Difference between pages "Clippings" and "Holotopia"

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CLIPPINGS, newest on top
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<div class="page-header" ><h1>HOLOTOPIA</h1><br><br><h2>An Actionable Strategy</h2></div>
  
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<div class="col-md-3"><h2>Imagine...</h2></div>
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<p>You are about to board a bus for a long night ride, when you notice the flickering streaks of light emanating from two wax candles, placed where the headlights of the bus are expected to be. Candles? <em>As headlights</em>? </p>
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<p>Of course, the idea of candles as headlights is absurd. So why propose it?
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<blockquote> Because <em>on a much larger scale</em> this absurdity has become reality.</blockquote> </p>
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<p>The Modernity <em>ideogram</em> renders the essence of our contemporary situation by depicting our society as an accelerating bus without a steering wheel, and the way we look at the world, try to comprehend and handle it as guided by a pair of candle headlights.</p>
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[[File:Modernity.jpg]]
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<small>Modernity <em>ideogram</em></small>
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<div class="col-md-3"><h2>A space</h2></div>
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<div class="col-md-3"><h2>Our proposal</h2></div>
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<div class="col-md-6">
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<blockquote>
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The core of our <em>knowledge federation</em> proposal is to change the relationship we have with information.
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</blockquote>
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<p>What is our relationship with information presently like?</p>
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<p>Here is how [[Neil Postman]] described it:</p>
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<blockquote>
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"The tie between information and action has been severed. Information is now a commodity that can be bought and sold, or used as a form of entertainment, or worn like a garment to enhance one's status. It comes indiscriminately, directed at no one in particular, disconnected from usefulness; we are glutted with information, drowning in information, have no control over it, don't know what to do with it."
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</blockquote>
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<div class="col-md-3">
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[[File:Postman.jpg]]<br><small>Neil Postman</small>
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<div class="col-md-7">
 
<div class="col-md-7">
<p>
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<p>What would information and our handling of information be like, if we treated them as we treat other human-made things—if we adapted them to the purposes that need to be served? </p>  
[[File:KunsthallDialog01.jpg]]
 
<br>
 
<small>A snapshot of Holotopia's pilot project in Kunsthall 3.14, Bergen.</small>
 
</p>
 
<p>Holotopia undertakes to develop whatever is needed for "changing course". Imagine it as a space, akin to a new continent or a "new world" that's just been discovered—which combines physical and virtual spaces, suitably interconnected. </p>
 
<p>In a symbolic sense, we are developing the following five sub-spaces.</p>
 
  
<h3><em>Fireplace</em></h3>
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<p>By what methods, what social processes, and by whom would information be created? What new information formats would emerge, and supplement or replace the traditional books and articles? How would information technology be adapted and applied? What would public informing be like? And <em>academic communication, and education</em>? </p>  
<p>The <em>fireplace</em> is where our varius <em>dialogs</em> take place, through which our insights are deepen by combining our collective intelligence with suitable insights from the past</p>
 
  
<h3><em>Library</em></h3>  
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<blockquote>The substance of our proposal is a <em>complete</em> <em>prototype</em> of <em>knowledge federation</em>, where initial answers to relevant questions are proposed, and in part implemented in practice. </blockquote>  
<p>The <em>library</em> is where the necessary information is organized and provided, in a suitable form.</p>  
 
  
<h3><em>Workshop</em></h3>
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<blockquote>Our call to action is to institutionalize and develop <em>knowledge federation</em> as an academic field, and a real-life <em>praxis</em> (informed practice).</blockquote>
<p>The <em>workshop</em> is where a new order of things emerges, through co-creation of <em>prototypes</em>.</p>
 
  
<h3><em>Gallery</em></h3>
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<blockquote>Our purpose is to restore agency to information, and power to knowledge.</blockquote>
<p>The <em>gallery</em> is where the resulting <em>prototypes</em> are displayed</p>
 
  
<h3><em>Stage</em></h3>
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<p>All elements in our proposal are deliberately left unfinished, rendered as a collection of <em>prototypes</em>. Think of them as composing a 'cardboard model of a city', and a 'construction site'.  By sharing them we are not making a case for a specific 'city'—but for 'architecture' as an academic field, and a real-life <em>praxis</em>. </p>  
<p>The <em>stage</em> is where our events take place.</p>
 
  
<p>This idea of "space" brings up certain most interesting connotations and possibilities—which Lefebre and Debord pointed to.</p>
 
  
 
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</div> </div>  
  
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<div class="col-md-3"><h2>A proof of concept application</h2></div>
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<p>The Club of Rome's assessment of the situation we are in, provided us with a benchmark challenge for putting the proposed ideas to a test.</p>
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<p>Four decades ago—based on a decade of this global think tank's research into the future prospects of mankind, in a book titled "One Hundred Pages for the Future"—[[Aurelio Peccei]] issued the following call to action: </p>
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<blockquote>
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"It is absolutely essential to find a way to change course."
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</blockquote>
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<p>Peccei also specified <em>what</em> needed to be done to "change course":</p>
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<blockquote>
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"The future will either be an inspired product of a great cultural revival, or there will be no future."
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</blockquote>
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<div class="col-md-3">
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[[File:Peccei.jpg]]<br><small>Aurelio Peccei</small>
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<div class="col-md-3"><h2>The Box</h2></div>
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<div class="col-md-7">
[[File:Box1.jpg]]
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<p>This conclusion, that we are in a state of crisis that has cultural roots and must be handled accordingly, Peccei shared with a number of twentieth century thinkers. Arne Næss, Norway's esteemed philosopher, reached it on different grounds, and called it "deep ecology". In what follows we shall assume that this conclusion has been <em>federated</em>—and focus on the more interesting questions, such as <em>how</em> to "change course"; and in what ways may the new course be different.</p>  
<small>A model of The Box.</small>
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<p>In "Human Quality", Peccei explained his call to action:</p>
<p>So many people now talk about"thinking outside the box"; but what does this really mean? Has anyone even <em>seen</em> the box?</p>
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<blockquote>  
<p>Of course, "thinking outside the box" is what the development of a new paradigm is really all about. So to facilitate this most timely process, we decided to <em>create</em> the box. And to choreograph the process of unboxing our thinking, and handling.</p>  
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"Let me recapitulate what seems to me the crucial question at this point of the human venture. Man has acquired such decisive power that his future depends essentially on how he will use it. However, the business of human life has become so complicated that he is culturally unprepared even to understand his new position clearly. As a consequence, his current predicament is not only worsening but, with the accelerated tempo of events, may become decidedly catastrophic in a not too distant future. The downward trend of human fortunes can be countered and reversed only by the advent of a new humanism essentially based on and aiming at man’s cultural development, that is, a substantial improvement in human quality throughout the world."
<p> Holotopia's [[Holotopia:The Box|Box]] is an object designed for 'initiation' to <em>holotopia</em>, a way to help us 'unbox' our conception of the world and see, think and behave differently; change course inwardly, by embracing a new value.</p>
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</blockquote>  
<p>We approach The Box from a specific interest, an issue we may care about—such as communication, or IT innovation, or the pursuit of happiness and the ways to improve the human experience, and the human condition. But when we follow our interest a bit deeper, by (physically) opening the box or (symbolically) considering the relevant insights that have been made—we find that there is a large obstacle, preventing our issue to be resolved. </p>  
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<p>
<p>We also see  that by resolving this whole <em>new</em> issue, a much larger gains can be reached than what we originally anticipated and intended. And that there are <em>other</em> similar insights; and that they are all closely related.</p>
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The Club of Rome insisted that lasting solutions would not be found by focusing on specific problems, but by transforming the condition from which they all stem, which they called "problematique".</p>  
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<blockquote>Could the change of 'headlights' we are proposing be "a way to change course"?</blockquote>  
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</div> </div>  
 
</div> </div>  
  
  
 
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<div class="row">
<div class="col-md-3"><h2>A vocabulary</h2></div>
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<div class="col-md-3"><h2>A vision</h2></div>
 
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<div class="col-md-7">
<p>Science was not an exception; <em>every</em> new paradigm brings with it a new way of speaking; and a new way of looking at the world.</p>  
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<blockquote><em>Holotopia</em> is a vision of a possible future that emerges when proper 'light' has been 'turned on'.</blockquote> 
<p>The following collection of <em>keywords</em> will provide an alternative, and a bit more academic and precise entry point to <em>holoscope</em> and <em>holotopia</em>.</p>
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<p>Since Thomas More coined this term and described the first utopia, a number of visions of an ideal but non-existing social and cultural order of things have been proposed. In view of adverse and contrasting realities, the word "utopia" acquired the negative meaning of an unrealizable fancy.</p>
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<p>As the optimism regarding our future waned, apocalyptic or "dystopian" visions became common. The "protopias" emerged as a compromise, where the focus is on smaller but practically realizable improvements.</p>  
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<p>The <em>holotopia</em> is different in spirit from them all. It is a <em>more</em> attractive vision of the future than what the common utopias offered—whose authors either lacked the information to see what was possible, or lived in the times when the resources we have did not yet exist. And yet the <em>holotopia</em> is readily attainable—because we already have the information and other resources that are needed for its fulfillment.</p>  
  
<h3><em>Wholeness</em></h3>
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<blockquote>The <em>holotopia</em> vision is made concrete in terms of <em>five insights</em>, as explained below.</blockquote>
<p>We define <em>wholeness</em> as the quality that distinguishes a healthy organism, or a well-configured and well-functioning machine. <em>Wholeness</em> is, more simply, the condition or the order of things which is, from an <em>informed</em> perspective, worthy of being aimed for and worked for.</p>
 
<p>The idea of <em>wholeness</em> is illustrated by the bus with candle headlights. The bus is not <em>whole</em>. Even a tiny piece can mean a world of difference. </p>
 
<p>While the <em>wholeness</em> of a mechanism is secured by just all its parts being in place, cultural and human <em>wholeness</em> are <em>never</em> completed; there is always more that can be discovered, and aimed for. This makes the notion of <em>wholeness</em> especially suitable for motivating <em>cultural revival</em> and <em>human development</em>, which is our stated goal.</p>  
 
  
<h3><em>Tradition</em> and <em>design</em></h3>
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</div> </div>  
<p><em>Tradition</em> and <em>design</em> are two alternative ways to <em>wholeness</em>. <em>Tradition</em> relies on Darwinian-style evolution; <em>design</em> on awareness and deliberate action. When <em>tradition</em> can no longer be relied on, <em>design</em> must be used.</p>
 
<p>As the Modernity <em>ideogram</em> might suggest, our contemporary situation may be understood as a precarious transition from one way of evolving to the next. We are no longer <em>traditional</em>; and we are not yet <em>designing</em>. Our situation can naturally be reversed by understanding our situation in a new way; by responding to its demands, and developing its opportunities. </p>  
 
  
  
<h3><em>Keyword</em> and <em>Prototype</em></h3>
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<div class="col-md-3"><h2>A principle</h2></div>
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<p>The <em>keywords</em> are concepts created by <em>design</em>. We shall see exactly how. For now, it is sufficient to keep in mind that we need to interpret them not as they what they "are", according to <em>tradition</em>, but as used and defined in this text. Until we find a better solution, we distinguish the <em>keywords</em> by writing them in italics.</p>  
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<p><em>What do we need to do</em> to "change course" toward <em>holotopia</em>?</p>
<p>The core of our proposal is to "restore agency to information, and power to knowledge". When <em>Information</em> is conceived of an instrument to interact with the world around us—then <em>information</em> cannot be only results of observing the world; it cannot be confined to  academic books and articles. The <em>prototypes</em> serve as models, as experiments, and as interventions.</p>  
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<blockquote>The <em>five insights</em> point to a simple principle or rule of thumb—making things  [[Wholeness|<em>whole</em>]].</blockquote>
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<p>This principle is suggested by the <em>holotopia</em>'s very name. And also by the Modernity <em>ideogram</em>. Instead of <em>reifying</em> our institutions and professions, and merely acting in them competitively to improve "our own" situation or condition, we consider ourselves and what we do as functional elements in a larger system of systems; and we self-organize, and act, as it may best suit the [[Wholeness|<em>wholeness</em>]] of it all. </p>
  
<h3><em>Human development</em> and <em>cultural revival</em> as ways to <em>change course</em></h3>
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<p>Imagine if academic and other knowledge-workers collaborated to serve and develop planetary wholeness – what magnitude of benefits would result!</p>
<p>We adopt these <em>keywords</em> from Aurelio Peccei, and use them exactly as he did. </p>
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</div> </div>
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</div> </div>  
  
 
<div class="row">
 
<div class="row">
<div class="col-md-3"><h2>A prototype</h2></div>
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<div class="col-md-3"><h2>A method</h2></div>
 
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<div class="col-md-7">
<p>We develop <em>holotopia</em> as a <em>prototype</em>. And the <em>holoscope</em> as a <em>prototype</em> 'headlights'—the leverage point, the natural way to <em>change course</em>. </p>
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<p>"The arguments posed in the preceding pages", Peccei summarized in One Hundred Pages for the Future, "point out several things, of which one of the most important is that our generations seem to have lost <em>the sense of the whole</em>." </p>  
<p>The Holotopia <em>prototype</em> is not only a description, but also and most importantly it already <em>is</em> "a way to change course". </p>  
 
  
<h3>A strategy</h3>
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<blockquote>To be able to make things [[Wholeness|<em>whole</em>]]—<em>we must be able to see things whole</em>! </blockquote>  
  
<p>The strategy that defines the Holotopia project—to focus on the natural and easy way, on changing the whole thing—has  its own inherent logic and "leverage points": Instead of occupying Wall Street, changing the relationship we have with information emerges as an easier, more natural and far more effective strategy. Just as it was in Galilei's time. </p>  
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<p>To highlight that the <em>knowledge federation</em> methodology described and implemented in the proposed <em>prototype</em> affords that very capability, to <em>see things whole</em>, in the context of the <em>holotopia</em> we refer to it by the pseudonym <em>holoscope</em>. </p>
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<p>While the characteristics of the <em>holoscope</em>—the design choices or <em>design patterns</em>, how they follow from published insights and why they are necessary for 'illuminating the way'—will become obvious in the course of this presentation, one of them must be made clear from the start.</p>  
  
<p>As an academic initiative, to give our society a new capability, to 'connect the dots' and see things whole, <em>knowledge federation</em> brings to this strategy a collection of technical assets. Their potential to make a difference may be understood with the help of the <em>elephant</em> metaphor.</p>
 
  
 
<p>
 
<p>
[[File:Elephant.jpg]]<br>
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[[File:Holoscope.jpeg]]<br>
<small>Elephant <em>ideogram</em></small>  
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<small>Holoscope <em>ideogram</em></small>
</p>  
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</p> 
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<blockquote>To see things whole, we must look at all sides.</blockquote>
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<p>The <em>holoscope</em> distinguishes itself by allowing for <em>multiple</em> ways of looking at a theme or issue, which are called <em>scopes</em>. The <em>scopes</em> and the resulting <em>views</em> have similar meaning and role as projections do in technical drawing. The <em>views</em> that show the entire <em>whole</em> from a certain angle are called <em>aspects</em>.</p>  
  
<p>Imagine visionary thinkers as those proverbial blind-folded men touching an elephant. We hear them talk about "a fan", and "a water hose" and and "a tree trunk". They don't make sense, and we ignore them.</p>  
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<p>This <em>modernization</em> of our handling of information—distinguished by purposeful, free and informed <em>creation</em> of the ways in which we look at a theme or issue—has become <em>necessary</em> in our situation, suggests the bus with candle headlights. But it also presents a challenge to the reader—to bear in mind that the resulting views are not "reality pictures", contending for that status with one other and with our conventional ones.</p>  
<p>Everything changes when we understand that what they are really talking about are the ear, the trunk and the leg of an exotic animal—which is enormously large! And of the kind that nobody has seen! </p>
 
<p>The <em>elephant</em> symbolizes the <em>paradigm</em> that is now ready to emerge among us, as soon as we begin to 'connect the dots'. Unlike the sensations we are accustomed to see on TV, the <em>elephant</em> is not only more spectacular, but also incomparably more relevant. <em>And</em> as we shall see in quite a bit of detail, it gives relevance, meaning and agency to academic insights and contributions. </p>  
 
  
<h3>A <em>dialog</em></h3>
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<blockquote>In the <em>holoscope</em>, the legitimacy and the peaceful coexistence of multiple ways to look at a theme is axiomatic.</blockquote>  
<p>This point cannot be overemphasized: The immediate goal of the Holotopia <em>prototype</em> is <em>not</em> to get  the proposed ideas accepted. Rather, it is to develop a <em>dialog</em> around them. Our strategy is to put forth a handful of insights that are <em>in the real sense</em> sensational—and to organize a structured conversation around them. </p>
 
<p>That structured conversation, that public <em>dialog</em>, constitutes the 'construction project' by which 'the headlights' are rebuilt!</p>  
 
  
<h3>A tactical detail</h3>
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<p>To liberate our worldview from the inherited concepts and methods and allow for deliberate choice of <em>scopes</em>, we used the scientific method as venture point—and modified it by taking recourse to insights reached in 20th century science and philosophy. </p>  
<p>To deflect the ongoing <em>power structure</em> devolution, we provide an arsenal of tactical tools, one of which must be mentioned early: Our invitation to a <em>dialog</em> is an invitation to abandon the usual fighting stance, and speak and collaborate in an <em>authentic</em> way. The <em>dialog</em> will evolve together with suitable technical instruments, including video and other forms of recording as corrective feedback.</p>
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<blockquote>
<!-- <p><em>Attrape-nigaud</em> is a French phrase for tactical contraptions of this kind.</p> -->
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Science gave us new ways to look at the world: The telescope and the microscope enabled us to see the things that are too distant or too small to be seen by the naked eye, and our vision expanded beyond bounds. But science had the <em>tendency to keep us focused on things that were either too distant or too small to be relevant—compared to all those large things or issues nearby, which now demand our attention</em>. The <em>holoscope</em> is conceived as a way to look at the world that helps us see <em>any</em> chosen thing or theme as a whole—from all sides; and in proportion.
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</blockquote>  
  
<h3>A step toward <em>academic</em> revival</h3>
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<p>A discovery of a new way of looking—which reveals a structural problem, and helps us reach a correct general assessment of an object of study or a situation as a whole (see if 'the cup is broken or whole')—is a new <em>kind of result</em> that is made possible by (the general-purpose science that is modeled by) the <em>holoscope</em>.</p>  
<p>A <em>cultural revival</em> requires an <em>academic</em> revival—where a 'change of course' perceived as purpose, serves to give new notions of impact and agency to academic work. </p>
 
<p>Here is how this may fit into the existing streams of thought. </p>
 
<p> The structuralists attempted to give rigor to the study of cultural artifacts. The post-structuralists "deconstructed" this attempt—by showing that writings of historical thinkers, and indeed <em>all</em> cultural artifacts, <em>have no</em> "real" interpretation. And that they are, therefore, subject to <em>free</em> interpretation.</p>
 
<p>The new relationship with information, which we are proposing, sets the stage for taking this line of development a step further: Instead of asking what, for instance, Pierre Bourdieu "really" saw and wanted to say, we acknowledge that he probably saw something that was <em>not</em> as we were inclined to believe; and that he struggled to understand and communicate what he saw in the manner of speaking of our traditional <em>order of things</em>, where what he saw could not fit in. </p>
 
<p>So we can now consider Bourdieu's work as a piece in a completely <em>new</em> puzzle—a <em>new</em> societal <em>order of things</em>. To which we have given the pseudonym <em>holotopia</em>.  </p>
 
<p>By placing the work of social scientists into that new context, we give their insights a completely <em>new</em> life; and a completely <em>new</em> degree of relevance. We show how this can be done without a single bit sacrificing rigor, but indeed—with a new degree of rigor and a new <em>kind of</em> rigor.</p>
 
</div> </div>
 
  
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<p>We will continue to use the conventional way of speaking and say that something <em>is</em> as stated, that <em>X</em> <em>is</em> <em>Y</em>—although it would be more accurate to say that <em>X</em> can or needs to (also) be perceived as <em>Y</em>. The views we offer are accompanied by an invitation to genuinely try to look at the theme at hand in a certain specific way (to use the offered <em>scopes</em>); and to do that collaboratively, in a [[dialog|<em>dialog</em>]].</p>
  
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<p>
 
[[File:Local-Global.jpg]]<br>
 
<small>BottomUp - TopDown intervention tool for shifting positions, which was part of our pilot project in Kunsthall 3.14, Bergen, suggests how this proposed <em>information</em> is to be used—by transcending fixed relations between top and bottom, and building awareness of the benefits of multiple points of view; and moving in-between.</small>
 
</p>
 
  
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<div class="page-header" ><h2>Five insights</h2></div>
  
 
 
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<div class="col-md-3"><h2><em>Ideogram</em></h2></div>
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<div class="col-md-3"><h2><em>Scope</em></h2></div>
<div class="col-md-7"><p>The <em>ideograms</em> as they presently are in the <em>holoscope</em> serve as a laceholder—for a variety of techniques that can be developed by using contemporary media technology. The point here is to condense lots and lots of insights into <em>something</em> that communicates them most effectively—which can be a poem, a picture, a video, a movie....</p>
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<div class="col-md-7">
<p>An <em>ideogram</em> the naturally serves for composing the <em>circle</em>–which condenses a wealth of insights into a simple, communicated message.</p>
 
<p>Instead of using media tools addictively, and commercially, we use them to <em>rebuild</em> the <em>culture</em>—as people have done through ages. The difference is made by the <em>knowledge federation</em> infrastructure—which secures that what needs to be <em>federated</em> gets <em>federated</em>. </p>
 
</div> </div>  
 
  
  
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<blockquote>What is wrong with our present "course"? In what ways does it need to be changed? What benefits will result?</blockquote>
  
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<p>  
<div class="col-md-3"><h2>We are dazzled and confused</h2></div>
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[[File:FiveInsights.JPG]]<br>
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<small>Five Insights <em>ideogram</em></small>  
<p>The unstructured nature of our information, in combination with the immersive nature of our media, have the effect of leaving us dazzled and confused. </p>  
 
<blockquote>The nature of our information is such that it not only fails to help us comprehend our world—but <em>it imperils our very ability to comprehend</em>. </blockquote>  
 
<p>Of the many studies that support this conclusion (which, however, remained without effect...), we here offer two <em>threads</em>. </p>
 
<h3>Nietzsche–Ehrlich–Giddens</h3>
 
<p>
 
[[File:Giddens-OS.jpeg]]
 
 
</p>  
 
</p>  
<p>The insight that the complexity of our world, combined with the inadequacy of our information, leaves us no other way of coping than to resort to what Anthony Giddens called "ontological security" is summarized by the above slide, and summarized [https://holoscope.info/2019/02/07/knowledge-federation-dot-org/#Giddens here]. </p>  
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<p>We use the <em>holoscope</em> to illuminate five <em>pivotal</em> themes, which <em>determine</em> the "course":</p>
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<ul>
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<li><b>Innovation</b>—the way we use our ability to create, and induce change</li>
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<li><b>Communication</b>—the social process, enabled by technology, by which information is handled</li>
 +
<li><b>Epistemology</b>—the fundamental assumptions we use to create truth and meaning; or "the relationship we have with information"</li>
 +
<li><b>Method</b>—the way in which truth and meaning are constructed in everyday life, or "the way we look at the world, try to comprehend and handle it"</li>
 +
<li><b>Values</b>—the way we "pursue happiness", which in the modern society <em>directly</em> determines the course</li>
 +
</ul>  
  
<h3>McLuhan–Postman–Debord</h3>
+
<p>In each case, we see a structural defect, which led to perceived problems. We demonstrate practical ways, partly implemented as <em>prototypes</em>, in which those structural defects can be remedied. We see that their removal naturally leads to improvements that are well beyond the removal of symptoms.</p>
<p>Here is another, a bit more profound stream of thought. From McLuhan and Postman we need only an overarching insight they share, namely that the medium has the power to limit and direct what <em>can</em> be said, and to even impact if not determine our very capability to express ourselves and comprehend. Debord took this a step further, by treating it as a power-related phenomenon.</p>  
 
  
<h3>We must act, not only observe</h3>  
+
<blockquote>The <em>holotopia</em> vision results.</blockquote>
<p>Two points remain to be highlighted.</p>
+
 
<p>The first is that the <em>academia</em> itself cannot be considered immune to the deep problems we've just outlined. The <em>academia</em> is not only failing to produce a guiding light to our society—but <em>also to itself</em>! Is the academic discipline on the way to become (what Giddens called) an "internally referential system"?</p>
+
<p>In the spirit of the <em>holoscope</em>, we here only summarize the <em>five insights</em>—and provide evidence and details separately.</p>  
<p>The second is that to restore agency to information, and power to knowledge, the <em>academia</em> must step beyond its traditional "objective observer" stance, and develop ways to turn knowledge into systems. And into action.</p>  
 
 
</div> </div>  
 
</div> </div>  
  
  
 
<div class="row">
 
<div class="row">
<div class="col-md-3"><h2>An academic core issue</h2></div>
+
<div class="col-md-3"><h2>[[Holotopia:Power structure|<em>Power structure</em>]]</h2></div>
 
<div class="col-md-7">
 
<div class="col-md-7">
<blockquote>
 
<p>Consider the <em>academia</em> as a <em>system</em>: It has a vast heritage to take care of, and make use of. Selected creative people come in. They are given certain tools to work with, certain ways how to work, certain communication tools that will take their results and turn them into socially useful effect. How effective, and efficient, is the whole thing as a system? Is it taking advantage of the invaluable (especially in this time when our urgent need is creative change) resources that have been entrusted to it?</p>
 
<p>Enter information technology...</p>
 
</blockquote>
 
<p>The big point here is that the <em>academia</em>'s <em>primary</em> responsibility or accountability is for the system as a whole, and for each of its components. The <em>academia</em> had an asset, let's call him Pierre Bourdieu. This person was given a format to write in—which happened to be academic books and articles. He was given a certain language to express himself in. <em>How good</em> are those tools? <em>Could there be</em> answers to this question (which the <em>academi</em> has, btw, not yet asked in any real way) that are incomparably, by orders of magnitude, better than what the <em>academia</em> of his time afforded to Bourdieu? And to everyone else, of course.</p> 
 
 
  
