jpg

Modernity ideogram

Imagine us as passengers in this bus—as it rushes at accelerating speed toward certain disaster; I imagine it already off track, struggling to dodge trees; and that dodging trees is its only way to choose directions.

Modernity ideogram points to the fundamental root of this error.

Nobody in his right mind would design this vehicle; surely the people who created it must have simply reified the source of illumination they had as headlights, without giving it a thought.

In One Hundred Pages for the Future, in 1981, based on a decade of The Club of Rome's research into the future prospects of mankind, Aurelio Peccei—this global think tank's leader and co-founder—concluded: “It is absolutely necessary to find a way to change course.” How can we possibly change course while our 'headlights' are as they are?

Information must intervene between us and the world.

And between us and our choices; and not just any information—but information that has been conscientiously designed for its pivotal function (I qualify something as pivotal if it decisively influences our society's evolutionary course; and as correct if it corrects it).

In Guided Evolution of Society, in 2001, systems scientist Béla H. Bánáthy federated relevant academic sources, and concluded in a genuinely holotopian tone:

“We are the first generation of our species that has the privilege, the opportunity, and the burden of responsibility to engage in the process of our own evolution. We are indeed chosen people. We now have the knowledge available to us and we have the power of human and social potential that is required to initiate a new and historical social function: conscious evolution. But we can fulfill this function only if we develop evolutionary competence by evolutionary learning and acquire the will and determination to engage in conscious evolution. These are core requirements, because what evolution did for us up to now we have to learn to do for ourselves by guiding our own evolution.”

Modernity ideogram points to this new communication challenge we are facing—to foster "evolutionary competence"; and the "will and determination to engage in conscious evolution" to begin with.

Knowledge federation prototypes "evolutionary guidance".

Or metaphorically—the society's new 'headlights'.

Information ideogram depicts the (principle of operation of the socio-technical) lightbulb.

Information ideogram

What do we need to do to correct this so ugly error?

Improving the candle won't do; that will never lead us to the lightbulb! So we must first of all design the process; and (you may need to reflect for a moment to see why) this process must include a prototype.

Knowledge federation is both the process and the prototype.

Information.jpg

Information ideogram

The Information ideogram depicts (the 'lightbulb' or) information (what it needs to be like to provide us evolutionary guidance) as an “i” (for "information"), composed as a circle or dot or point on top of a rectangle. Think of the rectangle as (representing) a multitude of documents; and the point as the point of it all; then you may interpret this ideogram as a way to say the obvious—that without a point, a myriad of printed pages are point-less!

The information "i" is inscribed in a triangle representing the metaphorical mountain; which you'll easily comprehend if you think about rising above those 'trees' and the proverbial "information jungle"—in order to see where the roads lead and which one we need to follow.

The (socio-technical) 'lightbulb' is created by federating knowledge.

As one would do to create the lightbulb, or any other technical object—we first identified the function or functions this new object will need to serve; and then federated the relevant sources—to find out what the thing that suits the function needs to be like. I'll illustrate a broad variety of sources we've consulted by a single one—the Object Oriented Methodology. And here too (as I always do in the Liberation book) I'll highlight the main points by sharing a vignette.

When the first computers appeared on the market, and people saw the potential of this new machine, ambitious software projects were undertaken—which often resulted in chaos: Thousands of tangled up lines of "spaghetti code", which were impossible to comprehend and correct. The solution was found in the creation of "software design methodologies"; among which the Object Oriented Methodology constituted the solution of choice and a landmark. Ole-Johan Dahl (who co-created the Object Oriented Methodology with Kristen Nygaard, and later received the Turing Award—the equivalent of the Nobel Prize in computing—for this work) wrote (with C.A.R. Hoare) in Structured Programming in 1972, in a chapter called “Hierarchical Program Structures”:

“As the result of the large capacity of computing instruments, we have to deal with computing processes of such complexity that they can hardly be understood in terms of basic general purpose concepts. The limit is set by the nature of our intellect: precise thinking is possible only in terms of a small number of elements at a time. The only efficient way to deal with complicated systems is in a hierarchical fashion. The dynamic system is constructed and understood in terms of high level concepts, which are in turn constructed and understood in terms of lower level concepts, and so forth.”