<h3>Analogy with the history of computer programming</h3>  
+
<h3><em>Scope</em></h3>  
<p>We point to the analogy between the situation in computer programming following the advent of the computer, in response to which computer programming methodologies were developed—and the situation in our handling of information following the advent of the Internet. In the first years of computing, ambitious software projects were undertaken, which resulted in "spaghetti code"—a tangled up mess of thousands of lines of code, which nobody could understand, detangle and correct. The programmers were coming in and out of those projects, and those who stepped in later had to wonder whether to throw the whole thing away and begin from scratch—or to continue to try to correct it. </p>  
+
 
<p>A motivating insight that needs to be drawn from this history is that a dramatic increase in size of the thing being handled (computer programs <em>and</em> information) can not be effectively responded to by merely more of the same. A <em>structural</em> change (a different <em>paradigm</em>) is what the situation is calling for. </p>  
+
<blockquote><b>What</b> might constitute "a way to change course"?</blockquote>  
<h3>A new <em>paradigm</em> is needed</h3>
+
 
<p>Edsger Dijkstra, one of the pioneers of the development of methodologies, argued that programming in the large is a <em>completely</em> different thing than programming in the small (for which textbook examples and the programming tools at large were created at the time):</p>  
+
<p>"Man has acquired such decisive power that his future depends essentially on how he will use it", observed Peccei. Imagine if some malevolent entity, perhaps an insane dictator, took control over that power! </p>
<blockquote>  
+
 
“Any two things that differ in some respect by a factor of already a hundred or more, are utterly incomparable.”
+
<blockquote>The [[Power structure|<em>power structure</em>]] insight allows us to see why no dictator is needed.</blockquote>  
</blockquote>  
 
<p>Doug Engelbart used to make the same point (that the increase in size requires a different paradigm) by sharing his parable of a man who grew ten times in size (read it [https://holoscope.info/2020/01/01/tesla-and-the-nature-of-creativity/#Tenfold_growth_parable here]). </p>  
 
  
<h3>The key point</h3>
+
<p>While the nature of the <em>power structure</em> will become clear as we go along, imagine it, to begin with, as our institutions; or more accurately, as <em>the systems in which we live and work</em> (which we simply call <em>systems</em>).</p>  
<p>The solution was found in developing structuring and abstraction concepts and methodologies. Among them, the Object Oriented Methodology is the best known example.</p>
 
<p>The key insight to be drawn from this analogy: computers can be programmed in <em>any</em> programming language. The creators of the programming methodologies, however, took it as their core challenge, and duty, to give the programmers the conceptual and technical tools that would <em>coerce</em> them to write code that is comprehensible, maintainable and reusable. The Object Oriented Methodology responds to this challenge by conceiving of computer programming as modeling of complex systems—in terms of a hierarchy of "objects". An object is a structuring device whose purpose is to "export function" (make a set of functions available to higher-order objects),  and "hide implementation". </p>
 
<p>Without recognizing that, the <em>academia</em> now finds itself in a similar situation as the creators of computer programming methodologies. The importance of finding a suitable response to this challenge cannot be overrated.</p>  
 
  
<h3>Implications for cultural revival</h3>  
+
<p>Notice that <em>systems</em> have an <em>immense</em> power—<em>over us</em>, because <em>we have to adapt to them</em> to be able to live and work; and <em>over our environment</em>, because by organizing us and using us in certain specific ways, <em>they decide what the effects of our work will be</em>. </p>  
<p>There is also an interesting <em>difference</em> between computer programming and handling of information: The fact that a team of programmers can no longer understand the program they are creating is easily detected—the program won't run on the computer; but how does one detect the incomparably larger and more costly problem—that a generation of people can no longer comprehend the information they own? And hence the situation they are in?</p>  
 
</div> </div>
 
  
 +
<blockquote>The <em>power structure</em> determines whether the effects of our efforts will be problems, or solutions. </blockquote> 
  
-------
+
<h3>Diagnosis</h3>
  
<div class="page-header" > <h2>Restoring purpose to information, and agency to knowledge</h2> </div>
+
<p>How suitable are <em>the systems in which we live and work</em> for their all-important role?</p>  
   
 
<div class="row">
 
<div class="col-md-3"></div>
 
<div class="col-md-7">
 
<p>Having used the <em>holoscope</em> to illuminate our general condition, and to <em>federate</em> The Club of Rome's core findings and call to action, we are now ready to revisit our proposal, and see how it firs into the big picture we've created. Let's begin by re-emphasizing our main point, that "the core of our proposal is to change the relationship we have with information". In the language of our metaphor, we are <em>not</em> saying "Here is a 'lightbulb', to replace those 'candles'."
 
</p>
 
<blockquote>
 
By proposing to academia to add <em>knowledge federation</em> to its repertoire of activities and fields, we are proposing an 'electromechanical workshop', which will develop and install new 'sources of illumination', and to improve them continuously—by taking advantage of new knowledge of knowledge, and information technology.
 
</blockquote>
 
<p>In what follows we look at this proposal from several points of view.</p>
 
</div> </div>  
 
  
<div class="row">
+
<blockquote>Evidence shows that the <em>power structure</em> wastes a lion's share of our resources. And that it either <em>causes</em> problems, or make us incapable of solving them.</blockquote>  
<div class="col-md-3"><h2>Use of knowledge resources</h2></div>
 
<div class="col-md-7">
 
<p>The point of view here is the <em>academia</em>'s prerogative to give to the academic workers, and to the rest of the world, conceptual and methodological tools, processes and institutional structures for handling knowledge. The question here is how this prerogative is used.</p>
 
<p>It is the prerogative of <em>academia</em> to tell everyone what information and knowledge are about, how they are to be created and used etc. Considering that our theme of focus is "a great cultural revival", we are especially interested in the workflow of knowledge in and from the humanities.</p>
 
<p>Considering that the tools, processes and institutional structures in knowledge work will decide the <em>effects</em> and the effectiveness of knowledge work, we must ask—<em>how</em> are those tools, processes and institutional structures created?</p>
 
<p>The obvious answer is that they are not. They are simply inherited from the past. Instead of considering them as part of their creative frontier <em>par excellence</em>, the academic workers are <em>socialized</em> to accept them as part and parcel of their vodation. <em>That</em> is what (applied to the <em>academia</em>) the metaphor of the candle headlights is intended to signify.</p>
 
<p>Then our next question must be—<em>how well</em> do those tools and processes serve us?</p>
 
<p>Here we may bring up, fir instance, Bourdieu's "theory of practice". If you are a sociology student, you will probably study it as one of the theories, among so many others; but you won't be asked to <em>do</em> anything with it. And if you are not a sociology student, the chances are (as we have seen) that not only you've never heard about Bourdieu, but that your ideas about the social world are in stark contradiction to whatever Bourdieu was trying to tell us. Put simply, our <em>collective mind</em> has no connections between the research in sociology and the rest of us.</p>
 
<p>Bourdieu happened to notice this general issue. When a decade ago, when we were "evangelizing" for our reorganization of Knowledge Federation as a <em>transdiscipline</em>, we told the story how Bourdieu teamed up with Coleman, and undertook to put sociology back together. And how Bourdieu made a case for this attempted <em>structural</em> change of sociology, by arguing why it may be "the largest contribution" to the field. It remained to point to the obvious—that Bourdieu's observation is far <em>more</em> true when we look at sociology as a piece in a larger puzzle, of our society.</p>
 
<p>To become "a sociologist", one is given a certain 'toolkit' that goes with that title.</p>
 
<p>Add to this picture the new media technology—which enabled the power over knowledge, that the "official culture" earlier secured through its control over the media (publishing agencies, opera houses etc.), to escape the "official culture" and fall into the hands of counterculture. </p>
 
<p>It takes a bit of courage now to lift up the eyes from these details, and see that in the large picture—the nature and the quality of the <em>academia</em>'s  'toolkit' could be such that it renders even an extraordinarily talented individual, a one who could change the world—<em>entirely</em> useless to the world!</p>
 
</div> </div>
 
  
-------
+
<p>The root cause of this malady is in the way <em>systems</em> evolve. </p>
  
<div class="row">
+
<blockquote>Survival of the fittest favors the <em>systems</em> that are predatory, not those that are useful. </blockquote>  
<div class="col-md-3"></div>
 
<div class="col-md-7"><h3>Information <em>ideogram</em></h3>
 
  
<p>The Information <em>idogram</em>, shown on the right, explains how the information we propose to create is different from the one we have. </p>  
+
<p>[https://youtu.be/zpQYsk-8dWg?t=920 This excerpt]  from Joel Bakan's documentary "The Corporation" (which Bakan as a law professor created to <em>federate</em> an insight he considered essential) explains how the most powerful institution on our planet evolved to be a perfect "externalizing machine" ("Externalizing" means maximizing profits by letting someone else bear the costs, notably the people and the environment), just as the shark evolved to be a perfect predator.  [https://youtu.be/qsKQiVJkEvI?t=2780 This scene] from Sidney Pollack's 1969 film "They Shoot Horses, Don't They?" will illustrate how the <em>power structure</em> affects <em>our own</em> condition.</p>  
</div> </div>  
 
  
<div class="row">
+
<p>The  <em>systems</em> provide an ecology, which in the long run shapes our values and "human quality". They have the power to <em>socialize</em> us in ways that suit <em>their</em> needs. "The business of business is business"—and if our business is to succeed in competition, we <em>must</em> act in ways that lead to that effect. We either bend and comply—or get replaced. The effect on the <em>system</em> of both options will be the same.</p>  
<div class="col-md-3"></div>
+
<p>  
<div class="col-md-6">
+
[[File:Bauman-PS.jpeg]]
<p>The <em>ideogram</em> shows an "i", which stands for "information", as composed of a circle placed on top of a square. The square stands for the details; and also for looking at a theme of choice from all sides, by using diverse <em>kinds of</em> sources and resources. The circle, or the dot on the "i", stands for the function or the point of it all. That might be an insight into the nature of a situation; or a rule of thumb, pointing to a general way to handle situations of a specific kind; or a project, which implements such handling.</p>  
+
</p>
</div>
+
<p>A consequence, Zygmunt Bauman diagnosed, is that bad intentions are no longer needed for bad things to happen. Through <em>socialization</em>, the <em>power structure</em> can co-opt our duty and commitment, and even heroism and honor.</p>  
<div class="col-md-3">
+
<p>Bauman's insight that even the holocaust was a consequence and a special case, however extreme, of  the <em>power structure</em>, calls for careful contemplation: Even the concentration camp  employees, Bauman argued, were only "doing their job"—in a <em>system</em> whose character and purpose was beyond their field of vision, and power to change. </p>  
[[File:Information.jpg]]
 
<small>Information <em>ideogram</em></small>
 
</div> </div>
 
 
<div class="row">
 
<div class="col-md-3"></div>
 
<div class="col-md-7">
 
<p>By showing the circle as <em>founded</em> on the square, the Information <em>ideogram</em> points to <em>knowledge federation</em> as a social process (the 'principle of operation' of the socio-technical 'lightbulb'), by which the insights, principles, strategic handling and whatever else may help us understand and take care of our increasingly complex world are kept consistent with each other, and with the information we own. </p>
 
<p><em>Knowledge federation</em> is itself a result of <em>knowledge federation</em>: We draw insights about handling information from the sciences, communication design, journalism... And we weave them into technical solutions. </p>  
 
  
</div> </div>  
+
<p>While our ethical sense is tuned to the <em>power structures</em> of the past, we are committing (in all innocence, by acting only through <em>power structures</em> that bind us together) the greatest  [https://youtu.be/d1x7lDxHd-o massive crime] in history.</p>  
  
-------
+
<blockquote>Our children may not have a livable planet to live on.</blockquote>
  
<div class="row">
+
<p>Not because someone broke the rules—<em>but because we follow them</em>.</p>  
<div class="col-md-3"></div>
 
<div class="col-md-7">
 
  
<h3>Holoscope and Holotopia</h3>
+
<h3>Remedy</h3>  
<p>Some rudimentary understanding of our <em>holoscope</em> <em>prototype</em> is necessary for understanding what is about to follow.</p>
 
</div> </div>  
 
  
<div class="row">
+
<p>The fact that we will not solve our problems unless we develop the capability to update our <em>systems</em> has not remained unnoticed. </p>  
<div class="col-md-3"></div>
 
<div class="col-md-6">
 
<p>The Holoscope <em>ideogram</em> serves to explain the role this has in the inner workings of the <em>holoscope</em>. If one should inspect a hand-held cup, to see whether it is cracked or whole, one must be able to look at it from all sides; and perhaps also bring it closer to inspect some detail, and take it further away and see it as a whole. The control over the <em>scope</em> is what enables the <em>holoscope</em> to make a difference.</p
 
</div>
 
<div class="col-md-3">
 
[[File:Holoscope.jpeg]]<br>
 
<small>Holoscope <em>ideogram</em></small>
 
</div> </div>  
 
  
<div class="row">
 
<div class="col-md-3"></div>
 
<div class="col-md-7">
 
<p>To be able to say that a cup is whole, one must see it from all sides. To see that a cup is broken, it is enough to show a  <em>single</em> angle of looking. Much of the art of using the <em>holoscope</em> will be in finding and communicating uncommon ways of looking at things, which reveal their 'cracks' and help us correct them. </p>
 
 
<p>
 
<p>
The difference between the <em>paradigm</em> modeled by the <em>holoscope</em> and the traditional science can easily be understood if one considers the difference in the purpose, or <em>epistemology</em>. When our goal is to "see things whole", so that we can make them whole, a discovery of a way of looking that reveals where a 'crack' might exist, <em>although we might not</em> (yet) <em>be able to see it</em>, can be a valuable contribution to knowledge, as a warning to take precaution measures against the potential consequences of an undetected 'crack'. In science, on the other hand, where our goal is to discover only the most solid 'bricks', with which we can construct the edifice of a "scientific reality picture"—such ways of looking and hypothetical 'cracks' are considered worthless, and cannot even be reported.</p>  
+
[[File:Jantsch-vision.jpeg]]
 +
</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>The very first step that the The Club of Rome's founders did after its inception, in 1968, was to convene a team of experts, in Bellagio, Italy, to develop a suitable methodology. They gave making things whole on the scale of socio-technical systems the name "systemic innovation"—and we adapted that as one of our <em>keywords</em>. </p>  
 +
 
 +
<p>The work and the conclusions of this team were based on results in the systems sciences. In the year 2000, in "Guided Evolution of society", systems scientist Béla H. Bánáthy surveyed relevant research, and concluded in a true <em>holotopian</em> tone:</p>
 +
 
 +
<blockquote>We are the <em>first generation of our species</em> that has the privilege, the opportunity and the burden of responsibility to engage in the process of our own evolution. We are indeed <em>chosen people</em>. 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 two are core requirements, because <em>what evolution did for us up to now we have to learn to do for ourselves by guiding our own evolution.</em></blockquote>  
  
<p> To fully understand the "course" we are proposing, it is important to consider what those 'cracks' really are: They are 'crevices on the road', they are 'wrong turns'—which can lead to a civilization-wide disaster, with all the imaginable and unimaginable tragic consequences this might imply. It then follows from our stated purpose (to evolve suitable 'headlights') that our handling of information must "change course": We must look at all sides, not only one!</p>  
+
<p>In 2010 Knowledge Federation began to self-organize to make further headway on this creative frontier. The procedure we developed is simple: We create a [[prototype|<em>prototype</em>]] of a system, and a <em>transdisciplinary</em> community and project around it to update it continuously. The insights in participating disciplines can in this way have real or <em>systemic</em> effects.</p>  
  
<p>A subtlety follows—which is, however, required if one should step into the <em>holotopia</em> development and contribute. We will be using the usual manner of speaking, and making affirmative statements of the usual kind, that a certain thing or issue <em>X</em> "is" so and so. Those statements need to be interpreted as meaning "please see if you can see  <em>X</em> (also) in this way". In other words, our statements need to be interpreted and handled in the manner of the <em>dialog</em>. </p>  
+
<p>Our very first <em>prototype</em>, the Barcelona Innovation Ecosystem for Good Journalism in 2011, was of a public informing that identifies systemic causes and proposes corresponding solutions (by involving academic and other experts) of perceived problems (reported by people directly, through citizen journalism). </p>  
  
------
+
<p>A year later we created The Game-Changing Game as a generic way to change <em>systems</em>—and hence as a "practical way to craft the future"; and based on it The Club of Zagreb, as an update to The Club of Rome.</p>
  
 +
<p>Each of about forty [[prototype|<em>prototypes</em>]] in our portfolio illustrates [[systemic innovation|<em>systemic innovation</em>]] in a specific domain.  Each of them is composed in terms of [[design pattern|<em>design patterns</em>]]—problem-solution pairs, ready to be adapted for other applications and domains.</p>
  
<p> in the way that's intended—namely as <em>views</em> resulting from <em>specific</em> scopes. A <em>view</em> is offered as <em>sufficiently</em> fitting the data (the <em>view</em> really serves as a kind of a mnemonic device, which engages our faculties of abstraction and logical thinking to condense messy data to a simple and coherent point of view)—within a given <em>scope</em>. Here the <em>scopes</em> serve as projection planes in projective geometry. If a <em>scope</em> shows a 'crack', then this 'crack' needs to be handled, within the <em>scope</em>—regardless of what the other <em>scopes</em> are showing.</p>  
+
<p>The Collaborology <em>prototype</em>, in education, will highlight some of the advantages of this approach.</p>  
<p>Hence a new kind of "result", which the <em>holoscope</em> makes possible—to "discover" new ways of looking or <em>scopes</em>, which reveal something essential about our situation, and perhaps even change our perception of it as a whole.</p>
+
 
<p>"Reality" is always more complex than our models. To be able to "comprehend" it and act, we must be able to simplify. The <em>big</em> point here is that the simplification we are proposing is a radical alternative to simplification by reducing the world to a <em>single</em> image—and ignoring whatever fails to fit in. This simplification is legitimate <em>by design</em>. The appropriate response to it (within the proposed <em>paradigm</em>) is <em>dialog</em>, not discussion—as we shall see next.</p>
+
<p> An education that prepares us only for traditional professions, once in a lifetime, is an obvious obstacle to <em>systemic</em> change. Collaborology implements an education that is in every sense flexible (self-guided, life-long...), and in an <em>emerging</em> area of interest (collaborative knowledge work, as enabled by new technology). By being collaboratively created itself (Collaborology is created and taught by a network of international experts, and offered to learners world-wide), the economies of scale result that <em>dramatically</em> reduce effort. This in addition provides a sustainable business model for developing and disseminating up-to-date knowledge in <em>any</em> domain of interest. By conceiving the course as a design project, where everyone collaborates on co-creating the learning resources, the students get a chance to exercise their "human quality". This in addition gives the students an essential role in the resulting 'knowledge-work ecosystem' (as 'bacteria', extracting 'nutrients') .</p>  
<p>Or in other words—aiming to return power to knowledge, we shall say things that might sound preposterous, sensational, scandalous... Yet they won't be a single bit "controversial"—within the <em>order of things</em> we are proposing, and using. They are <em>ways of looking</em> that (as we'll carefully show) <em>must</em> be considered—so that the 'cracks' may be revealed. </p>
 
  
 
</div> </div>  
 
</div> </div>  
  
  
-------
+
<div class="row">
 +
<div class="col-md-3"><h2>[[Holotopia:Collective mind|<em>Collective mind</em>]]</h2></div>
 +
<div class="col-md-7"><h3>Scope</h3>
 +
 
 +
<p>We have just seen that our evolutionary challenge and opportunity is to develop the capability to update our institutions or <em>systems</em>, to learn how to make them <em>whole</em>.</p>
 +
 
 +
<blockquote><b>Where</b>—with what system—shall we begin?</blockquote>
  
 +
<p>The handling of information, or metaphorically our society's 'headlights', suggests itself as the answer for several reasons. </p>
  
<div class="row">
+
<p>One of them is obvious: If we should use information as guiding light and not competition, our information will need to be different.</p>  
<div class="col-md-3"><h2>"Reality" is a basic human need</h2></div>
 
<div class="col-md-7"><h3>Aaron Antonovsky and salutogenesis</h3>
 
<p>Among the women who survived the Holocaust, about two thirds later developed a variety of psychosomatic problems. Aaron Antonovsky focused his research on the ones that didn't. He found out that what distinguished them was their greater "sense of coherence"—which he defined as "feeling of confidence that one's environment is predictable and that things will work out as well as can reasonably be expected". Today Antonovsky is considered an iconic progenitor of "salutogenesis"—the scientific study of conditions for and ways to health.</p>
 
<p>We mention Antonovsky to point to what is perhaps intuitively obvious: That a shared "reality" is a basic human need. Every social group provided its members with a <em>shared</em> "sense of coherence" (a predictable environment, a relatively stable role and "habitus" recognized by others, a shared way to comprehend the world...) But at what price!</p>  
 
  
</div> </div>  
+
<p>In his 1948 seminal "Cybernetics", Norbert Wiener pointed to another reason: In <em>social</em> systems, communication is what  <em>turns</em> a collection of independent individuals into a system. Wiener made that point by talking about ants and bees. It is the nature of the communication that determines a social system's properties, and behavior.  Cybernetics has shown—as its main point, and title theme—that "the tie between information and action" has an all-important role, which determines (Wiener used the technical keyword "homeostasis", but let us here use this more contemporary one) the <em>sustainability</em> of a system. The full title of Wiener's book was  "Cybernetics or Control and Communication in the Animal and the Machine". To be able to correct their behavior and maintain inner and outer balance, to be able to "change course" when the circumstances demand that, to be able to continue living and adapting and evolving—a system must have <em>suitable</em> communication and control.</p>  
  
 +
<h3>Diagnosis</h3>
  
<div class="row">
+
<p>That is presently <em>not</em> the case with our core systems; and with our civilization as a whole.</p>
<div class="col-md-3"><h2>Socialization determines our awareness</h2></div>
 
<div class="col-md-7"><h3>Antonio Damasio and Descartes' error</h3>
 
<p>The second main component of the <em>socialized reality</em> insight represents a major turning point from the self-image which the Enlightenment gave us, humans; and which served as the foundation for our democracy, legislature, ethics, culture...  Here too we represent a large body of research with the work of a single researcher—Antonio Damasio.</p>
 
<p>The point here—which Damasio deftly coded into the very title of his book "Descartes' Error"—is that we are not the rational decision makers, as the founding fathers of the Enlightenment made us believe. Damasio showed that the very contents of our rational mind (our priorities, and <em>what options</em> we are at all capable to conceive of and consider) are controlled by a cognitive filter, which is pre-rational and embodied.</p>
 
<p>Damasio's theory synergizes beautifully with Bourdieu's "theory of practice", to which it gives a physiological explanation.</p>
 
  
<h3>George Lakoff and philosophy in the flesh</h3>  
+
<blockquote>The tie between information and action has been severed, Wiener too observed. </blockquote>  
<p>Lakoff, a cognitive linguist, and Johnson, a philosopher, teamed up to give us a revision of philosophy, based on what the cognitive science found, under the title "philosophy in the flesh". The book's opening paragraphs, titled "How Cognitive Science Reopens Central Philosophical Questions", read:</p>  
+
<p>Our society's communication-and-control is broken; it needs to be restored.</p>
<blockquote>  
+
<p>
<p>The mind is inherently embodied.</p>  
+
[[File:Bush-Vision.jpg]]
 +
</p>
 +
<p>To make that point, Wiener cited an earlier work, Vannevar Bush's 1945 article "As We May Think", where Bush urged the scientists to make the task of revising <em>their</em> communication their <em>next</em> highest priority—the World War Two having just been won.</p>  
  
<p>Thought is mostly unconscious.</p>  
+
<blockquote>These calls to action remained, however, without effect.</blockquote>  
  
<p>Abstract concepts are largely metaphorical.</p>  
+
<p>"As long as a paradox is treated as a problem, it can never be dissolved," observed David Bohm. <em>Wiener too</em> entrusted his insight to the communication whose tie with action had been severed.</p>  
  
<p>These are three major findings of cognitive science. More than two millennia of a priori philosophical speculation about these aspects of reason are over. Because of these discoveries, philosophy can never be the same again.</p>  
+
<p>We have assembled a formidable collection of academic results that shared the same fate—to illustrate a general phenomenon we are calling [[Wiener's paradox|<em>Wiener's paradox</em>]]. The link between communication and action having been broken—the academic results will tend to be ignored <em>whenever they challenge the present "course"</em> and point to a new one!</p>
  
<p>When taken together and considered in detail, these three findings from the science of the mind are inconsistent with central parts of Western philosophy. They require a thorough rethinking of the most popular current approaches, namely, Anglo-American analytic philosophy and postmodernist philosophy.</p>  
+
<p>To an academic researcher, it may feel disheartening to see that so many best ideas of our best minds remained ignored.</p>  
  
</blockquote>  
+
<p>This sentiment is transformed into <em>holotopian</em> optimism when we look at 'the other side of the coin'—the creative frontier that is opening up. We are invited to, we are indeed <em>obliged</em> to reinvent <em>the systems in which we live and work</em>, by recreating the very communication that holds them together. Including, of course, our own, academic system, and the way in which it interoperates with other systems—<em>or fails</em> to interoperate. </p>
</div> </div>  
 
  
<div class="row">
+
<p>Optimism will turn into enthusiasm, when we consider also <em>this</em> widely ignored fact:</p>  
<div class="col-md-3"><h2>"Reality" is a product of <em>socialization</em></h2></div>
 
<div class="col-md-7"><h3>Bourdieu's "theory of practice"</h3>
 
<p>We have now come to the first of the three main components of the <em>socialized reality</em> insight—that what we consider "reality" is really a product of <em>socialization</em>. But what exactly does this mean? What is <em>socialization</em>?</p>
 
<p>While a wealth of academic insights may be drawn upon to illuminate this uniquely relevant idea, we here represent them all by the work of a single researcher, sociologist Pierre Bourdieu. His "theory of practice" <em>is</em> the theory of <em>socialization</em>. </p>
 
<p>Specifically, the meaning of Bourdieu's keyword <em>doxa</em> (which he adopted from Max Weber, and whose usage dates all the way back to Plato) points to an essential property of what we call <em>socialized reality</em>. Bourdieu used this <em>keyword</em> to point to the common <em>experience</em> that people had through the ages—that the societal <em>order of things</em> in which they lived was the <em>only</em> possible one. "Orthodoxy" implies that more than one are possible, but that only one ("ours") is the "right" one. <em>Doxa</em> ignores even the <em>possibility</em> of alternative options. </p>
 
<p>Two other Bourdieu's central <em>keywords</em>, "habitus", and "field", will provide us what we need to take along. Think of "habitus" as embodied predispositions to act and behave in a certain way. Think of "field" as something akin to a magnetic field, which deftly draws each person in a society to his or her "habitus". Instead of theorizing more, we provide an intuitive explanation in terms of a common situation, which is intended to serve as a parable.</p>
 
<p>From Bourdieu's theory, "reality" emerges as a structured 'turf'; each "habitus" ("king", "page", "cardinal" and so on) is a result of past structuring—and the starting point of new socialization into these roles; which can of course change with time, as results of future 'turf strife'.</p>  
 
  
<h3>What makes a real king real</h3>
+
<blockquote>The information technology we now use to communicate with the world was <em>created</em> to enable a paradigm change on that very frontier.</blockquote>  
<blockquote>The king enters the room and everyone bows. Naturally, you bow too. Even if you may not feel like doing that, deep inside you know that if you don't bow down your head, you may lose it.</blockquote>
 
<p>So what is it, really, that makes the difference between "a real king", and an imposter who "only believes" that he's a king? <em>Both</em> consider themselves as kings, and impersonate the corresponding "habitus". In the former case, however, <em>everyone else</em> has also been successfully socialized accordingly.</p>
 
<p>A "real king" will be treated with highest honors. An imposter will be incarcerated in an appropriate institution. Despite the fact that all too often, a single "real king" caused far more suffering and destruction than all the madmen and criminals combined.</p>
 
</div> </div>  
 
  
-------
+
<p>'Electricity', and the 'lightbulb', have already been created—<em>for the purpose of</em> giving our society the 'headlights' it needs.</p>
  
<div class="row">
+
<p>Vannevar Bush pointed to the need for this new paradigm already in his title, "As We May Think". His point was that "thinking" really means making associations or "connecting the dots". And that—given the vast volumes of our information—our knowledge work must be organized <em>in a way that enables us to benefit from each other's thinking</em>. Bush's point was that technology and processes must be devised to enable us to in effect "connect the dots" or think <em>together</em>, as a single mind does. He described a <em>prototype</em> system called "memex", which was based on microfilm as technology.</p>  
<div class="col-md-3"><h2>Key Point Dialog</h2></div>
 
<div class="col-md-7"><p>This <em>dialog</em> was one in a series of experiments, where we experimented with <em>dialog</em> as a means for igniting "a great cultural revival". The Bohm's circle was turned into a high-energy cyclotron. Provisions for spreading the <em>dialog</em> through the media were made. See the report.</p>
 
<p>An important point is to see the KPD as a set of evolving tactical tools.</p>
 
<p>The scheme is fault-tolerant, and there are no failures. A group of knowledgeable people talking about how to change, for instance, religion, is a prime spectacle, vastly surpassing anything that DT can provide the media. But a group of <em>homo ludens</em> characters attacking these views, or even just being unable to say or think anything that is not <em>within</em> the <em>paradigm</em>, can be an even <em>greater</em> spectacle. With proper camera work, and set in the right context, of course. This can act as a <em>mirror</em>—reflecting back how we are, what we've become. </p>
 
<p>Add Debategraph ++ — the use of new dialog mapping etc. tools — and you'll see a most wonderful playground, where our <em>collective mind</em> is being changed <em>as we speak</em>!</p>
 
</div> </div>  
 
  
 +
<p>Douglas Engelbart, however, took Bush's idea significantly further than Bush himself envisioned, and indeed in a whole new direction—by observing (in 1951!) that when each of us humans are connected to a personal digital device through an interactive interface, and when those devices are connected together into a network—then the overall result is that we are connected together as the cells in a human organism are connected by the nervous system. </p>
  
-------
+
<p>All earlier innovations in this area—the clay tablets <em>and</em> the printing press—required that a physical object with a message be <em>physically transported</em>.</p>  
<div class="row">
 
<div class="col-md-3"><h2><em>Socialization</em> and <em>symbolic action</em></h2></div>
 
<div class="col-md-7">
 
<p><em>Socialization</em> must be understood as a surrogate <em>epistemology</em>. We don't "know" because we've considered the data—but because we've been <em>socialized</em> to believe we know. </p>
 
<blockquote>During the past century we've learned to harness the power of... Now our task is to harness the power that's remain as largest—the power of our <em>socialization</em>. It is largest because it determines how all other powers will be used.</blockquote>
 
<p>We adopted the <em>symbolic action</em> <em>keyword</em> from Murray Edelman. It serves to point to a behavioral pattern—having been <em>socialized</em> to stay within certain limits of thought and behavior, and nonetheless seeing that something <em>must</em> be done, we act out our duties and fears in a <em>symbolic</em> way: We write a paper; we organize a conference.</p>
 
<p>We use <em>symbolic</em> as roughly an antonym to <em>systemic</em>: Impact, if it is to be real, must be able to affect our <em>systems</em>, that is, the <em>power structure</em>; not just do things within it.</p>
 
</div> </div>  
 
  
<div class="row">
+
<blockquote>This new technology allows us to "create, integrate and apply knowledge" <em>concurrently</em>, as cells in a human nervous system do.</blockquote>  
<div class="col-md-3"><h2><em>homo ludens</em> and <em>academia</em></h2></div>
 
<div class="col-md-7"><p>
 
<p>The <em>homo ludens</em> is the <em>socialized</em> human. Our shadow side. He's the <em>power structure</em> man. Adjusts to the field—gives it his power, and receives an illusion of power.</p>
 
<p>We once again emphasize that <em>homo ludens</em> and <em>homo sapiens</em> are not distinct things, our there; they are two perfect and abstract <em>scopes</em>, or ways of looking. Each of us humans has those two sides. The issue here is to <em>see</em> the other side, and to develop culture that helps us evolve as <em>homo sapiens</em>, not as <em>homo ludens</em>. </p>
 
<p>We don't need to do this—but it is interesting to imagine that the <em>homo ludens</em> was really what The Club of Rome was up against. And that what we call the <em>homo sapiens</em> re-evolution is what Peccei was calling for. In The Last Call trailer, there are TWO beautiful examples on record (SHOW THEM).</p>
 
<p>The <em>academia</em> is defined as "institutionalized academic tradition". We are proposing to update the <em>academia</em> by adding <em>knowledge federation</em> as field of interest and <em>praxis</em>. The point of this definition, and the stories that support it, is to go back to Socrates and Galilei, and show that <em>homo sapiens</em> evolution was what the academic tradition has really been about since its inception. </p>
 
<p>To make this even more clear, we talk about <em>homo ludens academicus</em>–a cultural subspecies, which according to ordinary logic should not even exist. The point is is to illuminate the question—whether the <em>ecology</em> of the contemporary <em>academia</em> (with its specific approach to education, "publish or perish" etc.)—is an ecology that favors the <em>homo ludens academicus</em> (which would mean that this institutionalization ha a 'crack', and needs to be repaired). </p>
 
</div> </div>  
 
 
  
-------
+
<p>We can now develop insights and solutions  <em>together</em>.</p>
  
<div class="row">
+
<p>Engelbart conceived this new technology as a necessary step toward becoming able to tackle the "complexity times urgency" of our problems, which he saw as growing at an accelerated rate. </p>  
<div class="col-md-3"><h2>Causal comprehension is <em>not</em> a reality test</h2></div>
 
<div class="col-md-7"><p>It takes only a moment of reflection to see just how much the "aha feeling"—when we understand how something may result as a consequence of known causes—has been elevated to the status of the reality test. But is it <em>really</em> that?</p>
 
<blockquote>
 
<p>The Enlightenment empowered the human reason to comprehend the world. Science taught us that women cannot fly on brooms—because that would violate some well established "natural laws". Innumerable prejudices and superstitions were dispelled.</p>
 
<p>But we've also thrown out the baby with the bathwater!</p>
 
</blockquote>  
 
  
 +
<p>[https://youtu.be/cRdRSWDefgw This three minute video clip], which we called "Doug Engelbart's Last Wish", will give us an opportunity for a pause and an illuminating reflection. Think about the prospects of improving the planetary <em>collective mind</em>. Imagine "the effects of getting 5% better", Engelbart commented with a smile. Then our old man put his fingers on his forehead, and raised his eyes up: "I've always imagined that the potential was... large..." The potential is not only large; it is <em>staggering</em>. The improvement that is both necessary and possible is <em>qualitative</em>—from a system that doesn't really work, to one that does.</p>
  
<p>At the 59th yearly meeting of the International Society for the Systems Sciences, whose title theme was "Governing the Anthropocene", a little old lady was wheeled to the podium in a wheelchair. She began her keynote by talking at length about how, while in the cradle, we throw our pacifier to the ground, and mother picks it up and gives it back to us; and we say "hum". </p>
+
<p>To Engelbart's dismay, our new "collective nervous system" ended up being used to only make the <em>old</em> processes and systems more efficient. The ones that evolved through the centuries of use of the printing press. The ones that <em>broadcast</em> information. </p>
<p>Mary Catherine Bateson is an American cultural anthropologist and cybernetician, the daughter of Margaret Mead and Gregory Bateson, two prominent historical figures in anthropology and cybernetics. The insight she undertook to bring home in this way is <em>alone</em> large enough to hold the <em>socialized reality</em> insight and the call to action it points to—if it can be understood. Her point was that from the cradle on we learn to comprehend and organize our world in terms of causes and effects—which makes us incapable of understanding things <em>truly</em>, that is <em>systemically</em>. Or to use the way of looking at our contemporary condition—from "seeing things whole" and "making things whole". And hence from "changing course".</p>
 
<p>Click  [https://youtu.be/nXQraugWbjQ?t=56 here] to hear Mary Catherine Bateson say, in her keynote to the American Society for Cybernetics:</p>
 
<blockquote>The problem of cybernetics is that it is <em>not</em> an academic discipline that belongs in a department. It is an attempt to correct an erroneous way of looking at the world and at knowledge in general. And there are all sorts of abstruse and sophisticated things that can be done with it, but on some level, what we would like is to affect what people think is common sense. Things that they take for granted, in fact are problematic: about causality; about purposes; about relationships... Universities don't have departments of epistemological therapy.
 
</blockquote>
 
<p>The problem we are talking about underlies each of the <em>five insights</em>—and hence is a key to <em>holotopia</em>. Isn't our "pursuit of happiness" misdirected by our misidentification of happiness with what appears to cause it—which we called <em>convenience</em>. And more generally, by our supposition that we <em>know</em> what goals are worth pursuing, because we can simply <em>feel</em> that. And in innovation—our ignoring of the structure of systems, and abandoning it to <em>power structure</em>. And in communication—our ignoring of the workings of our <em>collective mind</em>, and abandoning that too to <em>power structure</em>. And even our <em>socialized reality</em> is a result of our supposition that the "ana feeling" we experience when things (appear to) fit causally together as a sure sign that we've discovered the reality itself. And finally in method—which is consistently focused on finding for instance "disease causes" and eliminating them through chemical or surgical interventions and so on. </p>
 
</div> </div>  
 
  
<div class="row">
+
<p>  
<div class="col-md-3"><h2>Reason cannot know "reality"</h2></div>
+
[[File:Giddens-OS.jpeg]]
<div class="col-md-7">
 
<h3>Common sense is a product of experience</h3>
 
<p>
 
[[File:Oppenheimer–U.Sense.jpeg]]
 
 
</p>  
 
</p>  
<p>Even our common sense is a product of (our and our culture's) experience, with things such as pebbles and waves of water. We have no reason to believe that it will still work when applied to things that we <em>do not</em> have in experience, such as small quanta of matter—<em>and it doesn't</em>!. A complete argument, based on the double-slit experiment, is in Oppenheimer's essay "Uncommon Sense". </p>
 
  
<h3>"Reality" has no a priori structure</h3>  
+
<p>The above observation by Anthony Giddens points to the effects that our dazzled and confused <em>collective mind</em> had on our culture; and on "human quality".</p> 
<p>Indeed, when the insights reached in the last century's science and philosophy are taken into account, the reason is compelled to conclude that there is no "<em>the</em> reality" out there, waiting to be discovered. All we have to work with is human experience—of a world that, to our best knowledge, <em>has no</em> a priori structure.</p>  
+
 
<p>A piece of material evidence is Einstein's "epistemological credo", which we commented [http://kf.wikiwiki.ifi.uio.no/IMAGES#Einstein-Epistemology here].</p>  
+
<p>Our sense of meaning having been drowned in an overload of data, in a reality whose complexity is well beyond our comprehension—we have no other recourse but "ontological security". We find meaning in learning a profession, and performing in it a competitively.</p>
</div> </div>  
+
 
 +
<blockquote>But that is exactly what <em>binds us</em> to <em>power structure</em>!</blockquote> 
 +
 
 +
 
 +
<h3>Remedy</h3>  
 +
 
 +
<p><em>What is to be done</em>, to restore the severed link between communication and action?</p>
 +
<blockquote><em>How can we begin to change our collective mind</em>—as our technology enables, and our situation demands?</blockquote> 
 +
 
 +
<p>Engelbart left us a simple and clear answer: [[bootstrapping|<em>bootstrapping</em>]].</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>His point was that only <em>writing</em> about what needs to be done would not have an effect (the tie between information and action having been broken). <em>Bootstrapping</em> means that we consider ourselves as <em>parts</em> in a <em>collective mind</em>; and that we self-organize, and <em>act</em>, as it may best serve its restoration to <em>wholeness</em>.</p>
 +
 
 +
<blockquote>The key to solution is to either <em>create</em> new systems with the material of our own minds and bodies—or to <em>help others</em> do that.</blockquote>
 +
 
 +
<p>The Knowledge Federation <em>transdiscipline</em> was conceived by an act of <em>bootstrapping</em>, to enable <em>bootstrapping</em>. </p>  
 +
 
 +
<p>What we are calling <em>knowledge federation</em> is an umbrella term for a variety of activities and social processes that together comprise the functions of a <em>collective mind</em>. Obviously, the development of the <em>collective mind</em> [[paradigm|<em>paradigm</em>]] will requires a <em>system</em>, a new kind of institution, which will assemble and mobilize the required knowledge and human and other resources toward that end. Presently, Knowledge Federation is a complete <em>prototype</em> of the <em>transdiscipline</em> for <em>knowledge federation</em>, ready for inspection, co-creative updates and deployment.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>But may will have the requisit knowledge, and who may be given the power—to update our <em>collective mind</em>?</p>  
  
<div class="row">
+
<blockquote>The <em>praxis</em> of  <em>knowledge federation</em> itself must, of course, also be <em>federated</em>.</blockquote>   
<div class="col-md-3"><h2>"Reality" is the problem</h2></div>
 
<div class="col-md-7"><p>Let this redesign of Ronald Reagan's campaign slogan, which marked the beginning of an era, point to a remedial strategy and a <em>new</em> era.</p>
 
<p>The following excerpt from Berger and Luckmann's "Social Construction of Reality" is relevant:
 
<blockquote>  
 
  As more complex forms of knowledge emerge and an economic surplus is built up, experts devote themselves full-time to the subjects of their expertise, which, with the development of conceptual machineries, may become increasingly removed from the pragmatic necessities of everyday life. Experts in these rarefied bodies of knowledge lay claim to a novel status. They are not only experts in this or that sector of the societal stock of knowledge, they claim ultimate jurisdiction over that stock of knowledge in its totality. They are, literally, universal experts. This does not mean that they claim to know everything, but rather that they claim to know the ultimate significance of what everybody knows and does. Other men may continue to stake out particular sectors of reality, but they claim expertise in the ultimate definitions of reality as such.
 
</blockquote>
 
  
This theory about the nature of reality, then, becomes an instrument par excellence for legitimizing the given social reality:
+
<p>In 2008, when Knowledge Federation had its inaugural meeting, two closely related initiatives were formed: Program for the Future (a Silicon Valley-based initiative to continue and complete "Doug Engelbart's unfinished revolution") and Global Sensemaking (an international community of researchers and developers, working on technology and processes for collective sense making). </p>
<blockquote>  
+
<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.
+
[[File:BCN2011.jpg]]<br>
</blockquote>
+
<small>Paddy Coulter, Mei Lin Fung and David Price speaking at the 2011 An Innovation Ecosystem for Good Journalism workshop in Barcelona</small>
 +
</p>
 +
<p>We use the above triplet of photos ideographically, to highlight that Knowledge Federation is a true federation—where state of the art knowledge is combined in state of the art <em>systems</em>. The featured participants of our 2011 workshop in Barcelona, where our public informing <em>prototype</em> was created, are Paddy Coulter (the Director of Oxford Global Media and Fellow of Green College Oxford, formerly the Director of Oxford University's Reuter Program in Journalism) Mei Lin Fung (the founder of Program for the Future) and David Price (who co-founded both the Global Sensemaking R & D community, and Debategraph—which is now the leading global platform for collective thinking).  
 
</p>  
 
</p>  
</div> </div>
 
  
-------
+
<p>Other <em>prototypes</em> contributed other <em>design patterns</em> for restoring the severed link between information and action. The Tesla and the Nature of Creativity TNC2015 <em>prototype</em> showed what may constitute the <em>federation</em> of a research result—which is written in an esoteric academic vernacular, and has large potential general interest and impact. The first phase of this <em>prototype</em>, completed through collaboration between the author and our communication design team, turned the academic article into a multimedia object, with intuitive, metaphorical diagrams, and explanatory interviews with the author. The second phase was a high-profile, televised and live streamed event, where the result was made public. The third phase, implemented on Debategraph, modeled proper online collective thinking about the result—including pros and cons, connections with other related results, applications etc. </p>
 +
 
 +
<p>The Lighthouse 2016 <em>prototype</em> is a conceived as a <em>direct</em> remedy for the <em>Wiener's paradox</em>, created for and with the International Society for the Systems Sciences. This <em>prototype</em> models a system by which <em>an academic community</em> can federate a single core message into the public sphere. The message in this case was also relevant—it was whether or not we can rely on "free competition" to guide the evolution and the functioning of our <em>systems</em>; or whether we must use its alternative—the knowledge developed in the systems sciences. </p>
  
<div class="row">
 
<div class="col-md-3"><h2><em>Power structure</em></h2></div>
 
<div class="col-md-7"><blockquote>The <em>power structure</em> models the key political notions of the "enemy"; and of the "power holder". </blockquote>
 
<p>Related to the <em>power structure</em> insight we have already learned to perceive the <em>power structure</em> as "systems in which we live and work"—which determine our live ecology, our cultural ecosystem and (not the least) what the effects of our work will be. We now invite you to put also the <em>socialized reality</em> into this view.</p>
 
 
</div> </div>  
 
</div> </div>  
  
 
<div class="row">
 
<div class="row">
<div class="col-md-3"></div>
+
<div class="col-md-3"><h2>[[Holotopia:Socialized reality|<em>Socialized reality</em>]]</h2></div>
<div class="col-md-6"><p>The [[power structure|<em>power structure</em>]] was originally defined in that way—as a structure comprising power interests (represented by the dollar sign in the Power Structure <em>ideogram</em>), our ideas about the world (represented by the book) and our own condition or "human quality" (represented by the stethoscope). The resources we pointed to above may already suggest why—and a more complete explanation is provided in the literature of the [[power structure|<em>power structure</em>]] entry here. </p>  
+
<div class="col-md-7"><h3><em>Scope</em></h3>  
<p>The primary <em>power structure</em> in Galilei's time was, of course, represented by the synergy between the power of the kings and the worldview provided by the Church—and the consequences to people's wellbeing, or to "human quality", may be obvious. The interesting question is—how might the same basic relationship (or technically a <em>pattern</em>) be reproduced in our own time?</p>
+
<p>
<p>Who may be holding Galilei in house arrest <em>today</em>?</p>
+
<blockquote>"Act like as if you loved your children above all else",</blockquote>  
</div>
+
Greta Thunberg, representing her generation, told the political leaders at Davos. <em>Of course</em> political leaders love their children—don't we all? But what Greta was asking them to do was to 'hit the brakes'; and when the 'bus' they are believed to be 'driving' is inspected, it becomes clear that the 'brakes' too are missing. The job of a politician is to keep 'the bus on course' (the economy growing) for yet another four years. <em>Changing</em> the 'course' or the <em>system</em> is well beyond what they are able to do, or even imagine doing.</p>  
<div class="col-md-3">
 
[[File:Power Structure.jpg]]<br>
 
<small>Power Structure <em>ideogram</em></small>
 
</div> </div>  
 
  
 +
<p>The COVID-19 pandemic may require systemic changes <em>now</em>.</p>
  
<div class="row">
+
<blockquote><b>Who</b>—what institution or <em>system</em>—will take the leadership role, and guide us through our unprecedentedly immense creative and evolutionary challenges?</blockquote>   
<div class="col-md-3"><h2><em>Academia</em></h2></div>
 
<div class="col-md-7">
 
<blockquote><em>Academia</em> is institutionalized academic tradition.</blockquote>
 
<p>You have already seen that. Our reason to come back to this definition is to point to a subtlety, which sets the stage for the proposed <em>dialog</em>. </p>
 
<p>We have that our worldview can be shaped through <em>socialization</em> by <em>power structure</em>. But there is an alternative—to use reason, and knowledge and knowledge, to re-examine our beliefs; and to in that way <em>create</em> better and more solid ways to knowledge. And that is what "academic tradition" here stands for. Our references to Socrates and to Galilei as <em>academia</em>'s iconic figures are meant to re-emphasize that the academic tradition found its purpose, and drew its strength, from inspired individuals who dared to stand up to the <em>power structure</em> of the day, and by continuing the academic tradition bring the progress of knowledge, and of humanity, a step forward.</p>
 
<p>The question (to be asked and reflected on in front of the <em>mirror</em> is whether the contemporary <em>academia</em> is still institutionalizing the academic tradition?</p>
 
<p>Or has it become a (part of the) <em>power structure</em>—in a similar way as the Church was in Galilei's time?</p>
 
<p>Notice that the answer here is not either "yes" or "no". Our point is that we must look at our theme from <em>both</em> sides.</p>   
 
</div> </div>
 
  
 +
<p>Both Erich Jantsch and Doug Engelbart believed that "the university" would have to be the answer; and they made their appeals accordingly. But the universities ignored them—just as they ignored Vannevar Bush and Norbert Wiener before them, and so many others who followed. </p>
  
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<p>Why?</p>  
<div class="col-md-3"><h2><em>Dialog</em></h2></div>
 
<div class="col-md-7">
 
<p>We have introduced the <em>dialog</em> as a principle of communication. The association with the dialogs that Socrates had as his core activity, as recorded by Plato, was an obvious point. No less important was the subsequent work on this theme by David Bohm and others, the shoulders on which we stand to continue this work.</p>
 
<p>What we want to emphasize here as a subtle yet essential point is a wealth of tactical assets that the <em>dialog</em> as technique brings along. The central point here is that the <em>dialog</em> is not only a medium for creating knowledge, but also and above all the very functioning of our <em>collective mind</em>—and hence also the way to change it. Here tools like the Debategraph (...) need to be mentioned. But also judicious uses of the camera—whereby the breaches of the ethos of the <em>dialog</em> can be made clearly visible; and valuable feedback for bringing us back on track can be provided (...). </p>
 
</div> </div>  
 
  
 +
<p>Isn't the prospect of restoring agency to information and power to knowledge deserving of academic attention?</p>
  
 +
<p>It is tempting to conclude that the university institution followed the general trend, and evolved as a <em>power structure</em>. But to see solutions, we need to look at deeper causes.</p>
 +
<p>
 +
[[File:Toulmin-Vision2.jpeg]]
 +
</p>
  
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+
<p>We readily find them in the way in which the university institution <em>originated</em>.</p>  
<div class="col-md-3"><h2><em>Homo ludens</em></h2></div>
+
 
<div class="col-md-7">
+
<p>The academic tradition did not originate as a way to practical knowledge, but to <em>freely</em> pursue knowledge for its own sake; in a manner disciplined only by [[knowledge of knowledge|<em>knowledge of knowledge</em>]]—which philosophers have been developing since antiquity. Wherever this free-yet-disciplined pursuit of knowledge took us, we followed.</p>  
<p>Here's another way to summarize the above-mentioned resources: The Enlightenment has given us the <em>homo sapiens</em> self-identity. Which makes it all seem so deceptively easy—by making knowing our evolutionary birth right. We don't really need to <em>do</em> much in order to know...</p>  
 
<p>We update this flattering but distorted picture by pointing to another side: We can also evolve and act as <em>homo ludens</em>—who shuns knowledge, and simply learns what works and what doesn't from experience (or through <em>socialization</em>). The <em>homo ludens</em> does not care about overarching principles and purposes; he learns his various professional and social roles as one would learn the rules of a game, and performs in them competitively. </p>
 
<p>It is interesting to notice that the <em>homo sapiens</em> and the <em>homo ludens</em> represent two completely different ways to knowledge, and kinds of knowing. A consequence is that each of them may see himself as the epigone of evolution, and the other as going extinct. The <em>homo sapiens</em> looks at the data; the <em>homo ludens</em> just looks around...</p>
 
<p>And now a hint about setting the stage for the <em>dialogs</em>, by combining the conceptual 'technology' outlined here and the hardware technology: The producers of the trailer for The Last Call documentary (where some of the most interesting developments subsequent to The Club of Rome's more specific call to action are reported, voiced in their report "The Limits to Growth") gave us a couple of instances of the <em>homo ludens</em> on record:
 
<ul>
 
<li>A conversation between Dennis Meadows (representing the <em>homo sapiens</em> side) and an opponent, which begins [https://youtu.be/0141gupAryM?t=135 here]</li>
 
<li>Ronald Reagan wiping it all off, with a most simple (<em>homo ludens</em>) gesture, and a most charming smile, see it [https://youtu.be/0141gupAryM?t=94 here]</li>
 
</ul>
 
Yes, the <em>homo ludens</em> had no difficulty obstructing the re-evolution that The Club of Rome was trying to ignite. Can we learn from their experience, and do better?</p>
 
</div> </div>  
 
  
 +
<p>And as we pointed out in the opening paragraphs of this website, by highlighting the iconic image of Galilei in house arrest,
  
 +
<blockquote>it was this <em>free</em> pursuit of knowledge that led to the <em>last</em> "great cultural revival".</blockquote>
 +
</p>
  
 +
<p>We asked:
 +
<blockquote>Could a similar advent be in store for us today?</blockquote></p>
  