Think again of "information jungle"; and imagine it as an enormous mess of documents—all mixed up together; imagine the mountain rising from it and above it as a structure of viewpoints; each of which offers a coherent view (you can bend down and inspect a flower; or climb up the mountain and see the valley below; but the nature of our vision is such that we cannot see both at once).

Only coherent views can be comprehended.

If computer programs are to be comprehensible, reusable and modifiable—they need to be structured in a way that conforms to the limits of our intellect, Dahl and his colleagues found out; and created the Object Oriented Methodology as a way to enable the programmers—or to even compel the programmers to achieve that; by programming in terms of "objects".

The creators of Object Oriented Methodology considered themselves accountable for the tools they gave to programmers; at universities, we too must become accountable—for the information tools we gave to researchers! And to the people at large!

It is those tools that determine whether the result of humanity's (information-related) efforts will be chaos—or a new order!

I adapted the idea of the "object" and drafted the information holon; which is what the Information ideogram depicts. Arthur Koestler coined the keyword "holon" to denote something that is both a whole and a piece in a larger whole; and I applied it to information.

The information holon is a structuring template and principle; it is composed of a manageable collection of coherent 'side views', which compose the rectangle (and allow us to see a subject matter 'from all sides'); which together allow us to see and justify (or 'prove') a point—on a still higher level of generality.

The mountain is technically the information holarchy; it is composed of information holons—so that the points of a more detailed holons serve as dots to be connected to compose those more general or high-level ones.

You may now comprehend knowledge fedration as the process of distilling insights or points from the 'information jungle'; and rendering them as information holons—to be readily comprehended and verified; and combining them into information holarchy—to enable us to collectively rise above 'the information jungle' and comprehend things clearly.

Holotopia ideogram shows what we'll see when proper light's been turned on.

Holotopia ideogram

Holotopia is the vision that resulted when we used 'the lightbulb' to 'illuminate the way': We chose five pivotal categories (five factors that decisively influence our society's evolutionary course); and for each of them collected and organized what's been academically published or otherwise reported; and condensed it all to a general point or insight. Those five categories are:

  • innovation—our technology-augmented capability to create and induce change
  • information—which by definition includes not only written documents, but all other forms of heritage or recorded human experience; and also the social processes by which information is created and put to use
  • foundation—on which we develop knowledge and culture at large; which by definition includes the principles and the criteria we use to decide what we'll collectively rely on and live by; and what in our heritage is worth preserving and developing further
  • method—by which we create knowledge, and distinguish knowledge from belief
  • values—which direct "the pursuit of happiness" and our other pursuits.

Holotopia-id.jpg

Holotopia ideogram

The Holotopia ideogram comprises five pillars, each of which has a pivotal category as base and a point or insight as capital; think of a pillar as elevating us above "information jungle", so that we may comprehend a factor that determines our society's evolutionary course clearly and correctly.

A general insight resulted from the holotopia experiment.

Whenever we applied knowledge federation to a pivotal category, in each case the resulting insight toppled the "conventional wisdom"—by showing that the way the category is ordinarily comprehended and handled needs to be thoroughly revised and reversed; and that the effect of each of those reversals will be a dramatic improvement of our overall condition, personal and social.

The resulting five points or five insights elevate our comprehension of the world and our situation as a whole; so that when other similarly important themes such as creativity, religion and education are considered in the context of those five pointstheir comprehension and handling too ends up being revised and reversed; and we added ten themes to this ideogram—represented by the edges joining the five insights—to illustrate that.

Furthermore, the courses of action or reversals those five insights point to turned out to be so inextricably co-dependent, that making one of them necessitates that we make them all; or in other words—that making any of the obviously necessary improvements of our condition necessitates changing this condition, or technically the paradigm as a whole.