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+
<p>The key to the positive answer to this question—which is obviously central to <em>holotopia</em>—is in the <em>historicity</em> of "the relationship we have with knowledge"—which Stephen Toulmin explicated so clearly in his last book, "Reurn to Reason", from which the above quotation was taken. So that is what we here focus on.</p>
<div class="col-md-3"><h2>Prototype</h2></div>
 
<div class="col-md-7">
 
<p>As we have seen, <em>prototypes</em> are characteristic products of knowledge work on the other side of the <em>mirror</em>. The point here is to move knowledge workers and knowledge itself from 'the back seat', i.e. from its observer role, to 'the driver's seat'. By <em>federating</em> insights directly into <em>prototypes</em>, we give them a place in the world; and a power to make a difference.</p>  
 
</div> </div>
 
  
-------
+
<p>As Toulmin pointed out, at the time when the <em>contemporary</em> academic ethos was taking shape, it was the Church and the tradition that had the prerogative of telling the people how to conduct their daily affairs and what to believe in. And as the image of Galilei in house arrest may suggest—they held onto that prerogative most firmly! But the censorship and the prison could not stop an idea whose time had come. They were unable to prevent a completely <em>new</em> way of exploring the world to transpire from astrophysics, where it originated, and transform first our pursuit of knowledge in general—and then our society and culture at large.</p>
  
 +
<p>It is therefore natural that at the universities we consider the curation of this <em>approach</em> to knowledge to be our core role in our society. Being the heirs and the custodians of a tradition that has historically led to some of <em>the</em> most spectacular evolutionary leaps in human history, we remain faithful to that tradition. We do that by meticulously conforming to the methods and the themes of interests of mathematics, physics, philosophy, biology, sociology, philosophy and other traditional academic disciplines, which, we believe, <em>embody</em> the highest standards of that tradition. People can learn practical skills elsewhere. It is only at the <em>university</em> that they can acquire the highest standards of <em>knowledge of knowledge</em>—and the ability to pursue knowledge effectively in <em>any</em> domain.</p>
  
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<p>We must ask:</p>  
<div class="col-md-3"><h2>A vocabulary</h2></div>
 
<div class="col-md-7">
 
<p>Science was not an exception; <em>every</em> new paradigm brings with it a new way of speaking.</p>  
 
<p>The following collection of <em>keywords</em> will provide an alternative, and a bit more academic and precise entry point to <em>holoscope</em> and <em>holotopia</em>.</p>
 
  
<h3><em>Truth by convention</em> and <em>keywords</em></h3>
+
<blockquote>Can the academic tradition evolve still further? </blockquote>  
<p><em>Truth by convention</em> is the technical foundation of the <em>holoscope</em>; and the principle of operation of the 'lightbulb'. This principle can be easily understood by thinking of our usual, <em>traditional</em> usage of the language (where the meanings of concepts are inherited from the past and determined in advance) as 'candles'. <em>Truth by convention</em> allows us to give concepts completely <em>new</em> meaning; and by doing that, create completely <em>new</em> ways to see the world.</p>  
 
  
<p><em>Truth by convention</em> is the only truth that is possible in <em>holotopia</em>. </p>
+
<p>Can this tradition <em>once again</em> give us a completely <em>new</em> way to explore the world?</p>  
  
<p><em>Truth by convention</em> is the kind of truth that is common in mathematics; when we say "Let X be..." we are making a convention. It is meaningless to discuss whether <em>X</em> "really is" as defined.</p>
+
<p>Can the free pursuit of knowledge, curated by the <em>knowledge of knowledge</em>, once again lead to "a great cultural revival" ?</p>
  
<p><em>Truth by convention</em> is a way to liberate our language and ideas from the bondage of tradition. It provides us an Archimedean point for changing our worldview—and 'moving the world'.</p>  
+
<blockquote>Can "a great cultural revival" <em>begin</em> at the university?</blockquote>  
  
<p>Just like everything else here, <em>truth by convention</em> is a result of <em>knowledge federation</em>:  [[Willard Van Orman Quine]] identified the transition from traditional <em>reification</em> to <em>truth by convention</em> as a way in which scientific fields <em>tend to</em> enter a more mature phase of evolution. </p>
 
  
<p>The <em>keywords</em> are concepts defined by convention. Until we find a better way, we distinguish them by writing them in italics.</p>  
+
<h3>Diagnosis</h3>
  
<p>It must be emphasized that while the complexities and the subtleties of the world and the human experience are always beyhond what we can communicate, the <em>keywords</em>, being defined by convention, can have completely <em>precise</em> meanings. They are instruments of abstraction; we can use them to develop theories—even about themes that are intrinsically ambiguous or vague.</p>
 
  
<h3><em>Scope</em> and <em>view</em></h3> 
+
<blockquote>In the course of our modernization, we made a <em>fundamental</em> error.</blockquote>
<p>Defined by convention, <em>keywords</em> become ways of looking or <em>scopes</em>. <em>Scopes</em> have a central role in the approach to knowledge modeled by the <em>holoscope</em>. </p>
 
<p>When we, for instance, say that "<em>culture</em> is <em>cultivation</em> of <em>wholeness</em>", we are not claiming that culture "really is that". We are only defining a way of looking at "culture". We are saying "see if you can see culture (also) in this way". </p>
 
</div> </div>  
 
  
 +
<p>From the traditional culture we adopted a <em>myth</em> far more disruptive of modernization than the creation myth—that "truth" means "correspondence with reality"; and that the purpose of information, and of our pursuit of knowledge, is to "know the reality" objectively, as it truly is. It may take a moment of reflection to see how much this <em>myth</em> permeates our popular culture, our society and institutions; how much it marks "the relationship we have with information"—in all its various manifestations.</p>
  
<div class="row">
+
<p>This fundamental error has subsequently been detected and reported, but not corrected. (We again witness that the link between information and action has been severed.)</p>  
<div class="col-md-3"></div>
 
<div class="col-md-6">
 
<p>The Holoscope <em>ideogram</em> serves to explain the role this has in the inner workings of the <em>holoscope</em>. If one should inspect a hand-held cup, to see whether it is cracked or whole, one must be able to look at it from all sides; and perhaps also bring it closer to inspect some detail, and take it further away and see it as a whole. The control over the <em>scope</em> is what enables the <em>holoscope</em> to make a difference.</p
 
</div>
 
<div class="col-md-3">
 
[[File:Holoscope.jpeg]]<br>
 
<small>Holoscope <em>ideogram</em></small>
 
</div> </div>  
 
  
<div class="row">
 
<div class="col-md-3"></div>
 
<div class="col-md-7">
 
<p>To be able to say that a cup is whole, one must see it from all sides. To see that a cup is broken, it is enough to show a  <em>single</em> angle of looking. Much of the art of using the <em>holoscope</em> will be in finding and communicating uncommon ways of looking at things, which reveal their 'cracks' and help us correct them. </p>
 
<p>
 
The difference between the <em>paradigm</em> modeled by the <em>holoscope</em> and the traditional science can easily be understood if one considers the difference in the purpose, or <em>epistemology</em>. When our goal is to "see things whole", so that we can make them whole, a discovery of a way of looking that reveals where a 'crack' might exist, <em>although we might not</em> (yet) <em>be able to see it</em>, can be a valuable contribution to knowledge, as a warning to take precaution measures against the potential consequences of an undetected 'crack'. In science, on the other hand, where our goal is to discover only the most solid 'bricks', with which we can construct the edifice of a "scientific reality picture"—such ways of looking and hypothetical 'cracks' are considered worthless, and cannot even be reported.</p>
 
 
<p>  
 
<p>  
Human lives are in question, <em>very many</em</em> human lives; and indeed more, <em>a lot</em> more. The task of creating the 'headlights' that can illuminate a safe and sane course to our civilization is not to be taken lightly. An easy but central point here is that this task demands that information be <em>federated</em>, not ignored (when it fails to fit our "reality picture", and the way we go about creating it).
+
[[File:Einstein-Watch.jpeg]]
 
</p>
 
</p>
<p>Here is a subtlety—whose importance for what we are about to propose, and for paving the road to <em>holotopia</em>, cannot be overrated. We will here be using the usual manner of speaking, and make affirmative statements, of the kind "this is how the things are". Such statements need to be interpreted, however, in the way that's intended—namely as <em>views</em> resulting from <em>specific</em> scopes. A <em>view</em> is offered as <em>sufficiently</em> fitting the data (the <em>view</em> really serves as a kind of a mnemonic device, which engages our faculties of abstraction and logical thinking to condense messy data to a simple and coherent point of view)—within a given <em>scope</em>. Here the <em>scopes</em> serve as projection planes in projective geometry. If a <em>scope</em> shows a 'crack', then this 'crack' needs to be handled, within the <em>scope</em>—regardless of what the other <em>scopes</em> are showing.</p>
+
<p><em>It is simply impossible</em> to open up the 'mechanism of nature', and verify that our ideas and models <em>correspond</em> to the real thing!</p>  
<p>Hence a new kind of "result", which the <em>holoscope</em> makes possible—to "discover" new ways of looking or <em>scopes</em>, which reveal something essential about our situation, and perhaps even change our perception of it as a whole.</p>
 
<p>"Reality" is always more complex than our models. To be able to "comprehend" it and act, we must be able to simplify. The <em>big</em> point here is that the simplification we are proposing is a radical alternative to simplification by reducing the world to a <em>single</em> image—and ignoring whatever fails to fit in. This simplification is legitimate <em>by design</em>. The appropriate response to it (within the proposed <em>paradigm</em>) is <em>dialog</em>, not discussion—as we shall see next.</p>
 
<p>Or in other words—aiming to return knowledge to power, we shall say things that might sound preposterous, sensational, scandalous... Yet they won't be a single bit "controversial"—within the <em>order of things</em> we are proposing, and using. It may require a moment of thought to understand this fully.</p>  
 
  
<h3><em>Gestalt</em> and <em>dialog</em></h3>
+
<blockquote>The "reality", the 20th century's scientists and philosophers found out, is not something we discover; it is something we <em>construct</em>. </blockquote>  
</div> </div>  
 
  
<div class="row">
+
<p>This "social construction of reality" is a result of complex interaction between our cognitive organs and our culture. From the cradle to the grave, through innumerably many 'carrots and sticks', we are <em>socialized</em> to organize and communicate our experience <em>in a certain specific way</em>. </p>
<div class="col-md-3"></div>
 
<div class="col-md-6">
 
<p>When I type "worldviews", my word processor signals an error; in the <em>traditional</em> order of things, there is only one single "right" way to see the world—the one that "corresponds to reality". In the <em>holoscope</em> order of things we talk about <em>multiple</em> ways to interpret the data, or multiple <em>gestalts</em> (see the Gestalt <em>ideogram</em> on the right).</p>
 
<p>A canonical example of a <em>gestalt</em> is "our house is on fire"; in the approach to knowledge modeled by the <em>holoscope</em>, having a <em>gestalt</em> that is appropriate to one's situation is tantamount to being <em>informed</em>.</p> </div>
 
<div class="col-md-3">
 
[[File:Gestalt.gif]]<br>
 
<small>Gestalt <em>ideogram</em></small>
 
</div> </div>
 
 
 
<div class="row">
 
<div class="col-md-3"></div>
 
<div class="col-md-7">
 
<p>As the Gestalt <em>ideogram</em> might illustrate, the human mind has a tendency to "grasp" one <em>gestalt</em>, and resist others. The <em>dialog</em> is an attitude in communication where we deliberately aim to overcome that tendency. In the <em>holoscope</em>, the <em>dialog</em> plays a similar role as the attitude of an "objective observer" does in traditional science. </p>
 
<p>We practice the <em>dialog</em> when we undertake to suspend judgement, and make ourselves open to new and uncommon ways of seeing things.</p>
 
<p>Our conception and <em>praxis</em> of the <em>dialog</em> are, of course, also <em>federated</em>. Socrates, famously, practiced the dialog, and gave impetus to <em>academia</em>. David Bohm gave the <em>praxis</em> of dialog a more nuanced and contemporary meaning.</p>  
 
  
<h3><em>Wholeness</em></h3>
+
<blockquote>The <em>socialized reality</em> construction has has served as the 'DNA', which enabled the traditional cultures to reproduce themselves and evolve.</blockquote>  
<p>We define <em>wholeness</em> as the quality that distinguishes a healthy organism, or a well-configured and well-functioning machine. <em>Wholeness</em> is, more simply, the condition or the order of things which is, from an <em>informed</em> perspective, worthy of being aimed for and worked for.</p>
 
<p>The idea of <em>wholeness</em> is illustrated by the bus with candle headlights. The bus is not <em>whole</em>. Even a tiny piece can mean a world of difference. </p>
 
<p>A subtle but important distinction needs to be made: While the <em>wholeness</em> of a mechanism is secured by just all its parts being in place, cultural and human <em>wholeness</em> are <em>never</em> completed; there is always more that can be discovered, and aimed for. This makes the notion of <em>wholeness</em> especially suitable for motivating <em>cultural revival</em> and <em>human development</em>, which is our stated goal.</p>  
 
  
<h3><em>Tradition</em> and <em>design</em></h3>
+
<p>Information, in other words, <em>has</em> traditionally served as 'headlights'; the purpose of the traditional myths was not to tell the people how the world really originated—but to serve as foundation for principles and norms, which oriented their behavior; and the development of "human quality".</p>  
<p><em>Tradition</em> and <em>design</em> are two alternative ways to <em>wholeness</em>. <em>Tradition</em> relies on Darwinian-style evolution; <em>design</em> on awareness and deliberate action. When <em>tradition</em> can no longer be relied on, <em>design</em> must be used.</p>
 
<p>In a more detailed explanation, we would quote [[Holotopia: Anthony Giddens|Anthony Giddens]], as the <em>icon</em> of <em>design</em> and <em>tradition</em>, to show that our contemporary condition can be understood as a precarious transition from one way of evolving to the next. We are no longer <em>traditional</em>; and we are not yet <em>designing</em>. Which is, of course, what the Modernity <em>ideogram</em> is pointing to.</p>  
 
  
<h3><em>Socialization</em> and <em>epistemology</em></h3>
+
<p>Information, however, and <em>socialization</em>, have always served also a different purpose—as instruments of power, by which the power relationships were maintained. They have been not only core elements of culture—but also of the <em>power structure</em>.</p>  
<p>Although these two <em>keywords</em> are not exactly antonyms, we here present them as two alternative means to the same end. Aside from what we can see and experience ourselves—what can make us trust that something is "true" (worthy of being believed and acted on)? Through innumerably many subtle 'carrots and sticks', often in our formative age when our critical faculties are not yet developed, we may be <em>socialized</em> to accept something as true. <em>Epistemology</em>—where we use reasoning, based on <em>knowledge of knowledge</em>, is the more rational or academic alternative.</p>
 
<p>Pierre Bourdieu here plays the role of an <em>icon</em>. His <em>keyword</em> "doxa", whose academic usage dates back all the way to Plato, points to the <em>experience</em> that what we've been <em>socialized</em> to accept as "the reality" is the <em>only</em> one possible. Bourdieu contributed a complete description of the social mechanics of <em>socialization</em>. He called it "theory of practice", and used it to explain how subtle <em>socialization</em> may be used as an instrument of power. To the red thread of our <em>holotopia</em> story, these two <em>keywords</em> contribute a way in which (metaphorically speaking) Galilei could be held in "house arrest" even when no visible means of censorship or coercion are in place.</p>  
 
  
<h3><em>Reification</em> and <em>design epistemology</em></h3>
+
<p>In "Social Construction of Reality", Berger and Luckmann left us an analysis of the social process by which the reality is constructed—and pointed to the role that "universal theories" (which determine the relationship we have with information) play in maintaining a given social and political status quo. An example, but not the only one, is the Biblical worldview of Galilei's persecutors.</p>  
<p>By considering the available <em>knowledge of knowledge</em> (or metaphorically, by self-reflecting in front of the <em>mirror</em>), we become aware that <em>reification</em> — the axiom that the purpose of information is to show us "the reality as it truly is" (and the corresponding <em>reification</em> of our institutions, knowledge-work processes and models) can no longer be rationally defended. And that, on the other hand, our society's vital need is for <em>effective information</em>, the one that will fulfill in it certain vitally important roles. The <em>design epistemology</em> is a convention, according to which <em>information</em> is an essential piece in a larger whole or wholes—and must be created, evaluated, treated and used accordingly. That is, of course, what the bus with candle headlights is also suggesting.</p>
 
<p>The <em>design epistemology</em> is the crux of our proposal. It means considering knowledge work institutions, tools and professions as systemic elements of larger systems; instead of <em>reifying</em> the status quo (as one would naturally do in a <em>traditional</em> culture).</p>
 
<p>The <em>design epistemology</em> is the <em>epistemology</em> that suits a culture that is no longer <em>traditional</em>. </p>
 
<p>The <em>design epistemology</em> is a convention that defines the new "relationship with knowledge", which constitutes the core of our proposal.</p>
 
<p>Notice that <em>design epistemology</em> is not another <em>reification</em>. This <em>epistemology</em> is completely independent of or 'orthogonal to' whether we believe in "objective truth" etc. The <em>design epistemology</em> provides us a foundation for truth and meaning that is <em>independent</em> of all <em>reifications</em>. </p>  
 
 
  
<h3><em>Prototype</em></h3>
+
<p>To organize and sum up what we above all need to know about the <em>nature</em> of <em>socialization</em>, and about the relationship between power and culture, we created the Odin–Bourdieu–Damasio [[thread|<em>thread</em>]], consisting of three short real-life stories or [[vignette|<em>vignettes</em>]]. (The <em>thread</em> is an adaptation of Vannevar Bush's technical idea for organizing collective mind work, which he called "trail".) </p>  
<p>A <em>prototype</em> is a characteristic "result" that follows from the <em>design epistemology</em>. </p>
 
<p>When <em>Information</em> is no longer conceived of as an "objective picture of reality", but an instrument to interact with the world around us—then <em>information</em> cannot be only results of observing the world; it cannot be confined to  academic books and articles. The <em>prototypes</em> serve as models, as experiments, and as interventions.</p>
 
<p>The <em>prototypes</em> give agency to information.</p>
 
<p><em>Prototypes</em> also enable <em>knowledge federation</em>—a <em>transdiscipline</em> is organized around a <em>prototype</em>, to keep it consistent with the state of the art of knowledge in the participating disciplines.</p>  
 
  
<h3><em>Holoscope</em>, <em>holotopia</em> and <em>knowledge federation</em></h3>
+
<p>The first, Odin the Horse [[vignette|<em>vignette</em>]], points to the nature of turf struggle, by portraying the turf behavior of horses. </p>  
<p>The following must to be emphasized and understood:
 
<blockquote>
 
What we are proposing is a process—and not any particular result, or implementation, of that process.
 
</blockquote>
 
<em>Everything</em> here are just <em>prototypes</em>—both because everything here serves to illustrate the process; <em>and</em> because the nature of this process is such that everything is in continued evolution. The point of <em>knowledge federation</em> is that both the way we see and understand things, and the way we act etc., is in constant evolutionary flow, to reflect the relevant information.</p>
 
<p><em>Holoscope</em> is a <em>prototype</em> of a handling of information where knowledge is <em>federated</em>. <em>holotopia</em> is a <em>prototype</em> of a societal order of things that results. </p>
 
<p>And so <em>holoscope</em> may be considered a <em>scope</em>; and <em>holotopia</em> the resulting <em>view</em></p>
 
  
<h3><em>Elephant</em></h3>
+
<p>The second <em>vignette</em>, featuring Pierre Bourdieu as leading sociologist, shows that we humans exhibit a similar behavior—and that our culture may be perceived as a complex 'turf'.</p>  
<p>
 
[[File:Elephant.jpg]]<br>
 
<small>Elephant <em>ideogram</em></small>
 
</p>
 
 
<p>
 
<p>
Let us conclude by putting all of these pieces together, into a big-picture view.  
+
[[File:Bourdieu-insight.jpeg]]
 
</p>
 
</p>
<p>
+
<p>Bourdieu used interchangeably two keywords—"field" and "game"—to refer to this 'turf'. By calling it a field, he portrayed it as something akin to  a magnetic field, which orients our seemingly random or "free" behavior, without us noticing. By calling it a game, he portrayed it as something that structures or "gamifies" our social existence, by giving each of us certain "action capabilities" (which Bourdieu called "habitus"), pertaining to a role, which tends to be transmitted from body to body <em>directly</em>. Everyone bows to the king, and we do that too. With time, we become <em>socialized</em> to accept those roles and behaviors as <em>the</em> "reality". Bourdieu called this experience (that our social reality is as immutable and real as the physical reality) <em>doxa</em>. </p>
Let's talk about <em>empowering</em> cultural heritage, and knowledge workers, to make the kind of difference that Peccei was calling for. That's what the Elephant <em>ideogram</em> stands for.</p>  
+
 
<p>The structuralists attempted to give rigor (in the old-paradigm understanding of rigor) to the study of cultural artifacts. The post-structuralists <em>deconstructed</em> this attempt—by arguing that writings of historical thinkers, and cultural artifacts in general, <em>have no</em> "real" interpretation. And that they are, therefore, subject to <em>free</em> interpretation.</p>
+
<p>The third story, featuring Antonio Damasio in the role of a leading cognitive neuroscientist, completes this <em>thread</em> by explaining that we, humans, are <em>not</em> the rational decision makers, as the founding fathers of the Enlightenment made us believe. Each of us has an <em>embodied</em> cognitive filter, which <em>determines what options</em> we are able to rationally consider. This cognitive filter is <em>programmed</em> through <em>socialization</em>. Damasio's insight allows us to understand why we civilized humans don't rationally <em>consider</em> taking off our clothes and walking into the street naked; and that for <em>cognitively similar reasons</em> we don't consider changing <em>the systems in which we live and work</em>.</p>
<p>Our information, and our cultural heritage in general, is like Humpty Dumpty after the great fall—<em>nobody</em> can put it back together! That is, <em>within the old paradigm</em>, of course. </p>
+
 
<p>But there is a solution: We consider the visionary thinkers of the present and the past as those proverbial blind-folded men touching an elephant. We hear one of them talk about "a fan", another one about "a water hose", and yet another one about "a tree trunk". They don't make sense, and we ignore them.</p>  
+
<blockquote><em>Socialized reality</em> constitutes a <em>pseudo-epistemology</em>.</blockquote>
<p>Everything changes when we understand that what they are really talking about are the ear, the trunk and the leg of the big animal—which, of course, metaphorically represents the emerging <em>paradigm</em>! Suddenly it all not only makes sense—but it becomes a new kind of spectacle. A <em>real</em> one!</p>  
+
 
<p>In an academic context, we might talk, jokingly about post-post-structuralism. The <em>elephant</em> (as metaphor) is pointing to a way to empower academic workers to make a dramatic practical difference, in this time of need—while making their work <em>even</em> more rigorous; and academic!</p>  
+
<p>We can "know" something because we've been <em>socialized</em> to "know" it; and because the people around us "know" it too.</p>  
</div> </div>
+
 
 +
<p>The <em>socialized reality</em> insight adds substantial explanatory power to the <em>power structure</em> insight. We can now understand <em>why</em> we can be socialized to accept any societal order of things as just "reality". </p>
 +
 
 +
 
 +
<p>The <em>socialized reality</em> insight, which we have so far only touched upon, delineates and opens up a truly <em>wonderful</em> creative frontier—where three realms that are usually considered as independent are inextricably intertwined: culture, power and <em>epistemology</em> ("the relationship we have with information"). It is here that we can truly understand why "a great cultural revival" is possible—and see all the wonderful things that can be done to help it emerge. </p> 
 +
 
 +
<p>As an <em>understandable</em> consequence of historical circumstances, as Toulmin showed, our hitherto modernization has ignored these subtleties—and we've assumed that (1) the purpose of information is to mirror reality and (2) the traditions got it all wrong.  The consequences are far reaching and central to <em>holotopia</em>. </p>
 +
 
 +
<ul>  
 +
<li><b>Severed link between information and action</b>. The (perceived) purpose of information being to complete the 'reality puzzle'—every new piece appears to be as relevant as others, and <em>necessary</em> for completing the 'puzzle'. In the sciences <em>and</em> in the media, enormous quantities of information are produced "disconnected from usefulness"—as Neil Postman diagnosed. </li> 
 +
<li><b>Stringent limits to creativity</b>. A vast global army of selected, trained and publicly sponsored creative people are obliged to confine their repertoire of creative action to producing research articles in traditional academic fields. </li>  
 +
<li><b>Loss of cultural heritage</b>. A trivial observation will suffice to make a point: With the threat of eternal fire on the one side, and the promise of heavenly pleasures on the other, a 'field' was created that oriented people's ethical sense and behavior. To see that the ancient myths were, however, only a tip of an iceberg (a small part of a complex ecosystem whose purpose was to develop "human quality") this one-minute thought experiment—an imaginary visit to a cathedral—might be helpful: There is awe-inspiring architecture; Michelangelo's Pietà meets the eye, and his frescos are near by. Allegri's Miserere reaches us from above. And there's of course also the ritual. All this comprises an ecosystem—in which the emotions of awe and respect make one open to practicing and learning. By its complex dynamics, it resembles our biophysical environment—but there is a notable difference: There we have nothing equivalent to the temperature and CO2 measurements, to be able to diagnose problems and propose remedies. </li>
 +
<li><b>"Human quality" abandoned to <em>power structure</em></b>. Advertising is everywhere. And <em>explicit</em> advertising too is only a tip of an iceberg, the bulk of which consists of a variety of ways in which "symbolic power" is used to <em>socialize</em> us in ways that suit the <em>power structure</em> interests. Scientific techniques are used; [https://youtu.be/lOUcXK_7d_c the story of Edward Bernays], Freud's American nephew who became "the pioneer of modern public relations and propaganda", is iconic.</li>
 +
<li><b><em>Reification</em> of institutions</b>. Even when they cause us problems, and make us incapable of solving them.</li>
 +
</ul> 
 +
 
 +
<p>This conclusion suggests itself.</p>
 +
 
 +
<blockquote>The Enlightenment did not liberate us from power-related reality construction, as it is believed.</blockquote>  
 +
 
 +
<blockquote>Our <em>socialization</em> only changed hands—from the kings and the clergy, to the corporations and the media.</blockquote>
 +
 
 +
<p>Ironically, our carefully cultivated academic self-identity—as "objective observers of reality"—keeps us on the 'back seat'; we diagnose problems—but we cannot <em>federate</em> solutions.</p>
 +
 
 +
<h3>Remedy</h3>
 +
 
 +
<p>We have already seen the remedy.</p>
 +
 
 +
<blockquote>The remedy is to change the relationship we have with information.</blockquote>
 +
 
 +
<p>To consider information as <em>the</em> core element of our <em>systems</em>; and to adapt it to the functions that need to be served.</p>  
 +
 
 +
<p>In the spirit of the <em>holoscope</em>, we condensed the <em>fundamental</em> part of this argument by a metaphorical image, the Mirror <em>ideogram</em>. This <em>ideogram</em> renders the essence of the <em>academic</em> situation we are in.</p>  
 +
 
 +
<p>The Mirror [[ideogram|<em>ideogram</em>]] invites us to interrupt what we are doing and self-reflect—as Socrates used to invite his contemporaries, at the Academia's point of inception.</p>  
  
<!-- CUTS
 
  
<p>The Information <em>idogram</em>, shown on the right, shows how the information resulting from <em>knowledge federation</em> is to be different. </p>
 
 
</div> </div>  
 
</div> </div>  
  
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<div class="col-md-3"></div>
 
<div class="col-md-3"></div>
 
<div class="col-md-6">
 
<div class="col-md-6">
<p>The <em>ideogram</em> shows an "i", which stands for "information", as composed of a circle placed on top of a square. The square stands for the details; and also for looking at a theme of choice from all sides, by using diverse <em>kinds of</em> sources and resources. The circle, or the dot on the "i", stands for the function or the point of it all. That might be an insight into the nature of a situation; or a rule of thumb, pointing to a general way to handle situations of a specific kind; or a project, which implements such handling.</p>  
+
 
 +
<p>This self-reflection leads us to two insights.</p>
 +
 
 +
<blockquote>We are compelled to abolish <em>reification</em>.</blockquote>
 +
 
 +
<p>When we look at a mirror, we see ourselves <em>in the world</em>. We are not <em>above</em> the world, observing it "objectively". The disciplinary interests, methods and institutions are not something that objectively existed, which our predecessors only discovered. They <em>created</em> them—in certain historical circumstances. Hence it is academically legitimate to create new ones.</p>
 +
 
 +
<blockquote>We are compelled to embrace <em>accountability</em>.</blockquote>
 +
 
 +
<p>The world we see ourselves in, when we look at the <em>mirror</em>, is a world in dire need—for <em>new</em> ideas, new ways of thinking and being. We see that, by virtue of the role we have in that world, we hold the very key to its transformation.</p>  
 
</div>  
 
</div>  
 
<div class="col-md-3">
 
<div class="col-md-3">
[[File:Information.jpg]]
+
<p>
<small>Information <em>ideogram</em></small>  
+
[[File:Mirror2.jpg]]<br>
 +
<small>Mirror <em>ideogram</em></small>
 +
</p>  
 
</div> </div>  
 
</div> </div>  
 
 
<div class="row">
 
<div class="row">
 
<div class="col-md-3"></div>
 
<div class="col-md-3"></div>
 
<div class="col-md-7">
 
<div class="col-md-7">
<p>By showing the circle as being founded on the square, the Information <em>ideogram</em> points to <em>knowledge federation</em> as a social process (the 'principle of operation' of the socio-technical 'lightbulb'), by which the insights, principles, strategic handling and whatever else may help us understand and take care of our increasingly complex world are kept consistent with each other, and with the information we own. </p>
 
<p><em>Knowledge federation</em> is itself a result of <em>knowledge federation</em>: We draw core insights about handling information from the sciences, communication design, journalism... And we weave them into technical solutions. See, for instance, [[Richard Feynman|this excerpt]] from Richard Feynman's book "The Character of Phyhsical Law", where what we call <em>knowledge federation</em> is described and pointed to as the very essence of the scientific approach to knowledge.</p>
 
</div> </div>
 
  
--------------
+
<p>We are then also compelled to ask:</p>
  
<h3>An anomaly</h3>
+
<blockquote>How can we be accountable in our new social role, without sacrificing the academic rigor—which has been <em>the</em> distinguishing trait of our tradition?</blockquote>  
<p>Already we can observe that this event constitutes an interesting anomaly with respect to the <em>paradigm</em> we are proposing (in the sense in which Thomas Kuhn used this term, namely as something that demands a new paradigm, and drives its emergence).  Why did our institutions <em>ignore</em> Peccei's call to action? Why did the core question (illuminating the way our civilization has taken) at all <em>require</em> a "club"; why wasn't it handled within the rougine operation of our society's institutions?</p>
 
<p>Isn't this <em>alone</em> already sufficient evidence that we are 'driving' into the future 'in the light of a pair of candles'?</p>
 
  
-----------------
+
<p>The answer offers itself as an unexpected result of our metaphorical <em>self-reflection</em>:</p>
  
 +
<blockquote>We can walk right <em>through</em> the <em>mirror</em>!</blockquote>
  
XXXXXXX
+
<p>This takes only two steps.</p>
  
 +
<p>The first is to use what philosopher Villard Van Orman Quine called "truth by convention"—which we adapted as one of our <em>keywords</em>.</p> 
 
<p>
 
<p>
The simple idea is that once again—just as the case was at the dawn of the Enlightenment, when Galilei was in house arrest—a fundamental change in the relationship we have with information is the natural way to "change course". We show, however, that this course change in handling knowledge is not a departure from the academic approach to knowledge, but the natural way to resume its evolution. When establishing this new <em>paradigm</em> in knowledge work, we are facing a large challenge which is a paradox—to establish a new <em>paradigm</em> solidly on the terrain of the existing one. We do that by relying on a single axiom or principle:
+
[[File:Quine–TbC.jpeg]]
 +
</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>Quine opened "Truth by Convention" by observing:</p>  
 
<blockquote>  
 
<blockquote>  
Knowledge must be <em>federated</em>!
+
"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>
 
</blockquote>
To legitimately be able to say that we "know" something, we must first verify that it's compatible with other knowledge, and with available data. Our principle demands that information should not be simply ignored (because it belongs to another discipline; or another religion; or because it <em>fails</em> to belong to an established discipline or religion). In a complex world plagued by an overabundance of data, to understand anything we are of course compelled to simplify. But this simplification must be done by <em>federating</em> information, not by ignoring it.
 
</p>
 
<p>This principle is exactly what has distinguished the academic approach to knowledge since its inception.
 
</p>
 
  
-----------------
+
<p>But if  <em>truth by convention</em> has been the way in which <em>the sciences</em> improve their logical foundations—why not use it to update the logical foundations of <em>knowledge work</em> at large?</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>Having explored this direction, we can offer the following conclusion:</p>
 +
 
 +
<blockquote><em>Truth by convention</em> is the new Archimedean point, by which we can once again empower knowledge to make a difference.</blockquote> 
 +
 
 +
<p>As we are using this [[keyword|<em>keyword</em>]], the [[truth by convention|<em>truth by convention</em>]] is the kind of truth that is common in mathematics: "Let <em>X</em> be <em>Y</em>. Then..." and the argument follows. Insisting that <em>X</em> "really is" <em>Y</em> is obviously meaningless. A  convention is valid only <em>within a given context</em>—which may be an article, or a theory, or a methodology.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>The second step is to use <em>truth by convention</em> to <em>define</em> an <em>epistemology</em>.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>We defined [[design epistemology|<em>design epistemology</em>]] by rendering the core of our proposal (to change the relationship we have with information—by considering it a human-made thing, and adapting information and the way we handle it to the functions that need to be served) as a convention.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>Notice that nothing has been changed in the traditional-academic scheme of things. The <em>academia</em> has only been <em>extended</em>; a new way of thinking and working has been added to it, for those who might want to engage in that new way. On the 'other side of the <em>mirror</em>', we see ourselves and what we do as (part of) the 'headlights' and the 'light'; and we self-organize, and act, and use our creativity freely-yet-responsibly, and create a variety of new methods and results—just as the founding father of science did, at the point of its inception. </p> 
  
<p>[[The Club of Rome]] was itself a <em>federation</em> effort—where one hundred expert and policy makers were selected and organized to gather and create the information that would, in the language of our metaphor, 'illuminate the way'.
+
<p>In the "Design Epistemology" research article (published in the special issue of the Information Journal titled "Information: Its Different Modes and Its Relation to Meaning", edited by Robert K. Logan) where we articulated this proposal, we made it clear that the <em>design epistemology</em> is only one of the many ways to manifest this approach. We drafted a parallel between the <em>modernization</em> of science that can result in this way and the emergence of modern art:  By defining an <em>epistemology</em> and a <em>methodology</em> by convention, we can do in the sciences as the artists did—when they liberated themselves from the demand to mirror reality, by using the techniques of Old Masters. </p>  
The stark contrast between a civilization-wide resolute response to an <em>immediate</em> threat—the COVID19 pandemic, at the point of this writing—and the virtual lack of attention to the <em>long-term</em> but incomparably larger threat that The Club of Rome was warning us about, <em>already</em> suggests that we are 'driving in the light of a pair of candles'. It also suggests that something might be amiss in our <em>homo sapiens</em> self-image. Could we be living in an illusory Matrix, without knowing what's <em>really</em> going on; and without even <em>wanting</em> to know? And <em>what other things</em>, similarly important, might have remained in the shadow of our "knowing"?</p>
 
<p>Yet perhaps the most interesting possibility is to just <em>federate</em> further.  What insights might be powerful enough to trigger "a great cultural revival"? What exactly might we need to do to "change course"? The Holotopia project has been conceived as the vehicle for this sort of inquiry.</p>
 
  
---------------
+
<blockquote>As the artists did—we can become creative <em>in the very way in which we practice our profession.</em></blockquote>
  
 +
<p>To complete this proposal and make it concrete, we developed two <em>prototypes</em>: the <em>holoscope</em> models the <em>academic</em> reality on the other side of the [[mirror|<em>mirror</em>]]; the <em>holotopia</em> models the corresponding <em>social</em> reality.</p>
  
 +
<p>Let us illustrate these abstract ideas by brief and self-contained module, comprising an academically stated challenge, and two examples of its resolution—by using the techniques just described. Each of the examples includes both a concept definition <em>by convention</em>, and a <em>prototype</em> (of disciplinary or institutional re-definition) that was embedded and tested in academic practice, with encouraging results.</p>
  
  
<!-- EVEN OLDER
+
<p>The definition of <em>design</em> allowed us to capture the essence of our post-traditional cultural condition, and suggest how to adapt to it.</p>
  
 +
<p>We defined <em>design</em> as "alternative to <em>tradition</em>", where <em>design</em> and <em>tradition</em> are (by convention) two alternative ways to <em>wholeness</em>. <em>Tradition</em> relies on spontaneous, gradual, Darwinian-style evolution. Change is resisted, small changes are tried—and tested and assimilated through generations of use. We practice <em>design</em> when we consider ourselves <em>accountable</em> for <em>wholeness</em>. </p>
  
<center><h2><b>H O L O T O P I A: &nbsp;&nbsp; F I V E &nbsp;&nbsp; I N S I G H T S</b></h2></center><br><br>
+
<blockquote>When <em>tradition</em> cannot be relied on, <em>design</em> must be used.</blockquote>  
  
<div class="page-header" ><h1>Socialized Reality</h1></div>
+
<p>The situation we are in, which we rendered by the bus with candle headlights metaphor, can now be understood as a result of a transition: We are no longer <em>traditional</em> (our technology evolves by <em>design</em>); but we are not yet <em>designing</em> ("the relationship we have with information" is still <em>traditional</em>). Our call to action can be understood as a practical way to <em>complete</em> modernization. </p>  
  
 +
<p><em>Reification</em> can now be understood as the foundation for truth and meaning that suits the <em>tradition</em>; <em>truth by convention</em> is what empowers us to <em>design</em>.</p>
  
<div class="row">
+
<p>We proposed this definition to the academic design community, as part of an answer to its quest for logical foundations. The fact that Danish Designers chose our presentation to be repeated as opening keynote at their tenth anniversary conference suggests that this praxis—of <em>assigning</em> a purpose to a discipline and a community by using <em>ruth by convention</em>—may have <em>immediate</em> interest and applications. </p>
<div class="col-md-3"></div>
 
<div class="col-md-7">
 
  
<blockquote>  
+
<p>The definition of <em>implicit information</em> and of <em>visual literacy</em> as "literacy associated with <em>implicit information</em> for the International Visual Literacy Association was in spirit similar—but its point was different.</p>  
<p>We have come to the core of our response to Peccei—<em>what is to be done</em>, to begin "a great cultural revival" here and now.</p>
+
<p>  
<p>The answer offered will be the same as the core of our proposal—to change the relationship we have with information.</p>  
+
[[File:Whowins.jpg]]
<p>Instead of conceiving "truth" as "an objective picture of reality", and considering the purpose of information to be to provide us "an objective picture of reality", we'll propose to consider information as human-made, and to tailor the way we handle it to the various and sometimes vitally important purposes that need to be served.</p>  
+
</p>  
<p>The key point here will be to <em>perceive</em> the very notion "reality" as an instrument of <em>socialization</em>.</p></blockquote>  
+
<p>We showed the above <em>ideogram</em> as depicting a situation where two kinds of information—the <em>explicit information</em> with explicit, factual and verbal warning in a black-and-white rectangle, and the visual and "cool" rest—meet each other in a direct duel. The image shows that the <em>implicit information</em> wins "hands down" (or else this would not be a cigarette advertising). Our larger point was that while our legislation, ethical sensibilities and "official" culture at large are focused on <em>explicit information</em>, our culture is largely created through subtle <em>implicit information</em>. Hence we need a <em>literacy</em> to be able to decode those messages—and reverse the negative consequences of <em>reification</em>. </p>
</div> </div>
+
<p>Lida Cochran, the only surviving IVLA founder, found that this definition expressed and served the founders' original intention.</p>  
  
  
<div class="row">
 
<div class="col-md-3"><h2><em>Scope</em></h2></div>
 
<div class="col-md-7">
 
<p>This is not to say that reality "really is" that. What we are offering is a <em>scope</em> and a <em>view</em>, or insight. A way in which the <em>wholeness</em> of our <em>culture</em>—of the 'vehicle' whose purpose is to take us to <em>wholeness</em>—is 'cracked'.</p>
 
<h3><em>Socialization</em></h3>
 
<p>From the cradle to the grave, through innumerably many carrots and sticks, we are <em>socialized</em> to think and behave in a certain way. <em>Socialization</em> is really the way in whicy <em>cultures</em> function. </p>
 
<p>The question, then, is—Who does the <em>socialization</em>? In what way? And for what ends?</p>
 
 
</div> </div>  
 
</div> </div>  
 +
  
 
<div class="row">
 
<div class="row">
<div class="col-md-3"><h2><em>View</em></h2></div>
+
<div class="col-md-3"><h2>[[Holotopia:Narrow frame|<em>Narrow frame</em>]]</h2></div>
<div class="col-md-7">
+
<div class="col-md-7"><h3><em>Scope</em></h3>
<p>The answer, the <em>view</em> we are offering, is to perceive <em>socialization</em> as largely the prerogative of the <em>power structure</em>.
+
 
And to perceive <em>reification</em> as an instrument by which people are coerced to accept a certain societal <em>order of things</em> without questioning it. </p>  
+
<p>We have just seen that the academic tradition—instituted as the modern university—finds itself in a much larger and more central social role than it was originally conceived for. We look up to the <em>academia</em>, and not to the Church and the tradition, for an answer to <em>the</em> pivotal question:</p>  
<p>Further, we propose to perceive the academic tradition as an age-old effort to <em>liberate</em> ourselves from the <em>power structure</em> and the socialized "realities" it imposes—and to evolve further. Wasn't <em>that</em> the reason why Socrates, and Galilei, were tried?</p>  
+
 
<p>There's been a new event in this age-old development. An error, a bug in the program, has been discovered. The Enlightenment gave us the <em>homo sapiens</em> self-identity. It made us believe that "a normal human being" <em>sees</em> the "reality" as it really is. And that it is a human prerogative to know and to <em>understand</em> "reality". Our democracy and other institutions, our knowledge work, our ethical sensibilities, the way we handle <em>culture</em>—all this has been built on this error as foundation.</p>  
+
<blockquote><b>How</b> should we look at the world, to be able to comprehend and handle it?</blockquote>  
<p>We now own all the information needed to perceive this error; and means to correct it. And by doing that, to resume the evolution of knowledge; and of culture and society.</p>
+
 
<p><em>The</em> core insight here is that by liberating ourselves from an age-old myth or a dogma, we can develop a foundation for working with knowledge that is at the same time perfectly robust and rigorous, creative beyond bounds <em>and</em> most importantly <em>accountable</em>. </p>
+
<p>That role, and that question, carry an immense power!</p>  
</div> </div>  
+
 
 +
<p>It was by providing a completely <em>new</em> answer to that question, that the last "great cultural revival" came about.</p>
 +
 
 +
 
 +
<h3>Diagnosis</h3>
 +
 
 +
<blockquote>So how <em>should</em> we look at the world, to be able to comprehend and handle it? </blockquote>
 +
<blockquote>Nobody knows! </blockquote>
 +
 
 +
<p>Of course, countess books and articles have been written about this theme since antiquity. But in spite of that—or should we say <em>because</em> of that—no consensus has emerged.</p>  
 +
 
 +
<p>The way we the people look at the world, try to comprehend and handle it, shaped itself spontaneously—from scraps of science that were most visible around the middle of the 19th century, when Darwin and Newton as cultural heroes replaced Adam and Moses. What is today popularly considered as the "scientific worldview" took shape then—and remained largely unchanged.</p>
  
<div class="row">
+
<p>As members of the <em>homo sapiens</em> species, this worldview would make us believe, we have the evolutionary privilege to be able to comprehend the world in causal terms, and to make rational choices accordingly. Give us a correct model of the world, and we'll know exactly how to satisfy our needs (which we can experience directly). But the traditional cultures got it all wrong: Not knowing how the nature works, they put a "ghost in the machine", and made us pray to him to give us what we needed. Science corrected this error—and now we can satisfy our needs by manipulating the mechanisms of nature directly, with the help of technology. </p>
<div class="col-md-3"><h2>Action</h2></div>
 
<div class="col-md-7">
 
<p>We propose (a way) to abandon "reality" as foundation altogether. To liberate ourselves from the <em>power structure</em> and the "reality" it's created for us. And to create a pragmatic approach to knowledge, which will accelerate the evolution of <em>culture</em>—on a similar scale and rate as the science and the technology have been evolving.</p>  
 
  
</div> </div>  
+
<p>It is this causal or "scientific" understanding of the world that made us modern. Isn't that how we understood that women cannot fly on broomsticks?</p>  
  
<div class="page-header" ><h2>Stories</h2></div>
+
<p>From our collection of reasons why this way of looking at the world is neither scientific nor functional, we here mention only two.</p>  
  
<div class="row">
+
<p>  
<div class="col-md-3"><h2>Einstein</h2></div>
+
[[File:Heisenberg–frame.jpeg]]
<div class="col-md-7">
+
</p>
<p>Throughout our <em>prototypes</em>, Einstein represents "modern science" (if it were <em>federated</em>).</p>
+
<blockquote>The first reason is that the nature is not a mechanism.</blockquote>  
  
<h3>Closed watch argument</h3>
+
<p>The mechanistic way of looking at the world that Newton and his contemporaries developed in physics, which around the 19th century shaped the worldview of the masses, was later disproved and disowned by modern science. Research in physics showed that even the <em>physical</em> phenomena exhibit the <em>kinds of</em> interdependence that cannot be understood in "classical" or causal terms.</p>  
<p>Explains why "correspondence with reality" cannot be rationally claimed.</p>  
 
<p>Read it <em>here</em> (links will be provided).</p>  
 
  
<h3>Reality as illusion</h3>
+
<p>In "Physics and Philosophy", Werner Heisenberg, one of the progenitors of this research, described how "the narrow and rigid" way of looking at the world that our ancestors adapted from the 19th century science was damaging to culture—and in particular to its parts on on which the "human quality" depended, such as ethics and religion. And how as a result the "instrumental" thinking and values, which Bauman called "adiaphorized", became prominent. Heisenberg believed that the dissolution of that "rigid and narrow frame" would be <em>the</em> most valuable gift of his field to humanity. </p>
<p>Einstein argues that "reality" has been a product of illusion—the "aristocratic illusion" that reason can know "reality", prevalent in philosophy, and the "plebeian illusion" that "reality" is what we perceive through our senses.</p>  
 
  
<h3>Epistemological credo</h3>
+
<p>In 2005, Hans-Peter Dürr (considered as Heisenberg's scientific "heir") co-wrote the Potsdam Manifesto, whose title and message is "We need to learn to think in a new way". The proposed new thinking is similar to the one that leads to <em>holotopia</em>: "The materialistic-mechanistic worldview of classical physics, with its rigid ideas and reductive way of thinking, became the supposedly scientifically legitimated ideology for vast areas of scientific and political-strategic thinking. (...) We need to reach a fundamentally new way of thinking and a more comprehensive under­standing of our <em>Wirklichkeit</em>, in which we, too, see ourselves as a thread in the fabric of life, without sacrificing anything of our special human qualities. This makes it possible to recognize hu­manity in fundamental commonality with the rest of nature (...)"</p>  
<p>In the introductory pages of his "Autobiographical notes", where he offers a quick journey through modern physics as he experienced it, Einstein states his "epistemological credo". The <em>epistemology</em> we are proposing is roughly equivalent to it. Already the fact that Einstein states his "epistemological credo" explicitly (instead of assuming that it's "obvious", and hence remaining in the <em>paradigm</em> or "reality" we've been socialized in) is significant.</p>
 
</div> </div>  
 
  
<div class="row">
+
<blockquote>The second reason is that even complex mechanisms ("classical" nonlinear dynamic systems) cannot be understood in causal terms.</blockquote>
<div class="col-md-3"><h2>Galilei</h2></div>
 
<div class="col-md-7">
 
<p> Galilei's claim that the Earth <em>is</em> moving was not a statement of how the things "really are", but a <em>scope</em>. As it is well known, we may place the frame of reference, or the coordinate system, in any way we like. The difference his <em>scope</em> made was, however, that it enabled rigorous, rational understanding of astrophysical phenomena; and ultimately the advent of "Newton's laws" and of science.</p>
 
<p>As Piaget wrote, "the mind organizes the world, by organizing itself.</p>
 
<p>Our situation is calling for another such step—where we'll create a way of looking at the world that will enable us to understand the <em>social</em> phenomena in a rigorous way, and to explore them in a way that 'works'.</p> 
 
</div> </div>  
 
  
<div class="row">
+
<p>
<div class="col-md-3"><h2>Odin—Bourdieu—Damasio</h2></div>
+
[[File:MC-Bateson-vision.jpeg]]
<div class="col-md-7">
+
</p>
<p>Bourdieu's "theory of practice" is a sociological theory of <em>socialization</em>. The story of Bourdieu in Algeria tells how Bourdieu became a sociologist, by observing how the instruments of power morphed from torture chambers, weapons and censorship—and became <em>symbolic</em>.
+
<p>It has been said that the road to Hell is paved with good intentions. Research in the systems sciences, one of which is cybernetics, explained this <em>scientifically</em>: The "hell" (which you may imagine as global issues, or the 'destination' toward which our 'bus' is diagnosed to be headed) tends to be a "side effect" of our best efforts and "solutions", reaching us through "nonlinearities" and "feedback loops" in the natural and social systems we are trying to manipulate. </p>  
 +
<p>
 +
[https://youtu.be/nXQraugWbjQ?t=57 Hear Mary Catherine Bateson] (cultural anthropologist and cybernetician, daughter of Margaret Mead and Gregory Bateson who pioneered both fields) say:
 +
<blockquote>  
 +
"The problem with Cybernetics is that it is not an academic discipline that belongs in a department. It is an attempt to correct an erroneous way of looking at the world, and at knowledge <em>in general</em>. (...) Universities do not have departments of epistemological therapy!"
 +
</blockquote>
 
</p>  
 
</p>  
<p>Damasio contributed a solid academic result to show that we are <em>not</em> rational decision makers; that an <em>embodied</em> pre-rational filter controls what we are rationally able to conceive of.</p>
 
<p>Damasio's theory beautifully synergizes with Bourdieu's observations that etc. etc.</p>
 
<p>Bourdieu still saw the issue of power as a kind of a zero sum game (where some are winners, and others are losers). The story of Odin the horse serves to highlight a different possibility—that we may be playing turf games, and creating <em>power structures</em> for no better reason than serving an atavistic, self-destructive part of our psyche...</p>
 
</div> </div>
 
  
<div class="row">
+
<h3>Remedy</h3>
<div class="col-md-3"><h2>Antonovsky</h2></div>
+
 
<div class="col-md-7">
+
<blockquote><em>Truth by convention</em> allows us to explicitly <em>define</em> and academically <em>develop</em> new ways to look at the world.</blockquote>
<p>Showed how important "sense of coherence is"—even for our health!</p>
+
 
<p>The <em>power structure</em> capitalizes on this vital need of ours, by providing us <em>sense of coherence</em>; but at what cost!?</p>  
+
<p>We called the result a <em>methodology</em>, and our <em>prototype</em> the Polyscopic Modeling <em>methodology</em> or [[polyscopy|<em>polyscopy</em>]]. </p>
</div> </div>  
+
 
 +
<p>A <em>methodology</em> is in essence a toolkit; anything that does the job would do. We, however, defined <em>polyscopy</em> by turning state of the art <em>epistemological</em> insights into conventions.</p>  
 +
 
 +
<blockquote>By creating a <em>methodology</em>, the severed link between fundamental scientific insights and the popular worldview can be restored.</blockquote>  
 +
 
 +
<p>The <em>polyscopy</em> definition comprises eight aphorismic postulates; by using [[truth by convention|<em>truth by convention</em>]], each of them is given an interpretation.</p>  
 +
 
 +
<p>The first postulate defines <em>information</em> as "recorded experience". It is thereby made explicit that the substance communicated by information is not "reality", but human experience. Since human experience can be recorded in a variety of ways (a chair is a record of experience related to sitting and chair making), the notion of <em>information</em> is extended well beyond written documents. The first postulate enables <em>knowledge federation</em> across cultural traditions and fields of interests; the barriers of language and method are bridged by reducing all that is of relevance to human experience, as 'common denominator'. </p>  
 +
 