Each of those five reversals turned out to be a special case of this general principle:

Make things whole.

Which I can now offer you as holotopia principle—the simple rule of thumb pointing to a requisite new way in which we need to direct our creative efforts; and the resulting new evolutionary course and its corresponding 'destination' or order of things or paradigm.

To be able to make things whole we need to see things whole.

So I now offer you see things whole as the holoscope principle—the rule of thumb pointing to a new and informed (creation and use of) information.

I can now invite you to take one more step up the metaphorical mountain—and consider this general conclusion:

We are not informed.

What we have—regarding any of the core themes of our lives and times—is not knowledge but belief.

As soon as we substitute the 'lightbulb' for the 'candle', and knowledge for belief—our comprehension and handling of life's core issues will be radically transformed.

And result in radical improvement of our condition.

The holotopia experiment showed that (not "success", nor "profit", but) making things whole is the direction we need to follow; that (not self-centeredness and competition, but) collaborative self-organization is our—and everyone's—enlightened interest.

The stars in the Holotopia ideogram represent prototypes—which are the results of this enlightened course of action. Prototype are the knowledge federation technical tool that enables us to put the make things whole principle into practice; to turn insights into action and action into real-life effects, and concerted change.

– A new type of thinking is essential if mankind is to survive and move toward higher levels.
(Albert Einstein in an interview to The New York Times, 1946)

My point

It stands to reason that thinking "inside the box"—within the confines of our habitual and institutionalized patterns of thought and action, which (as Max Weber diagnosed at the point of inception of scientific study of society) keeps us confined to "the iron cage" of dysfunctional and obsolete institutions or systems (of which the system of information, our society's 'candle headlights', is the example at hand), which I'll designate as conditioned—won't do the job. The "liberation" in Liberation book's title is, of course all-inclusive or comprehensive—just as wholeness and holotopia, its results, are; but to make things simple you may just as well see it as the liberation of the mind from conditioning—which is the key to comprehensive liberation.

"The tie between information and action has been severed", Neil Postman warned in his keynote to German Informatics Society titled "Informing ourselves to Death", in 1990; the liberated mind is that tie. But the information we have today cannot liberate the mind; because it cannot be turned into action. The information that will liberate us and empower us must be different in outlook and structure; it must be created by a social process that is different from all institutionalized processes we have—as the holotopia experiment so convincingly confirmed.

It is "widely known" that this liberating sort of information was what Plato undertook to foster when he created Academia; so I turned academia into a keyword, and use it to designate "the institutionalized academic tradition"; in order to point out that what we've institutionalized is not what this tradition's founding fathers had in mind.

But this is not my point.

I am not telling you how the world is—but acting in a new way; and inviting you to act. Because ironically—as long as we use our old and dysfunctional processes and systems to communicate and act—we remain part of those systems; and hence also part of the problem!

The error I am proposing to correct is an error of self-perception.

We've been taught to see ourselves as "objective observers"; and that "our job" is to report what we see in conventional publications; we need to see ourselves as actors caught up in a dysfunctional system—and liberate ourselves and update our system by self-organizing differently; so that academia can give its key contribution to continuing our culture's evolution; as it did in Galilei's time.

I invite you to partake in restoring the severed tie between information and action.

In this precarious moment of transition from one stable order of things to another, which has been called the Information Age, information is the transformative power and critical resource that we scientists, we academic researchers, can and must be accountable for; which we must use to empower all of us to be accountable for the viability of our species; and to continue our culture's evolution.

You and I will truly begin to communicate when you'll no longer see me as trying to convince you of something—but as handing out a missing pieces of the puzzle that is yours to solve.

My point is not to tell you how the world is or how to correct it. I am not here to describe anything but to act, and I'm inviting you to act; so that together we may foster the social process and be the social process that will supply the information we the people vitally need; the information that will restore vision to post-industrial democracy; and allow culture to continue evolving.

The substance of this proposal is a practical way to achieve that.