 +
<p>The second postulate is that the [[scope|<em>scope</em>]] (the way we look) determines the <em>view</em> (what is seen). In <em>polyscopy</em> the experience (or "reality" or whatever is "behind" experience) is not assumed to have an a priori structure. We <em>attribute</em> to it a structure with the help of the concepts and other elements of our <em>scope</em>. This postulate enables us to create new ways of looking, and to make the basic approach of science generally applicable—as prototyped by the <em>holoscope</em>. </p>
 +
 
 +
<p><em>Polyscopy</em> did not talk about knowledge. We may now improvise this new axiom:</p>
 +
 
 +
<blockquote><em>Knowledge</em> must be <em>federated</em>.</blockquote>
 +
 
 +
<p>This only states the intuitive or common-sense idea of "knowledge": If we should be able to say that we "know" something, we must <em>federate</em> not only supporting evidence, but also potential counter-evidence—and hence <em>information</em> in general. Academic peer reviews implement that principle in science; but this <em>federation</em> tends to be restricted to a discipline. An analogy with constitutional democracy also comes to mind—where even a hated criminal has the right for a fair trial. Like a dutiful attorney, <em>knowledge federation</em> does its best to gather suitable evidence, and back each <em>federated</em> insight with a convincing case.</p>  
  
<div class="row">
+
<p>A <em>methodology</em> allows us to state explicitly what information needs to be like; and what being "informed" means. We modeled this intuitive notion with the keyword [[gestalt|<em>gestalt</em>]]. To be "informed", one needs to have a <em>gestalt</em> that is appropriate to one's situation. "Our house is on fire" is a canonical example. The knowledge of <em>gestalt</em> is profoundly different from only knowing the data (such as the room temperatures and the CO2 levels.). To have an appropriate <em>gestalt</em> means to be moved to do the action that a situation is calling for.</p>  
<div class="col-md-3"><h2>In popular culture</h2></div>
 
<div class="col-md-7">
 
<p>The Matrix is an example of <em>socialized reality</em>.</p>
 
<p>The Reader is a more nuanced one.</p>  
 
<p>King Oedipus is an archetypal story, showing how <em>socialized reality</em> can make us do exactly the things we are trying to avoid.</p>
 
</div> </div>  
 
  
<div class="row">
+
<blockquote>Can we be uninformed—in spite of all the information we have?</blockquote>  
<div class="col-md-3"><h2>IVLA story</h2></div>
 
<div class="col-md-7">
 
<p>While our ethical and legal sensibilities are focused on <em>explicit information</em>, our culture, and our "human quality", are being shaped by the more subtle <em>implicit information</em>. </p>
 
<p>Literacy associated with <em>implicit information</em></p>
 
</div> </div>  
 
  
<div class="row">
+
<p>"One cannot not communicate", reads one of Paul Watzlawick's axioms of communication. Even when everything in a news report is <em>factually</em> correct, the <em>gestalt</em> it conveys <em>implicitly</em> can be profoundly deceptive—because we are told what Donald Trump has said, and not Aurelio Peccei.</p>  
<div class="col-md-3"><h2>Chomsky—Harari—Graeber—Bakan</h2></div>
 
<div class="col-md-7">
 
<p>Here we have a Darwinian or <em>memetic</em> view of our culture's evolution. A <em>complete</em> explanation of <em>power structure</em> emergence, and our disempowerment.</p>
 
</div> </div>  
 
  
<div class="row">
+
<p><em>Polyscopy</em> offers a collection of techniques for communicating and 'proving' or <em>justifying</em> general or <em>high-level</em> insights and claims. <em>Knowledge federation</em> is conceived as the social process by which such insights can be created and maintained. To create the <em>methodology</em>, we <em>federated</em> methodological insights from a variety of fields:</p>  
<div class="col-md-3"><h2>Maturana—Piaget—Berger and Luckmann</h2></div>
+
<ul>  
<div class="col-md-7">
+
<li>[[pattern|<em>Patterns</em>]] have a closely similar function as mathematics does in traditional sciences—and at the same time completely generalize the implementation of this function</li>
<p>Studies of reality construction in biology of perception, psychology and sociology.</p>  
+
<li>[[ideogram|<em>Ideograms</em>]] allow us to include the expressive power and the insights and techniques from art, advertising and communication design</li>
</div> </div>  
+
<li>[[vignette|<em>Vignettes</em>]] implement the basic technique from media informing, where an insight or issue is made accessible by telling illustrative and engaging or "sticky"  real-life people and situation stories</li>  
 +
<li>[[thread|<em>Threads</em>]] implement Vannevar Bush's technical idea of "trails" as a way to combine specific ideas into higher-level units of meaning</li>
 +
</ul>  
  
<div class="row">
 
<div class="col-md-3"><h2>Nietzsche—Ehrlich—Giddens—Debord</h2></div>
 
<div class="col-md-7">
 
<p>How we lost the <em>personal</em> capability to connect the dots...</p>
 
</div> </div>
 
  
<div class="row">
+
<p>We conclude by telling a [[vignette|<em>vignette</em>]]—which will illustrate some of the further nuances of this <em>methodological</em> approach to information and knowledge.</p>  
<div class="col-md-3"><h2>Pavlov—Chakhotin</h2></div>
 
<div class="col-md-7">
 
<p>Politics (political propaganda) as <em>socialization</em>. What brought Hitler into power...</p>
 
</div> </div>  
 
  
<div class="row">
+
<p>A situation with overtones of a crisis, closely similar to the one we now have in our handling of information at large, arose in the early days of computer programming. The buddying industry undertook ambitious software projects—which resulted in thousands of lines of "spaghetti code", which nobody was able to 'detangle' (understand and correct). The solution was conceived as "computer programming methodology"; [https://holoscope.info/2019/02/07/knowledge-federation-dot-org/#InformationHolon the longer story] is interesting, but we only highlight a couple of lessons learned from the "object oriented methodology", developed in the 1960s by Ole-Johan Dahl and Krysten Nygaard.</p>
<div class="col-md-3"><h2>Freud—Bernays</h2></div>
 
<div class="col-md-7">
 
<p>For a long time Freud fought an uphill battle to convince the scientific community that we are not as rational as we may like to believe. His nephew turned his insights into good business. </p>  
 
</div> </div>
 
<!-- OLD
 
  
  
<div class="row">
+
<blockquote>The designers of a computer programming language made themselves accountable for the "usability" of the results, and developed a methodology.</blockquote>  
<div class="col-md-3"></div>
 
<div class="col-md-7">
 
  
<blockquote>  
+
<p>Any sufficiently complete programming language, even the "machine language" of the computer, will allow the programmers to create <em>any</em> application program. The creators of the object oriented methodology, however, took it upon themselves to provide the programmers the kind of programming tools that would enable them, or even <em>compel</em> them, to write comprehensible, reusable and well-structured code. </p>  
Without giving it a thought, we adopted from the traditional culture a myth incomparably more subversive than the myth of creation. This myth now serves as the foundation on which our worldview, culture and social institutions have evolved.</blockquote>  
 
</div> </div>  
 
  
<div class="row">
+
<p>  
<div class="col-md-3"><h2><em>Scope</em></h2></div>
+
[[File:Dahl-Vision.-R.jpeg]]
<div class="col-md-7">
+
</p>
<p>We have come to the very crux of our proposal. We are about to zoom in on the relationship we have with information. And on the way in which truth and meaning are conceived of, and socially constructed in our society. </p>
 
<p><em>That</em> changed during the Enlightenment; and triggered a comprehensive change. Could a similar advent be in store for us today?</p>
 
</div> </div>  
 
  
<div class="row">
+
<blockquote>To understand a complex system, <em>abstraction</em> must be used. We must be able to <em>create</em> views of the complex whole on distinct levels of generality.</blockquote>  
<div class="col-md-3"><h2>Our proposal</h2></div>
 
<div class="col-md-7"><p>We emphasize, once again, that the crux of our proposal is a relationship or an attitude. What we are offering is not "the solution", but a <em>process</em>, by which the solutions are continuously improved. If we might be perceived as proposing 'a better candle', or even 'the lightbulb'—our <em>real</em> proposal is a <em>praxis</em> by which information, and the way we handle it, can continue to evolve. </p>
 
<p>Hence what we are about to say is offered as an initial <em>prototype</em>—whose purpose is to serve as an initial proof of concept; <em>and</em> to prime the process through which its continued improvement will be secured.</p>
 
  
<h3>Truth and meaning today</h3>
+
<p>The object oriented methodology provided a structuring template called "object"—which "hides implementation and exports function". What this means is that an object can be "plugged into" more general objects based on the functions it produces—without the burden of the details of its code. </p>  
<p>Although our proposal does not depend on it, we begin with a brief sketch of the status quo, to give our proposal a context. </p>
 
<p>"Truth", it seems to be taken for granted, means "correspondence with reality". When I write "worldviews", my word processor complains. Since there is only one world, and hence only one "reality", there can be only one ("true") worldview—the one that <em>corresponds</em> to "reality".</p>
 
<p>Meaning, it is assumed, is the test of truth. Something is "true" if it "makes sense", i.e. if it fits into the "reality puzzle". "This makes no sense" means "this is nonsense"; it means it <em>cannot</em> be true.</p>
 
<p>The purpose of information, it is assumed, is to tell us "the truth"; to show us the reality as it truly is. If this is done right, the ("true") pieces of information will fit snuggly together, like pieces in a jigsaw puzzle; and compose for us a coherent and clear "reality picture".</p>  
 
  
<h3>Truth in the <em>holoscope</em></h3>
+
<p>We have seen, in <em>socialized reality</em>, that the <em>academia</em> too needs to consider itself accountable for the tools and processes by which information and knowledge are handled—<em>both</em> for the ones used by academic researchers, <em>and</em> for the ones used by people at large. To see what those two lessons learned may mean practically, Imagine a highly talented young person, let's call him Pierre Bourdieu to be concrete, about to become a researcher. The <em>academia</em> will give Bourdieu a certain way to render his results, which he'll be using throughout his career. The "usability", comprehensibility and in a word—the <em>usefulness</em> of Bourdieu's life work will largely depend on the format in which he'll render his results. This format, however, will not be in his power to change, and it is unlikely that even Bourdieu would even think about doing that.</p>  
<p>All truth in our proposal is <em>truth by convention</em>: "When I say <em>X</em>, I mean <em>Y</em>." Truth, understood in this way, is both incomparably more solid (a convention is incontrovertibly true), and incomparably more flexible (a written convention can easily be changed)—compared to the conception of truth we've just described. </p>
 
<p><em>Truth by convention</em> is completely independent of what's been called "reality". We offered it as a new 'Archimedean point', which can once again empower knowledge to 'move the world'. A clear understanding of this might require, however, a bit of reflection; and a <em>dialog</em>.</p>
 
  
<h3>Meaning in the <em>holoscope</em></h3>
+
<p>Bourdieu is, of course, only a drop in the ocean.</p>  
<p>Meaning is, by convention, strictly "in the eyes of the beholder". <em>Information</em>, by convention, reflects not reality but human experience. And experience (we avoid the word "reality"), by convention, has no a priori structure. Rather, it is considered and treated as we may treat an ink blot in a Rorschach test—as something to which we <em>assign</em> meaning; by perceiving it in a certain way.</p>
 
<p>We too make claims of the kind "here is how the things are"; not in "reality", however, but in experience. The meaning of such a claim, howeer, is that the offered <em>scope</em> fits the offered <em>view</em> to a <em>sufficient</em> degree to illicit the "aha feeling". The sensation of meaning is thereby transmitted from one mind to another—and that's all we want from it. The message is a certain kind of human experience—and that's what's been communicated. </p>
 
<p>Hence a vast creative frontier opens up before our eyes—where we find ways (by taking due advantage of the vast powers of the new media, and by <em>federating</em> whatever we've learned from the psychology of cognition, from arts, the advertising...) to <em>improve</em> such communication.</p>  
 
  
<h3>Information in the <em>holoscope</em></h3>
 
<p><em>Information</em> is, by convention, "a system within a system", which has a purpose—to fulfill a number of functions within the larger system (or systems). Or as we like to phrase this—its purpose is to make the larger system <em>whole</em>.</p>
 
<p>"A piece of information" is not a piece in the "reality puzzle". Rather, it is, as Gregory Bateson phrased it, "a difference that makes a difference". Hence we can <em>create</em> what "a piece of information" might be like—to best fulfill new or neglected purposes. </p>
 
<p>An example might be a piece of information that conveys the "aha experience" – namely that something can be seen and understood in a certain specific way. The piece of information may then have the <em>scope</em>–<em>view</em>–<em>federation</em> structure, where a way of looking at a phenomenon or issue called <em>scope</em> is offered—alongside with a <em>view</em> that may result from it, and a <em>federation</em> by which this view is first clearly communicated, then backed by data so that it may be verified, and finally given ways to make a difference, by eliciting suitable action. An example is, of course, what's been going on right here.</p>
 
 
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<div class="col-md-6">
<p>The <em>views</em> thus created do not exclude one another, even when they appear to contradict one other. "Models are to be used, not to be believed." There are, by convention, a multiplicity of ways to perceive a theme of interest or situation. Any of them can be legitimate, if it follows from a justifiable way of looking; and it can be useful, if it tells us something we <em>need to</em> know. Since the purpose of <em>information</em> is to contribute to the <em>wholeness</em> of the system or systems in which it has a role, the chances are that a seemingly <em>discordant</em> view will be <em>more</em> useful than something that smoothly fits in.</p>  
+
 
</div>  
+
 
<div class="col-md-3">
+
<p>The solution for structuring information we devised in <em>polyscopy</em> is called <em>information holon</em>. An <em>information holon</em> is closely similar to the "object" in object oriented methodology. Information, represented in the Information <em>ideogram</em> as an "i", is depicted as a circle on top of a square. The circle represents the point of it all ('the cup has a crack'); the square represents the details, the side views. </p>
[[File:Holoscope.jpeg]]<br>
+
 
<small><center>Holoscope <em>ideogram</em></center></small>  
+
<p>When the <em>circle</em>  is a general insight or a <em>gestalt</em>, it allows that insight to be integrated or "exported" as a "fact" into <em>higher-level</em> insights (while the contributing insights and data remain "hidden" in the <em>square</em>). When the <em>circle</em> is a <em>prototype</em>, the multiplicity of insights that comprise the <em>square</em> are given direct <em>systemic</em> impact, and hence agency.</p>  
 +
</div> <div class="col-md-3">
 +
[[File:Information.jpg]]<br>
 +
<small>Information <em>ideogram</em></small>  
 
</div> </div>  
 
</div> </div>  
 
 
<div class="row">
 
<div class="row">
 
<div class="col-md-3"></div>
 
<div class="col-md-3"></div>
<div class="col-md-7">
+
<div class="col-md-7">  
<p>The <em>holoscope</em> <em>ideogram</em> serves to explain how the <em>holoscope</em>, and <em>information</em>, are to be used: The cup is <em>whole</em> only if it is <em>whole</em> from all sides. It has a crack if <em>any</em> of the views show a crack. Hence the <em>holoscope</em> endeavors to illuminate <em>all</em> relevant angles of looking (but organizes and encloses those details in the <em>square</em>). And shares the final outcome (as the <em>circle</em>). This makes it effective and easy to both understand and verify its message (by using the provided <em>scopes</em> to look at a theme from all sides, as one would do while inspecting a hand-held cup, to see if it's cracked or whole).</p>  
+
 
<p>An example of a resulting "piece of information" is a <em>gestalt</em>—an interpretation of the nature of a situation as a whole. "The cup is cracked" is an example of a <em>gestalt</em>; another examples include "our house is on fire"; and the Modernity <em>ideogram</em>. A <em>gestalt</em> points to a way in which a situation may need to be handled.</p>  
+
<p>The Holotopia <em>prototype</em> may now be understood as the <em>circle</em> by which our <em>knowledge federation</em> proposal is being <em>federated</em>. The <em>holotopia</em> vision is hereby not only described—but also turned into a collaborative strategy game, whose goal is to "change course".</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>A <em>prototype</em> <em>polyscopic</em> book manuscript titled "<em>Information</em> Must Be <em>Designed</em>" is structured as an <em>information holon</em>. Here the claim made in the title (which is the same we made in the opening of this presentation by talking about the bus with candle headlights) is <em>justified</em> in four chapters of the book—each of which presents a specific angle of looking at it. The book's four chapters present four <em>aspects</em> of our handling of information; they identify anomalies and propose remedies—which are the <em>design patterns</em> of the proposed <em>methodology</em>. </p>  
 +
 
 +
<p>It is customary in programming language design to showcase the language by creating its first compiler in the language itself. In this book we described the <em>paradigm</em> that is modeled by <em>polyscopy</em>,  and then used <em>polyscopy</em> to make a case for that <em>paradigm</em>.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>The book's [http://folk.uio.no/dino/IDBook/Introduction.pdf introduction] is available online. What we (at the time this manuscript was written) branded <em>information design</em>, has subsequently been completed and rebranded as <em>knowledge federation</em>. </p>  
 +
 
 
</div> </div>  
 
</div> </div>  
  
  
 
<div class="row">
 
<div class="row">
<div class="col-md-3"><h2><em>View</em></h2></div>
+
<div class="col-md-3"><h2>[[Holotopia:Convenience paradox|<em>Convenience paradox</em>]]</h2></div>
<div class="col-md-7"><p>We can now offer (an initial version of) the <em>socialized reality</em> insight with the same caveat as before. This <em>view</em> is not offered as a new "reality picture", to replace the old one, but as a way of looking, to be considered in a <em>dialog</em>. What is being proposed is (once again) that <em>dialog</em>—through which this insight will be kept continuously evolving, and alive—and not any <em>fixed</em> view.</p>  
+
<div class="col-md-7"><h3><em>Scope</em></h3>
  
<h3>"Reality" cannot help us distinguish truth from falsehood</h3>  
+
<p>We turn to culture and to "human quality", and ask: </p>  
  
<p>The "correspondence with reality" is a truth criterion that cannot be tested in practice.</p>
+
<blockquote>
<p>Instead of guarding us from illusion, the idea of a fixed and "objectively" knowable "reality" <em>itself</em> tends to be a product of illusion.</p>
+
<b>Why</b> is "a great cultural revival" realistically possible?</blockquote>  
  
<h3>"Reality" is a construction</h3>  
+
<p>What insight, and what strategy, may divert our "pursuit of happiness" from material consumption and opportunism to human cultivation?</p>  
<p>
+
 
 +
<p>We approach this theme also from another angle: Suppose we developed the <em>praxis</em> of <em>federating</em> information—and used it to combine <em>all</em> relevant heritage and insights, from sciences, world traditions, therapy schools... </p>
 +
 
 +
<blockquote>Suppose we used <em>real</em> information to guide our choices, not advertising. What changes would develop? What difference would they make?</blockquote>
 +
 
 +
<p>The Renaissance replaced the original sin and the eternal reward as preoccupations, by happiness and beauty here and now.</p>
 +
 
 +
<blockquote> What values might the <em>next</em> "great cultural revival" bring to the fore? </blockquote>  
  
<h3>"Reality" is a result of <em>socialization</em></h3>
+
<h3>Diagnosis</h3>  
<p>The fixed <em>grasp</em> of the human mind ... a <em>gestalt</em>... is most naturally used to fix a certain <em>social</em> order of things...</p>  
 
  
<h3>We got it all wrong</h3>
+
<blockquote>In the course of <em>modernization</em> we made a <em>cardinal</em> error—by elevating <em>convenience</em> (what <em>feels</em> attractive or pleasant) to the status of our cardinal value.</blockquote>  
<p>And finally, and most importantly, "reality" is not what this is all about. Not at all. And it has never been that!</p>
 
<p>"Reality" is just a contraption, that the <em>traditional</em> culture created to <em>socialize</em> its members into a shared "reality". Either you see "the reality"; <em>or</em> you are not "normal". Well, everyone wants to be normal. It is intrinsically human to be part of it. And so we comply.</p>
 
<p>Part of it is to socialize the people to accept a certain <em>social</em> order of things as just "reality". This is part is the one that's relatively better known, and we can come back to it.</p>
 
<p>The other part is that the traditional <em>socialization</em> was really how the culture operated! How the cultural heritage was coded, and transmitted. On the surface, it's all about "believing in Jesus". But underneath that surface are the ethical messages: that one should be unselfish; even sacrifice oneself for the benefit of others. (Isn't that what Jesus did, by dying on the cross? And what the Almighty also did, by sacrificing his son?) Underneath the surface is an entire emotional ecology (respect, awe, piety, charity...); and ways to nurture it (architecture, frescos, music, ritual...). And it is similar in all walks of life, including what happens in people's homes and families, of course.</p>
 
<p>So when we understood that "they got it all wrong"; that God <em>did not</em> create the world in six days etc., the result was an enormous empowerment of human reason. We understood that the women can't fly on brooms (because that would violate some well-established "laws of physics"). A myriad superstitions and prejudices were eradicated, and we made a giant leap in both understanding the world, and in freedom to creatively change it.</p>
 
<p>But we also threw out the baby with the bathwater—we threw out not only the cultural heritage, but also <em>the very mechanisms</em> by which culture is transmitted.</p>
 
<p>Well, this is of course true only up to a point. <em>Socialization</em> remained the mechanism, as it has always been. But being unaware of its function, and missing the opportunity to consciously take it into our own hands, <em>socialization</em> only changed hands. We are no longer <em>socialized</em> to be pious believers and the king's loyal subjects. We are socialized to be mindless consumers—and to cast our votes against our best interests.</p>
 
<p>We got it all wrong <em>also</em> when we empowered the reason in the way we did (and here Galilei's, and also Socrates' persecutors may have a point; and we may need to federate <em>them</em> as well, however non-modern this may seem...): We developed a culture of arrogance, where we don't seek information, or knowledge, because <em>we believe that we already know</em>. Since our eyes, aided with our reason, can simply "see the reality" as it is, <em>we do not need information</em> to tell us what values we should nourish; what ethical options we should prefer; what music, architecture, lifestyle-habits we should preserve or further develop.</p>
 
<p>We developed a "culture" of <em>convenience</em>!</p>
 
<p>Even our very <em>reason</em> is only riding on a back seat—helping the driver (our likes and dislikes) with the technical task of steering the course he has already chosen.</p>
 
<p>This is how "human development" lost its bearings!</p>
 
<p>This is why we must "find a way to change course"!</p>
 
<p>The Holotopia project undertakes to reconstruct the mechanisms by which cultural heritage and culture evolve. And by which <em>we too</em> evolve culturally.</p>
 
</div> </div>
 
  
<div class="row">
+
<p>This error can easily be understood if we consider that we've been looking at the world through the <em>narrow frame</em>—which elevated (direct) causality to the status of our chosen ("scientific") way to create truth and meaning. <em>Convenience</em> indeed <em>appears</em> to make us happy—and we take it for granted that it indeed does. </p>  
<div class="col-md-3"><h2>Our point</h2></div>
 
<div class="col-md-6"><p>Let us now put the academic tradition, and the <em>academia</em> as its institutionalization, on this map.</p>  
 
 
 
  
</div> </div>  
+
<p>The value of <em>convenience</em> is endlessly reinforced by advertising.</p>  
  
 +
<p>We let <em>convenience</em> orient even our choice of—information!</p>
  
<!-- OLD
+
<p>The consequences are sweeping.</p>
  
 +
<p>When <em>convenience</em> is the criterion by which we measure life quality, <em>the systems in which we live and work</em> easily appear as the best possible ones. We lose interest in "cultural revival", and "human quality". We believe that we can simply <em>feel</em> what we want—and that the rest is <em>a practical matter</em> of getting it.</p>
  
We look at the attitude we have towards information. And at the ideas we have about the meaning and purpose of information, and also about truth and reality, and about meaning itself.
+
<blockquote>When we recognize that <em>convenience</em> is a deceptive value—we are compelled to acknowledge that we have no reliable basis for deciding what our goals should be.</blockquote>  
</p>  
 
<p>We look, more concretely, on the assumption that
 
<ul>
 
<li> "truth" means "correspondence with reality"</li>  
 
<li> "truth", understood in this way, is what distinguishes "good" information</li>
 
<li>"a normal human being" sees "the truth" that is, sees "the reality as it is"—and is therefore perfectly capable of understanding and representing his "interests"</li> </ul>
 
This assumption permeates not only our ideas about knowledge, and about ourselves—but also our understanding and  handling of our society's most fundamental issues, such as freedom, justice, power and democracy. </p>
 
</div> </div>  
 
  
<div class="row">
+
<p>A cultural frontier opens up—where <em>real</em> information is created and used for making choices. </p>  
<div class="col-md-3"><h2>View</h2></div>
 
<div class="col-md-7"><h3>"Reality" is a product of <em>socialization</em></h3>
 
<p>From the 20th century science and philosophy we have learned that
 
<ul>
 
<li>Correspondence of our "true" ideas are true because they depict the reality "objectively"or "as it truly is", is (or more precisely <em>can</em> and demonstrably needs to be consider as) a <em>myth</em> (a shared belief that cannot be verified, which serves certain social purposes)</li>
 
<li>The way we see the world, or "reality", is constructed through a complex and profoundly interesting interplay between of our cognitive organs and our culture</li>
 
<li>What we consider "reality" is (or more precisely can and demonstrably needs to be considered as) a product of our <em>socialization</em>.</li>
 
</ul>
 
</p>
 
<p>There is, of course, nothing wrong with <em>socialization</em>; that is how the culture has always functioned, and always will. Already in the crib, and long before our rational faculties have developed to the point where we are capable of understanding what goes on, and being critical about it, our socialization is well under way. What makes all the difference is whether our rational faculties—of us <em>as a culture</em>—are developed to the point where <em>socialization</em> is considered and treated as <em>human-made</em>—and hence subjected to careful scrutiny, and made an instrument of conscious evolution.</p>
 
<p>The alternative is alarming: Socialization may become an instrument of renegade power; so that the enormous power that information and knowledge have is used <em>not</em> to liberate us, but to enslave us. That socialization is used to <em>hinder</em> us from evolving further—as culture; and as humans.</p>  
 
  
<h3><em>Academia</em> must take the lead</h3>
+
</div> </div>
<p>As part of <em>holotopia</em>'s <em>scope</em>, we have defined <em>academia</em> as "institutionalized academic tradition". The point here is to see that the academic tradition has been an alternative to unconscious, power-driven <em>socialization</em> <em>since its inception</em>; the stories of Socrates and Galilei illustrate that unequivocally!</p>
 
<p>During the Enlightenment, this process—of liberating us from renegade socialization—took a gigantic leap forward. But it was not at all completed!</p>
 
<p>While we liberated ourselves from the kings and the clergy; but having failed to take our <em>socialization</em> into our own hands, our socialization has only changed hands—as new <em>power structures</em> replaced the old ones.</p>
 
</div> </div>  
 
  
 
<div class="row">
 
<div class="row">
 
<div class="col-md-3"></div>
 
<div class="col-md-3"></div>
 
<div class="col-md-6">
 
<div class="col-md-6">
<h3>The situation we are in</h3>  
+
 
<p>
+
<h3>Remedy</h3>  
<blockquote>
+
 
We (the <em>academia</em>) must see ourselves in the <em>mirror</em>!
+
<p>We point to the remedy by the Convenience Paradox <em>ideogram</em>. Like all of us, the person in the picture wants his life to be convenient. But he made a wise choice: Instead of simply following the direction downwards, which <em>feels</em> easier, he paused to reflect whether this direction leads to a more convenient <em>condition</em>. </p>  
</blockquote>
+
 
The evolution of knowledge, or more specifically the evolution of <em>knowledge of knowledge</em>, which the <em>academia</em> is now in charge of, has brought us to a whole new situation.</p>  
+
<blockquote>It doesn't.</blockquote>  
<p>Having been <em>socialized</em> to compete and produce, we are too busy to even see this new situation clearly. </p>  
+
 
<p>
+
<p>The <em>convenience paradox</em> is a <em>pattern</em>, where a more convenient direction leads to a less convenient situation. The iconic image of a "couch potato" in front of a TV is an obvious instance. The less obvious instances are, however, abundant, and often surprising.</p>  
Metaphorically, we say that the evolution of <em>knowledge of knowledge</em> has brought us in front of the <em>mirror</em>. </p>  
+
 
<p>The <em>mirror</em> symbolizes
+
<p>The <em>convenience paradox</em> is a result of us simplifying "pursuit of happiness" by ignoring its two most interesting <em>dimensions</em>—time; and our own condition, which makes us inclined or <em>able to feel</em> in some specific way.</p>  
<ul>
+
 
<li>Self-reflection</li>
+
<p>By depicting the <em>way</em> to <em>wholeness</em> as "yang" in the traditional yin-yang <em>ideogram</em>, it is suggested that its nature is paradoxical and obscure—and that the <em>way</em> needs to be illuminated by suitable <em>information</em>. This <em>way</em> is what the Buddhists call "Dhamma" and the Taoists "Tao". </p>  
<li>End of (the assumption, or the pretense of) "objectivity"</li>
 
<li>Beginning of <em>accountability</em>—by seeing ourselves <em>in the world</em>, we see that we are part of the world, and responsible for it.</li>
 
</ul>  
 
</p>
 
<p>The academic tradition, and the social role we've acquired, as <em>academia</em>, demands that we build a larger version of this <em>mirror</em> and offer it to contemporary people and society—along the lines we've been drafting here. Having only our <em>socialized reality</em> as a frame of reference, what we do, and what we've become, appears to us as just "normal". We must now see ourselves, and what we do, in a more solid frame.</p>
 
<p>And when we do that, the collective walk <em>through the mirror</em> will most naturally follow</p>
 
<p>And so the <em>academia</em> must now guide our society <em>through the mirror</em>—just as Moses (according to that other tradition) guided the oppressed over the Red Sea. No miracle is, however, needed now; only a consistent application of the information we own.</p>  
 
  
  
 +
<p>However paradoxical, the <em>way</em> follows a certain pattern that <em>can</em> be understood; not in a mechanistic-causal way, not by studying what various cultures <em>believe</em> in—but by focusing on and <em>federating</em> the <em>phenomenology</em> repeated in the world traditions.</p>
 
</div>  
 
</div>  
 
<div class="col-md-3">
 
<div class="col-md-3">
[[File:Mirror.jpg]]<br>
+
[[File:Convenience Paradox.jpg]]
<small><center>The Mirror <em>idogram</em></center></small>
+
<small>Convenience Paradox <em>ideogram</em></small>  
 
</div> </div>  
 
</div> </div>  
 +
<div class="row">
 +
<div class="col-md-3"></div>
 +
<div class="col-md-7">
 +
<blockquote>We showed that the <em>convenience paradox</em> is a <em>pattern</em> repeated or subtly reflected in all major aspects of our civilized human condition.</blockquote>
  
 +
<p>To do that, we created an <em>information holon</em>—where the <em>square</em> comprises the main <em>aspects</em> of human <em>wholeness</em>. </p>
  
<div class="row">
+
<p>Here, however, we only <em>motivate</em> this work. We do that by sharing three specific insights—and supporting them by a few anecdotes and examples. </p>  
<div class="col-md-3"><h2>Action</h2></div>
+
 
<div class="col-md-7"><h3>We must go <em>through</em> the <em>mirror</em></h3>  
+
<blockquote>1. Human wholeness <em>feels</em> better than most of us can imagine.</blockquote>
<p>We must take the consequences of the knowledge we own—and resume our evolution. Just as the contemporary <em>academia</em>'s founding fathers did, in Galilei's time.</p>  
+
 
<p>Or to in the language of our metaphor, <em>academia</em> must guide us, the people, through the <em>mirror</em>. And into a <em>new</em> academic and social reality on its other side; which are now ready to be explored and developed. </p>
+
<p>We called this insight "the best kept secret of human culture" , and made it a theme of one of our chosen <em>ten conversations</em>. </p>  
<p><em>Holotopia</em> is a <em>prototype</em> of a social and cultural reality on the other side of the <em>mirror</em>. </p>
+
 
<p><em>Holoscope</em> is offered as a <em>prototype</em> of the corresponding <em>academic</em> reality. And also as the next step—the one that <em>enables</em> us to walk through the <em>mirror</em>.</p> 
+
<p><em>It was a glimpse or an experience or side of human wholeness</em> that attracted our ancestors to the Buddha, the Christ, Mohammed and other adepts and teachers of the <em>way</em>, or "sages" or "prophets". C.F. Andrews described this in "Sermon on the Mount":</p>
</div> </div>  
+
 +
<blockquote>"Through their practice, the early disciples of Jesus found out) that the Way of Life, which Jesus had marked out for them in His teaching, was revolutionary in its moral principles. It turned the world upside down (Acts 17. 6). (...) They found in this new 'Way of Life' such a superabundance of joy, even in the midst of suffering, that they could hardly contain it. Their radiance was unmistakable. When the Jewish rulers saw their boldness, they 'marvelled and took knowledge of them that they had been with Jesus' (Acts 4. 13). (...) It was this exuberance of joy and love which was so novel and arresting. It was a 'Way of Life' about which men had no previous experience. Indeed, at first those who saw it could not in the least understand it; and some mocking said, 'These men are full of new wine' (Acts 2. 13)."</blockquote>  
  
 +
<p>The existence and character of this experience can, however, readily be verified by simply observing or asking the people who have followed the <em>way</em>, and tasted some of its fruits.</p>
  
<div class="page-header" ><h2>Stories</h2></div>
+
<blockquote>2. The <em>way</em> to <em>wholeness</em> is counter-intuitive.</blockquote>  
  
<div class="row">
+
<p>
<div class="col-md-3"><h2>"Reality" is a <em>myth</em></h2></div>
+
[[File:LaoTzu-vision.jpeg]]
<div class="col-md-7">
 
<p>A <em>myth</em> is a popular belief that cannot be verified—but serves certain social and cultural roles.</p>
 
<p>Two quotations of Einstein, repeated in several places already, including Federation through Images on this website, are sufficient to make this point:
 
* The closed watch metaphor explains why "correspondence with reality" cannot be verified
 
* The quotations about the two illusions confirms that "correspondence with reality" is (according to 'modern science') a product of illusion
 
 
</p>  
 
</p>  
</div> </div>  
+
<p>To get a glimpse of it, compare the above utterances by Lao Tzu (acclaimed as progenitor of Taoism; "tao" literally means "way"), with what Christ taught in his Sermon on the Mount. Why was Teacher Lao claiming that "the weak can defeat the strong"? Why did the Christ advise his disciples to "turn the other cheek"?</p>  
  
<div class="row">
+
<p>Aldous Huxley's book "Perennial Philosophy" is <em>alone</em> sufficient to give an answer.  Coming from a family that gave some of Britain's leading scientists, Huxley undertook to not only <em>federate</em> some of the core insights about the <em>way</em> (by demonstrating the consistency of both the relevant practices <em>and</em> their results across historical periods and cultures), but to also make a case for the method he used, as an extension of science needed to support <em>cultural</em> evolution.</p>
<div class="col-md-3"><h2>"Reality" is constructed</h2></div>
 
<div class="col-md-7">
 
<p>The point here is to see that what we consider <em>the</em> reality is constructed—by our perception organs, our psyche and our society.</p>  
 
<p>A brief summary begins [https://holoscope.info/2019/02/07/knowledge-federation-dot-org/#Maturana here].</p>  
 
  
<h3>"Reality" construction in cognitive biology</h3>
+
<blockquote>3. To overcome the paradox, we must <em>reverse</em> the modernity's characteristic values.</blockquote>  
<p>To 'see ourselves'—how (we saw that) "reality" is constructed—it is sufficient to <em>federate</em> Maturana (as cognitive biologist), </p>  
 
  
<h3>"Reality" construction in psychology</h3>  
+
<p><em>Convenience</em> must be replaced by "human development". </p>  
<p>Piaget (as cognitive psychologist) and </p>  
 
  
<h3>"Reality" construction in sociology</h3>  
+
<p><em>Egotism</em> must be subjugated by service to larger purposes.</p>  
<p>Berger and Luckmann (as sociologists), to see how those insights were made, and some of their consequences.</p>
 
</div> </div>  
 
  
<div class="row">
+
<p>Lao Tzu (the Holotopia <em>prototype</em>'s iconic pointer to the <em>way</em>) is often portrayed as reading a bull—which signifies that he achieved that.</p>  
<div class="col-md-3"><h2>"Reality" is a product of <em>socialization</em></h2></div>
 
<div class="col-md-7">
 
<h3>Odin – Bourdieu – Damasio </h3>
 
<p>The nature of socialization illustrated by this <em>thread</em></p>
 
<p>TBA </p>  
 
  
<h3>Pierre Bourdieu</h3>
+
<p>While this insight can easily be <em>federated</em> in the manner just described, we here point to it by a curiosity.</p>
<p>  
 
Text
 
</p>  
 
  
<h3>Antonio Damasio</h3>
 
 
<p>
 
<p>
Text
+
[[File:Huxley-vision.jpeg]]
 
</p>
 
</p>
 +
<p>In "The Art of Seeing", Huxley observed that overcoming egotism is a necessary element of even <em>physical</em> wholeness!</p>
  
<h3>Odin the horse</h3>  
+
<p>We may now perceive significant parts of our cultural history as a struggle between <em>cultivation</em> of <em>wholeness</em> guided by insights into the nature of the <em>way</em>—and the <em>power structure</em>–related <em>socialization</em>, aided by the attraction of <em>convenience</em> and <em>egotism</em>. It is on the outcome of this struggle, Peccei warned us, that our future will depend. </p>  
<p>
+
 
Text
+
<blockquote>What hope do we have of reversing its outcome?</blockquote>  
</p>
 
</div> </div>  
 
  
<div class="row">
+
<p>The answer is, of course, that we now have a whole new <em>dimension</em> to work with.</p>  
<div class="col-md-3"><h2>Political consequences of <em>socialized reality</em></h2></div>
 
<div class="col-md-7">
 
<h3>Ivan Pavlov</h3>
 
<p>
 
Text
 
</p>  
 
  
<h3>Sergei Chakhotin</h3>  
+
<blockquote>We can <em>design</em> communication.</blockquote>  
<p>  
 
Text
 
</p>  
 
  
<h3>Murray Edelman</h3>  
+
<p>We can create media content that will communicate the <em>convenience paradox</em> in clear and convincing ways; we can guide people to an <em>informed</em> use of information; <em>and</em> we can create various elements of culture to <em>socialize</em> us or <em>cultivate</em> us accordingly. Including, of course, <em>the systems in which we live and work</em>. </p>
<p>
 
Text
 
</p>  
 
  
<h3>Symbolic action</h3>
 
<p>We propose this pair of (roughly) antonyms: <em>symbolic</em> and <em>systemic</em> action.</p>
 
<p>Having been socialized to think and act within the confines of the existing systems ("inside the box"), we  act out our concerns and responsibilities in a <em>symbolic</em> way: We organize a conference; publish an article; occupy Wall Street...</p>
 
  
</div> </div>  
+
<blockquote>A <em>vast</em> creative frontier opens up.</blockquote>  
  
<div class="row">
+
<p>We illustrate it here by a handful of examples.</p>  
<div class="col-md-3"><h2>Cultural consequences of <em>socialized reality</em></h2></div>
 
<div class="col-md-7">
 
<h3>Sigmund Freud</h3>
 
<p>Fought a heavy battle to convince his contemporaries that we are <em>not</em> the rational animal we believe we are.</p>  
 
  
<h3>Edward Louis Bernays</h3>
 
<p>Freud's nephew, turned Freud's ideas into a "scientific" approach to culture creation—for the benefits of the counterculture...</p>
 
<p>Edward Louis Bernays (November 22, 1891 − March 9, 1995) was an Austrian-American pioneer in the field of public relations and propaganda, referred to in his obituary as "the father of public relations". (Wikipedia)</p>
 
  
<h3><em>Implicit information</em></h3>
+
<p>The NaCuHeal-Information Design was our project developed in collaboration with the European Public Health Association, through Prof. Gunnar Tellnes who was then its president. In Norway Tellnes developed an authentic approach to health, which was based on nature and culture-related activities. This collaboration resulted in several <em>prototypes</em>, of which we mention two.</p>  
<p>IVLA story. Ideogram. While we are focusing on <em>explicit</em> information, our culture is dominated by and created through <em>implicit information</em>. </p>  
 
  
</div> </div>  
+
<p>We contributed "Healthcare as a Power Structure" to the European Association for the History of Medicine and Health. Historiographically, we based this research on the results  of Weston Price and Werner Kollath—two pioneers of the scientific "hygiene", understood as a scientific study of the ways in which civilized lifestyle influences people's health. But we also added a <em>methodological</em> contribution—a way to 'connect the dots' and supplement historiographic research by a general "law of change" result. By seeing that also our approach to health and medicine can develop pathological tendencies, we can explain the fact that the results of those pioneers are still virtually unknown even to medical professionals; and why, in spite of them, our "caring for health" so consistently ignores the lifestyle factors, and relies on far more costly interventions.</p>  
  
<div class="row">
+
<p>Kommunewiki—a <em>dialog</em>-based communication project for Norwegian municipalities (as basic units of Norwegian democracy)—was conceived to empower their members to counter <em>power structure</em> lifestyle tendencies, and develop <em>salutogenic</em> new ones.</p>  
<div class="col-md-3"><h2><em>Socialization</em> in popular culture</h2></div>
 
<div class="col-md-7">
 
<h3>The Matrix</h3>
 
<p>
 
When we think of the machines as being the <em>power structure</em>, the metaphor works rather accurately. We live in a constructed reality—while serving as power sources, living batteries, for machines. The metaphor is complete—reality is constructed, we have no freedom at all—and the world in an abysmal condition, without us being aware of that. </p>
 
<p>Even the fact that periodically there is a revolution, "the One" comes and restarts the matrix... </p>
 
<p>This puts us into an interesting situation—<em>can we ever</em> liberate ourselves from the <em>matrix</em> completely?</p>
 
<p>Of course, that's exactly what this part of the Holotopia project (liberation from <em>socialized reality</em>) is about.</p>  
 
 
  
<h3>Animal Farm</h3>
+
<p>We developed the "Movement and Qi" educational <em>prototype</em> as a way to add to the conventional academic portfolio a collection of ways to use human <em>body</em> as medium—and work with "human quality" directly. And as a way to include the insights and techniques of the "human quality" traditions such as yoga and qigong into the academic repertoire. </p>
<p>  
 
The animals throw out the humans, but the pigs take over and begin behaving as the humans did. A pattern repeated by our revolutions. The point is to see the <em>pattern</em> in our evolution—we tend to turn our social organization, <em>and</em> our shared "reality" (they are really two sides of the same coin), into a turf...  
 
</p>
 
  
<h3>Socializing elephants</h3>
+
<p>"Liberation", subtitled "Religion beyond Belief", is a book manuscript and a communication design project. The book <em>federates</em> the message of Ven. Ajahn Buddhadasa, a 20th century's Buddhism reformer in Thailand, who—having through experimentation and practice understood and 'repeated the Buddha's experiment', found in it also a natural antidote to rampant materialism. The first four chapters present four <em>aspects</em> of human <em>wholeness</em>, including physical effortlessness, creativity, emotions and vitality. Buddhadasa's insights are shown to be a <em>necessary</em> piece in this large puzzle. The closing four chapters explain how <em>societal</em> <em>wholeness</em> may result.</p>  
<p>  
 
The elephant can't move his leg. This is a metaphor for socializing humans, of course.
 
</p>
 
  
</div> </div>  
+
<p>The core Buddhadasa's message, which is also the message of this book, is to  portray <em>religion</em> as "liberation"—not only from rigidly held beliefs that form our self-identity, but from rigidly held <em>anything</em>, as well as from <em>self-identity</em> as such.</p>  
  
<div class="page-header" ><h2>Prototypes</h2></div>
+
<p>We chose this book as part of our strategy for launching the <em>holotopia</em>. Many people have strong opinions about religion—be they "religious" and pro, or "scientific" and against. This book is likely to surprise both sides and challenge <em>both</em> positions—while at the same time reconciling their differences. </p>
  
 +
<blockquote>Isn't the prospect of <em>evolving</em> religion further a promising strategy for remedying religion-inspired violence?</blockquote>
  
<div class="row">
+
<p>And of course, a way to evolve further culturally and ethically—as Peccei requested; and <em>holotopia</em> promised to deliver.</p>  
<div class="col-md-3"><h2>Holoscope and Holotopia</h2></div>
 
<div class="col-md-7">
 
<p>They are, of course, the <em>prototypes</em> of an approach to knowledge that liberates us; and a social order that results. We shall here, however, show how we may evolve beyond the <em>socialized reality</em> (or metaphorically, 'step through the <em>mirror</em>'), with the help of Holoscope's specific technical solutions.</p>  
 
  
 
</div> </div>  
 
</div> </div>  
 +
  
 
<div class="row">
 
<div class="row">
<div class="col-md-3"><h2><em>Truth by convention</em></h2></div>
+
<div class="col-md-3"><h2>Summary and conclusions</h2></div>
<div class="col-md-7">
+
<div class="col-md-7"><h3>Human quality and cultural revival</h3>
<p>When we say, for instance, "Culture is...", one expects, instantly, that what is being told is what culture "really is". How can we <em>ever</em> overcome this problem?</p>
 
<p>By using <em>truth by convention</em></p>
 
<p>This has the additional advantage of giving us explicit definitions of things (instead of taking things for granted, because we all "know" what they are..</p>  
 
  
</div> </div>  
+
<p>We <em>assumed</em> that Peccei's call to action (that we must "find a way to change course") was <em>federated</em>, and undertook to find out in what way the specific "change of course" he diagnosed was necessary,  "the advent of a new humanism essentially based on and aiming at man’s cultural development, that is, a substantial improvement in human quality throughout the world" could realistically be achieved.</p>  
  
<div class="row">
+
<p>The first of the <em>five insights</em>, the <em>power structure</em>, showed that when we use "free competition" or "the survival of the fittest" to direct our efforts and our evolutionary course, then <em>we</em> end up being 'the enemy' <em>creating</em> the "problematique". We have seen that the key to "changing course" is a change of values—from <em>convenience</em> and <em>egotism</em> to <em>wholeness</em>. We have seen (the <em>convenience paradox</em> insight) that this change of values follows when we substitute <em>federated</em> information for various forms of power-motivated <em>socialization</em>, such as advertising. </p>  
<div class="col-md-3"><h2><em>Design epistemology</em></h2></div>
 
<div class="col-md-7">
 
<p>It's defined <em>by convention</em></p>  
 
<p>Triply secure: (1 - 3)</p>  
 
  
</div> </div>  
+
<p>The values are an easy target, if we consider that <em>convenience</em> and <em>egotism</em> are so obviously lame that they hardly merit to be called "values". In the [[Holotopia:Socialized reality|<em>Socialized reality</em>]] detailed article, we however showed that those values inhibit also our <em>personal</em> "pursuit of happiness", profoundly and directly. And that as soon as an <em>informed</em> "pursuit of happiness" is in place, not only the direction is changed, but also a vast culture-creative frontier opens up, where the levels of human <em>wholeness</em> and fulfillment come within reach that are well beyond what the now common ways of "pursuing happiness" can achieve.</p>
  
<div class="row">
+
<p>Furthermore, in <em>narrow frame</em>, we have seen how a general-purpose <em>methodology</em> can be developed for doing that, on state-of-the-art academic premises.</p>  
<div class="col-md-3"><h2><em>Prototype</em></h2></div>
 
<div class="col-md-7">
 
<p>Resolves the <em>symbolic action</em> problem. Also the <em>Wiener's paradox</em>. Enables us to <em>bootstrap</em>. </p>
 
 
</div> </div>  
 
  
<div class="row">
+
<p>We can now offer the following conclusion.</p>
<div class="col-md-3"><h2><em>Dialog</em></h2></div>
 
<div class="col-md-7">
 
<p>A cognitive and ethical stance—roughly equivalent to the "objective observer" etiquette in science. </p>
 
<p>Has been part of <em>academia</em> since its inception—but David Bohm gave it a new meaning. A profound topic, truly worth studying.</p>  
 
  
</div> </div>  
+
<blockquote>The <em>five insights</em> show that "a way to change course" is by changing the relationship we have with information.</blockquote>  
  
 +
<p>From using <em>convenience</em> to choose information—to using <em>information</em> as 'guiding light' to make choices in general—and the choice of values in particular.</p>
  
 +
<h3>The relationship we have with information</h3>
  
 +
<p>A case for what we called the "core of our proposal"—to change the relationship we have with information—follows from the <em>five insights</em> directly. They are, after all, <em>insights</em>; each of them shows, in its own specific domain, that a radical change of perception, and of direction, follows as soon as we develop the <em>praxis</em> of <em>federating</em> insights, and using basic insights as "guiding light" to orient our action. </p>
  
 +
<p>The core of our proposal is to extend the academic or "scientific" approach to knowledge to include all those basic issues of human life and culture that have so far remained untouched by it—or even touched in a wrong way. A simple argument follows from the <em>historicity</em> of our handling of information: Science was conceived as a way to explore the natural phenomena; it ended up in its much larger role, of "the Grand Revelator of modern Western Culture" [http://holoscope.org/STORIES#Whorf as Benjamin Lee Whorf called it], "without intending to". </p>
  
 +
<h3><em>Knowledge federation</em> as academic field and real-life <em>praxis</em></h3>
  
 +
<p>Academically, the <em>prototype</em> we've proposed is a <em>paradigm</em> proposal (we have adapted from Thomas Kuhn's familiar keyword).</p>
  
 +
<p>Each of the <em>five insights</em> can now be seen as a large <em>anomaly</em>; a costly error, which has already been amply reported—and yet those reports remained ignored.</p>
  
 +
<p>The handling of each of the anomalies, we have shown, <em>requires</em> the specific choices or <em>design patterns</em> that our <em>prototype</em>, which forms the substance of our proposal, embodies.</p>
  
<!-- OLD
+
<p>We can now offer the following conclusion.</p>
  
  
<div class="row">
+
<blockquote>Our call to action, to institutionalize and develop <em>knowledge federation</em> as an academic field and a real-life <em>praxis</em>, is a practical way to implement the changes that have become necessary. As an academic field, <em>knowledge federation</em> is conceived as the <em>academia</em>'s and the society's evolutionary organ; as a real-life <em>praxis</em>, it is the collective thinking we now need to develop.</blockquote>  
<div class="col-md-3"><h2>The pitch</h2></div>
 
<div class="col-md-7">
 
<h3>All those candles</h3>  
 
 
<p>
 
<p>
Without giving it a thought, we adopted from the traditional culture a myth incomparably more subversive than the myth of creation. This myth has served as <em>the</em> foundation on which our culture has developed.</p>  
+
[[File:Jantsch-university.jpeg]]
<small><p>  
+
</p>
The fact that the <em>reality myth</em> sneaked through our rational checks and balances can hardly be surprising. When I type "worldviews", my word processor complains; since there is only one world, there can be only one worldview—the one that <em>corresponds</em> to reality. The <em>reality myth</em> is hard-coded in our language; it permeates our culture.
+
<p>When making this call to action, we are not saying anything new; we are only echoing the call to action that <em>many</em> have made before us.</p>  
</p></small>
 
<p>Looking at Galilei's time and situation, we wonder why it was so difficult for those people back then to see those simple facts—that the Earth is just one of the planets in the Solar system... and that the human mind <em>does</em> have the capacity to understand the world. But by doing that, we fail to recognize the <em>real</em> gift that the story of Galilei has in store for us—the <em>insight</em> into the human condition, whereby it is recognized that we humans can be <em>socialized</em> to believe in almost anything!</p>
 
<p>Hence instead of being caught up in a battle that was waged and won centuries ago, we must ask whether we too have our <em>socialized reality</em>, which we are now called upon to overgrow, and overcome.</p>
 
</div> </div>  
 
  
<div class="row">
+
<p>We, however, also <em>federate</em> that call to action, by organizing together a broad variety of insights that motivate it; and we <em>operationalize</em> the action, by evolving [[prototype|<em>prototypes</em>]].</p>  
<div class="col-md-3"><h2>The point</h2></div>
 
<div class="col-md-7">
 
<h3>The miracle of the mirror</h3>
 
<p>The <em>academia</em> now has the prerogative, and the obligation (imposed on it by the nature of the academic tradition, and by its social role of the keeper of the keys to our culture's 'cellar' where its foundations can be seen and accessed) to guide our society 'through the <em>mirror</em>'. A feat not unlike the miracle that Moses performed, by guiding the oppressed over Sinai. And a feat that is perfectly feasible—according to <em>today</em>'s values and ideas.</p>
 
<p>A feat whose liberating consequences extend all the way to the horizon, and the chances are also well beyond.</p>  
 
  
</div> </div>
 
<div class="row">
 
<div class="col-md-3"><h2>Scope</h2></div>
 
<div class="col-md-7">
 
<p>
 
We have come to the very heart of our matter—our culture's invisible <em>foundations</em>. Our analysis of those foundations is in two parts; we here take up the values, which determine what we consider worth preserving, creating, knowing and acting on. Related to the <em>narrow frame</em> insight we take up the language, the method and other tools which decide what can and can not be built, preserved and considered as "culture".
 
</p>
 
<p>Recall that we are developing an analogy with Galilei's time and conditions, in response to Aurelio Peccei's diagnoses and recommendations. There can be no doubt that what was going on in Galilei's time was exactly the kind of change that Peccei's calls to action were pointing to. Galilei stands here in an iconic role—representing for us the idea that the reason <em>can</em> be empowered to challenge the conventional wisdom, and the time-honored truths written in the Scripture. Could a similar advent be in store for us today?</p>
 
<p>
 
We are about to see not only a positive answer to that question—but also that this answer follows logically from the information we already own. </p>
 
<p>
 
In addition to <em>design</em> and <em>tradition</em>, we define and use here another pair of <em>keywords</em>, <em>epistemology</em> and <em>socialization</em>. They will enable us to talk about our theme (how we know that something is "true" or "good" etc.). One might say that the <em>tradition</em> evolves and functions by <em>socialization</em>; and that a post-<em>traditional</em> culture must rely on <em>epistemology</em>. That would be a useful simplification—but an oversimplification none the less.</p>
 
<p>
 
So let us rather recognize that <em>socialization</em> is and has always been the way in which the human cultures operate. Already in the cradle, and long before our capacity to reflect about those matters has grown, we adopt from our parents patterns of speech and behavior. At school, through innumerably many carrots and sticks, we learn to distinguish between "right" and "wrong". It is best to understand a culture as we understand an ecosystem—where everything depends on everything else; and whose <em>wholeness</em> can be disrupted by human action.</p>
 
<p>
 
Notice that <em>tradition</em> is our ideal <em>keyword</em>. A <em>culture</em> is <em>by definition</em> capable of producing <em>wholeness</em> through spontaneous evolution, by trial and error and the survival of the fittest. The question is whether <em>we</em> are still capable of doing that, in the post-<em>traditional</em> culture we've created.</p>
 
<small>
 
<p>Facing now <em>the</em> perennial creative challenge—to undo the effects of our socialization, we may feel sympathy toward Galilei, Darwin and other iconic figures of the scientific tradition. They risked their reputation, and sometimes their very lives, acting as the informed reason demanded—while not only their socialized others, but also their socialized <em>selves</em> were telling them that they were wrong!</p>
 
</small>
 
<p>
 
The meaning of <em>epistemology</em> may best be explained by looking at the academic tradition through the stories of the two main ions we here chose to represent it, Socrates and Galilei. A closer look will that both were instances of the empowerment of reason to disobey the <em>socialization</em>; and create a new—free and evolving, yet more solid—way to knowledge. Is the contemporary <em>academia</em> still capable of continuing this tradition, by acting accordingly when the circumstances demand that?</p>
 
<p>Was the Enlightenment's rebellion against the tradition, which still continues today, a disruption of nature-like or paradise-like <em>wholeness</em>? </p>
 
<p>Or was it a rebellion against a human order of things where people were <em>socialized</em> to obey the kings and the clergy, which kept the evolution in check?</p>
 
<p>Our point is that it was <em>both</em>. Or more precisely—that to see what has happened to us, and what we need to do now, we need to <em>see</em> our culture's evolution that resulted in the Englightenment in those two ways.</p> 
 
</div> </div>
 
  
<div class="row">
 
<div class="col-md-3"><h2>Myths and Errors</h2></div>
 
<div class="col-md-7">
 
<h3>"Truth" means "correspondence with reality"</h3>
 
<p>First of all that there <em>is</em> such a thing; and second that it is knowable, and provable.</p>
 
  
<h3>Information must show us "the reality"</h3>
+
<h3>The <em>holotopia</em> vision</h3>  
<p>The purpose of information, and the value of information, is to be decided on one criterion alone—whether it shows us "the reality" in an "objectively true" way or not. That this is what distinguishes "real" or "good" information, from nonsense and deception.</p>
 
<p>A closely related error is to ignore <em>implicit information</em> (in academia, legislature, ethics...), and focus solely on information that explicitly <em>claims</em> something.</p> 
 
</div> </div>  
 
  
  
<div class="row">
+
<p>The <em>five insights</em> together compose a vision of "a great cultural revival". They complete the analogy between our time and the situation at the twilight of the Middle Ages and the dawn of the Renaissance, which we've been pointing to by using the iconic image of Galilei in house arrest:</p>  
<div class="col-md-3"><h2>View</h2></div>
 
  
<div class="col-md-6">
 
<p>
 
The evolution of <em>knowledge of knowledge</em> has brought us into this situation; in front of the metaphorical <em>mirror</em>. </p>
 
<p>This metaphor has several connotations:
 
 
<ul>  
 
<ul>  
<li>Seeing ourselves; from a situation where we believed (had every reason to believe, or it appeared so) that what we see (with our eyes, our reason, and the refined instruments of science) is the reality, we have evolved to see <em>how</em> we <em>construct</em> what we see; seeing the <em>limits</em> of our seeing, and knowing</li>  
+
<li><b>A revolution in innovation</b>. By bringing a radical improvement of the efficiency and effectiveness of human work, through innovation, the Industrial Revolution promised to liberate our ancestors from hardship and toil, so that they may focus on developing culture and "human quality".  The <em>power structure</em>, however, thwarted our aspirations. This issue can be resolved, and progress can be resumed, by learning to "make things whole" on the level of <em>the systems in which we live and work</em>.</li>
<li>Seeing ourselves in the world; in a human world that is in a completely new situation, and has completely new needs, than when during the Enlightenment and the Scientific and Industrial Revolution, when our present foundations took shape</li>  
+
 
 +
<li><b>A revolution in communication</b>. The printing press enabled the Enlightenment by enabling a revolution in literacy and communication.  The <em>collective mind</em> insight shows that the new information technology can power a <em>similar</em> revolution—whose effect will be a revolution of <em>meaning</em>. The kind of revolution that can make the differences that needs to make, in a post-industrial society.</li>  
 +
 
 +
<li><b>A revolution in <em>epistemology</em></b>. By reviving the academic tradition, the Enlightenment empowered our ancestors to use their reason to comprehend the world, and evolve faster. The <em>socialized reality</em> insight shows that the evolution of the academic tradition brought us to a <em>new</em> turning point—which will liberate us from  <em>reifying</em> our inherited <em>systems</em> and worldviews; and enable us to evolve culturally, at a similar rate as we've evolved technologically.</li>
 +
 
 +
<li><b>A revolution in method</b>. Galilei in house arrest was <em>science</em> in house arrest. Once liberated, this new way to understand the the world liberated our ancestors from superstition, and empowered them to change their condition by developing technology. The <em>narrow frame</em> insight shows that the "project science" can and needs to be extended into all walks of life—to illuminate the core issues that traditional science left in the dark. </li>
 +
 
 +
<li><b>A revolution in culture</b>. The Renaissance <em>was</em> a "great cultural revival"—a liberation and celebration of life, love, and beauty, through lifestyle change and the arts. The <em>convenience paradox</em> insight shows that our culture is again a victim of <em>power structure</em>; and that a <em>final</em> liberation is possible.</li>  
 +
 
 
</ul>  
 
</ul>  
Our situation demands that we, first of all, self-reflect. And then find a way to continue further not by <em>avoiding</em> the <em>mirror</em>, but by (metaphorically, of course) going through it.</p>
+
 
<p>The substance of our KF proposal, as already noted, is a complete <em>prototype</em> of an academic reality on the other side of the <em>mirror</em>. What we are talking about here is how to 'go through'.
 
</p> </div>
 
<div class="col-md-3">
 
[[File:Mirror.jpg]]<br>
 
<small>The Mirror <em>idogram</em></small>
 
 
</div> </div>  
 
</div> </div>  
 +
 +
 +
 +
<div class="page-header" ><h2>A strategy</h2></div>
 +
 +
<div class="row">
 +
<div class="col-md-3"><h2>We will <em>not</em> solve our problems</h2></div>
 +
<div class="col-md-6">
 +
 +
<p>The Holotopia [[prototype|<em>prototype</em>]] is conceived as a co-creative space, where we make tactical moves toward "changing course".</p>
 +
 +
<p>We respond to Margaret Mead's call to action (published in "Continuities in Cultural Evolution", in 1964—four years before The Club of Rome was founded):
 +
<blockquote>
 +
"(W)e are living in a period of extraordinary danger, as we are faced with the possibility that our whole species will be eliminated from the evolutionary scene. One necessary condition of successfully continuing our existence is the creation of an atmosphere of hope that the huge problems now confronting us can, in fact, be solved—and can be solved in time."
 +
</blockquote> </p>
 +
<p>We do not claim, or even assume, that "the huge problems now confronting us" can be solved.</p>
 +
</div>
 +
 +
<div class="col-md-3">
 +
[[File:Mead.jpg]]<br>
 +
<small>Margaret Mead</small>
 +
</div> </div> 
  
 
<div class="row">
 
<div class="row">
 
<div class="col-md-3"></div>
 
<div class="col-md-3"></div>
 +
<div class="col-md-7">
 +
<p>[https://youtu.be/U7Z6h-U4CmI?t=223 Hear Dennis Meadows] (who coordinated the team that produced The Club of Rome's seminal 1972 report Limits to Growth) diagnose, based on 44 years of experience on this frontier, that our pursuit of "sustainability" falls short of avoiding the "predicament" they were warning us about back then:</p>
 +
<blockquote>
 +
"Will the current ideas about "green industry", and "qualitative growth", avoid collapse? No possibility. Absolutely no possibility of that. (...) Globally, we are something like sixty or seventy percent <em>above</em> sustainable levels."
 +
</blockquote> 
  
<div class="col-md-7">
+
<p>We wasted precious four decades pursuing a dream ([https://youtu.be/0141gupAryM?t=95 hear Ronald Reagan] set the tone for it, in the role of "the leader of the free world"). </p>  
<p>
+
 
The <em>academia</em> has the prerogative to guide us through the <em>mirror</em>. (Assuming that Peccei was right), <em>academia</em> holds the key to our future.
+
<blockquote>A sense of sobering up, and of <em>catharsis</em>, now needs to reach us from the depth of our problems. </blockquote>
</p>  
+
 
<p>
+
<p>Small things don't matter. Business as usual is a waste of time. </p>  
By adopting the rational foundation that the Enlightenment left us, we became able to know, collectively, that women can't fly on broomsticks. Innumerably many superstitions and prejudices were dispelled. </p>  
+
<p>Our evolution, or "progress", must acquire a new—cultural—focus and direction.</p>
<p>
+
<p>[https://youtu.be/U7Z6h-U4CmI?t=291 Hear Dennis Meadows say], in the interview cited above:</p>
But we have also thrown out the baby with the bathwater. We have <em>no</em> foundation on which we can preserve the traditional heritage. And <em>no</em> foundation for reconstituting the myriad functions of a culture, and hence the <em>wholeness</em> that the <em>traditional culture</em> (we assume) represented.</p>  
+
<blockquote>
<p>Consequently, we have abandoned the production of culture to counterculture; to advertisers, political propaganda, superficial interests... <em>We</em> are now molded by those interests. What they need is not "human development"; they mold us to be sheepish, selfish and obedient.</p>  
+
"Will it be possible, here in Germany, to continue this level of energy consumption, and this degree of material welfare? Absolutely not. Not in the United States, not in other countries either. Could you <em>change</em> your cultural and your social norms, in a way that gave attractive future? Yes, you could."
 +
</blockquote>
 +
 
 +
<p>It is <em>this</em> change—of our very idea of "progress"—that the <em>holotopia</em> is focusing on.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>Ironically, our problems can only be solved when we no longer see them as problems—but as <em>symptoms</em> of much deeper, structural or systemic defects, which <em>can</em> and must be corrected to continue our evolution; to resume "progress". But this we need to do irrespective of problems!</p>
 +
 
 +
<blockquote>The <em>five insights</em> show that the <em>structural</em> problems now confronting us <em>can</em> be solved.</blockquote>
 +
 
 +
<p>Hence the <em>holotopia</em> fulfills "one necessary condition of successfully continuing our existence" in a much <em>larger</em> degree than Mead asked for. It fosters <em>more than</em> "an atmosphere of hope". It is indeed a clear vision of a future that is far <em>more</em> worth living in than our present-day condition, <em>and</em> of what we must do to get there, that the <em>holotopia</em> 'brand' stands for.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>And we don't even need to <em>wait</em> for our problems to be solved; we can be part of "a great cultural revival" instantly—by joining <em>holotopia</em> in action, or even only in spirit. </p>  
 +
 
 +
<p>We, however, neither deny that the problems we are facing must be attended to, nor belittle the heroic efforts of our frontier colleagues who are working on their solution.</p>
 +
 
 +
<blockquote>The <em>holotopia</em> only <em>complements</em> the problem-based approaches—by adding what is still lacking to make solutions possible.</blockquote>  
  
 
</div> </div>  
 
</div> </div>  
  
 
<div class="row">
 
<div class="row">
<div class="col-md-3"><h2>Action</h2></div>
+
<div class="col-md-3"><h2>Holotopia is not <em>our</em> project</h2></div>
 +
<div class="col-md-6">
  
<div class="col-md-7">
+
<p>Holotopia is the project of our generation and more—it is <em>trans-generational</em>.</p>
<p>
 
Four courses of action follow as rather obvious, yet necessary, from the self-reflection in front of the <em>mirror</em>.
 
</p>
 
<h3><em>Truth by convention</em></h3>
 
<p>A new 'Archimedean point', to replace old formulas such as Descartes' "<em>cogito</em>", and Galilei's "<em>Eppur si muove</em>". We need it to once again give knowledge the power to 'move the world'.</p>
 
<small> <p>
 
We did not invent <em>truth convention</em>; our only innovation was to turn <em>itself</em> into a convention. But that makes <em>all</em> the difference—by giving us a completely solid new foundation to build on, independent of "reality". We can then define an <em>epistemology</em> explicitly—not as a statement about reality, but as a convention. Our <em>epistemology</em> is a <em>prototype</em>; it has provisions that allow it to evolve further.</p> </small>
 
<h3><em>Design epistemology</em></h3>
 
<p>This new <em>epistemology</em> is roughly what the Modernity <em>ideogram</em>, the bus with candle headlights is saying: Information (and the way we handle it) is a piece in a larger whole; and it must be treated accordingly.</p>
 
<small><p>
 
The <em>design epistemology</em> is, of course, stated as a convention. Other conventions, for other purposes, can be made, by using this approach.</p> </small>  
 
  
<h3><em>Information</em> is "recorded experience</h3>
+
<p><em>Our</em> generation's task is to it. Instead of living our children a mess—to leave them the beginning of a <em>new</em> world.</p>  
<p>According to this convention, <em>information</em>, reflects human experience, not "reality". </p>
 
<p><em>Anything</em> that records experience is (or can be considered as) <em>information</em>. A chair is <em>information</em> because it embodies the experience about sitting, and chair making. This definition includes, rituals, myths, customs, values and so many other elements of the tradition as potentially containing valuable <em>information</em></p>
 
<small> <p>We recognize it as our challenge to <em>federate</em> the <em>information</em> contained therein.</p> </small>  
 
  
<h3><em>Knowledge federation</em></h3>  
+
<p>Margaret Mead left us this encouragement:
<p>The <em>prototype</em> we proposed is of an 'evolutionary organ', which the <em>academia</em> may use to <em>federate</em> information into systemic change, in culture and beyond. </p>  
+
<blockquote>  
<small> <p> The Holotopia <em>prototype</em> is of course an example.</p> </small>
+
"Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world. Indeed, it is the only thing that ever has."
</div> </div>  
+
</blockquote> </p>  
 +
<p>She also pointed to the critical task at hand: "Although tremendous advances in the human sciences have been made in the last hundred years, almost no advance has been made in their use, especially in ways of creating reliable new forms in which cultural evolution can be directed to desired goals."</p>
  
 +
<p><em>That</em> is where the Holotopia <em>prototype</em> finds its niche! We set it up as a research lab, for resolutely working toward that goal. We create a transformative 'snowball', with the material of our own bodies; and we let it roll. </p>
 +
</div>
  
<div class="page-header" ><h2>Stories</h2></div>
+
<div class="col-md-3">
 
 
<div class="row">
 
<div class="col-md-3"><h2>Plan</h2></div>
 
<div class="col-md-7">
 
 
<p>  
 
<p>  
Three insights will here be <em>federated</em>:
+
[[File:SagradaFamilia.png]]<br>
* "correspondence with reality" is a <em>myth</em>  
+
<small>Like Gaudi's Sagrada Familia, the <em>holotopia</em> is a trans-generational building project. (We preliminarily borrow this photo found on the Web.)</small>  
* "reality" is constructed—by our cognitive organs; and our society
+
</p>  
* "reality" is a product of <em>socialization</em>  
 
</p>
 
<small><p>These three insights constitute a radical departure from the positivist frame of mind, which tends to mark education.</p> </small>
 
  
 
</div> </div>  
 
</div> </div>  
 +
  
 
<div class="row">
 
<div class="row">
<div class="col-md-3"><h2>Reality is a <em>myth</em></h2></div>
+
<div class="col-md-3"><h2>We <em>federate</em> a strategy</h2></div>
 
<div class="col-md-7">
 
<div class="col-md-7">
 +
<p>Peccei wrote in One Hundred Pages for the Future (the boldface emphasis is ours):</p>
 +
<blockquote><p>For some time now, the perception of (our responsibilities relative to "problematique") has motivated a number of organizations and small voluntary groups of concerned citizens which have mushroomed all over to respond to the demands of new situations or to change whatever is not going right in society. These groups are now legion. They arose sporadically on the most variend fronts and with different aims. They comprise peace movements, supporters of national liberation, and advocates of women's rights and population control; defenders of minorities, human rights and civil liberties; apostles of "technology with a human face" and the humanization of work; social workers and activists for social change; ecologists, friends of the Earth or of animals; defenders of consumer rights; non-violent protesters; conscientious objectors, and many others. These groups are usually small but, should the occasion arise, they can mobilize a host of men and women, young and old, inspired by a profound sense of te common good and by moral obligations which, in their eyes, are more important than all others.</p>
 +
<p>They form a kind of popular army, actual or potential, with a function comparable to that of the antibodies generated to restore normal conditions in a biological organism that is diseased or attacked by pathogenic agents. The existence of so many spontaneous organizations and groups testifies to the vitality of our societies, even in the midst of the crisis they are undergoing. <b>Means will have to be found one day to consolidate their scattered efforts in order to direct them towards strategic objectives.</b></p> </blockquote>
 +
 +
<p>Especially in times of change, diversity is good and useful, and it needs to be preserved and nourished. The systems scientists have a keyword, "requisite variety", which points to a <em>necessary</em> spectrum of capabilities or <em>memes</em> that make a social system capable of responding to environmental change, by changing itself—and hence viable or "sustainable".</p>
 +
 +
<blockquote>The risk is, however, that the actions of "small voluntary groups of concerned citizens" may be reactive, not <em>pro</em>active.</blockquote> 
 +
 +
<p>To point to this risk, from political scientist Murray Edelman we adapted the keyword [[symbolic action|<em>symbolic action</em>]]. We engage in <em>symbolic action</em> when we act out our concerns and responsibilities <em>within the limits of what's allowed</em>—i.e. within the limits set by <em>the systems in which we live and work</em>. We organize a demonstration; or an academic conference. As a rule, <em>symbolic action</em> will have only <em>symbolic</em> effects; it will make us <em>feel</em> that we've done our duty. But it won't affect the <em>systemic</em> causes from which our problems result.</p>
 +
 +
<p>There is a lot to be said in favor of <em>informing</em> the work on change—by allowing the "strategic objectives" to emerge by <em>federating</em> insights, and by learning from one another. "Design for evolution" was Erich Jantsch's fruitful slogan, and we let it be our guiding light.</p>
 +
 +
<p>The advantages of adding an "evolutionary learning" module to the frontier where change is under way become especially striking when we consider the following insight, which follows as an obvious consequence of the <em>five insights</em>, and from all the rest we've shared above:</p>
 +
 +
<blockquote>Comprehensive change can be easy—even when small and obviously necessary changes may have proven to be impossible.</blockquote>
 +
 +
<p>Comprehensive change, however, has its own way in which it may need to proceed; it has its own [http://kf.wikiwiki.ifi.uio.no/CONVERSATIONS#Donella systemic leverage points].</p>
 +
 +
<blockquote>The Holotopia <em>prototype</em> is envisioned as a 'research lab', organized to help the best strategies and strategic directions emerge.</blockquote>
 +
 +
<p>Here we are presenting an initial variant, to get us started.</p>
  
<h3>It is sufficient to quote einstein</h3> 
 
<p>A <em>myth</em> is a popular belief that cannot be verified—but serves certain social and cultural roles.</p>
 
<p>Two quotations of Einstein, repeated in several places already, including Federation through Images on this website, are sufficient to make this point:
 
* The closed watch metaphor explains why "correspondence with reality" cannot be verified
 
* The quotations about the two illusions confirms that "correspondence with reality" is (according to 'modern science') a product of illusion
 
</p>
 
<p>
 
Einstein's "epistemological credo" is precisely what we turned into a convention, while creating the <em>design epistemology</em>. We of course also added the purpose. </p>
 
 
</div> </div>  
 
</div> </div>  
  
 +
<b>This text will be corrected, improved and completed by the end of 2020.</b>
 +
 +
<!-- AAA
 
<div class="row">
 
<div class="row">
<div class="col-md-3"><h2>Reality is constructed</h2></div>
+
<div class="col-md-3"><h2>We foster a <em>meme</em></h2></div>
 
<div class="col-md-7">
 
<div class="col-md-7">
<p>It was described by Piaget, Maturana and Berger and Luckmann, along so many others; read from [https://holoscope.info/2019/02/07/knowledge-federation-dot-org/#Maturana here].</p>
 
</div> </div>
 
  
 +
<p>Margaret Mead also left us an admonition—what exactly distinguishes "a small group of citizens" that is capable of making a large difference—which we do not take lightly.</p>
 +
 +
 +
<blockquote>"(W)e take the position that the unit of cultural evolution is neither the single gifted individual nor the society as a whole, but <em>the small group of interacting individuals</em> who, together with the most gifted among them, can take the next step; then we can set about the task of creating the conditions in which the appropriately gifted can actually make a contribution. That is, rather than isolating potential "leaders," we can purposefully produce the conditions we find in history, in which clusters are formed of a small number of extraordinary and ordinary men and women, so related to their period and to one another that they can consciously set about solving the problems they propose for themselves."</blockquote>
 +
 +
 +
<p>We have demonstrated that we are <em>not</em> creating the conditions "in which the appropriately gifted can actually make a contribution". Our stories, deliberately chosen to be a half-century old, show that the "appropriately gifted" have <em>offered</em> their gifts—but we did not receive them.</p>
 +
 +
<blockquote>Through innumerably many 'carrots and sticks', we  have been socialized to turn a deaf ear to the hero in us, and conform to our institutions as "little cogs that mesh together" (see [https://youtu.be/tRpWtQOpFm4 this excerpt] from the animated film The Incredibles). </blockquote>
 +
 +
<p>To act in ways we <em>know</em> don't work, because our embodied experience tells us that, is an epitome of stupidity. Unless, of course, our goal is to shift the paradigm—in which case acting in ways we know don't work is exactly <em>what we have to be able to do</em>!  </p>
 +
 +
<p>Can the Holotopia <em>prototype</em> mobilize enough "human quality", within us who take in it an active part, and on the interface where it meets the world, to manifest its vision?</p>
  
<div class="row">
+
<blockquote>In the Holotopia <em>prototype</em>, we turn the challenge of <em>transforming</em> the cultural ecology that would make us "little cogs that mesh together" into a co-creative strategy game.</blockquote>  
<div class="col-md-3"><h2>Reality is <em>socialized</em></h2></div>
 
<div class="col-md-7"><p>This development—how exactly we learned, painstakingly,  that we are not those "objective observers" we believed we were (an assumption based on which <em>so much</em> of our world has been developed)—is so central to the Holotopia project, that we here take time to point to some of its milestones.</p>  
 
  
<h3>Bowing to the king</h3>  
+
<p>Our core goal is, in other words, to <em>federate</em> a value, and a way of being in the world—where we make both things and <em>ourselves</em> <em>whole</em>—by <em>being</em> responsible, responsive and self-organizing parts in a whole.</p>  
<p>A story illustrating subtle yet pervasive workings of <em>socialization</em></p>  
 
  
<h3>Socrates – Galilei</h3>
 
<p>The key point here is Piaget's "the reason organizes the world by organizing itself"</p>
 
 
</div> </div>  
 
</div> </div>  
 +
 +
<div class="page-header" ><h2>Tactical assets</h2></div>
 +
  
 
<div class="row">
 
<div class="row">
 
<div class="col-md-3"></div>
 
<div class="col-md-3"></div>
<div class="col-md-6">
+
<div class="col-md-7"><p>The Holotopia <em>prototype</em> is conceived as a collaborative strategy game—where we make tactical moves toward the <em>holotopia</em> vision. By prime it by this collection of tactical assets. </p>
<h3>Pavlov – Chakhotin</h3>
+
 
<p>Pavlov's experiments on dogs (for which he was awarded the Nobel Prize) can serve as a parable for <em>socialization</em></p>
 
<p>After working with Pavlov in his laboratory, Chakhotin participated in 1932 German elections against Hitler. Understood that Hitler was conditioning or <em>socializing</em> the German people. Wrote "Le viole des foules..." (see the comments,  link TBA). </p>
 
<p>Chakhotin practiced, and advocated, to use non-factual or <em>implicit</em> information to counteract the <em>socialization</em> attempts by political bad guys (see the image on the right). Adding "t" to the familiar Nazi greeting produced "Heilt Hitler" (cure Hitler). </p>
 
</div>
 
<div class="col-md-3">
 
[[File:Chakhotin-sw.gif]]
 
 
</div> </div>  
 
</div> </div>  
 +
 +
<div class="row">
 +
<div class="col-md-3"><h2>Art</h2></div>
 +
<div class="col-md-7"><p>The Holotopia <em>prototype</em> extends science as we know it—and at the same time thoroughly transforms it. The <em>science</em> we practice is not limited to academic professionals and laboratories, on the contrary—it <em>extends</em> the traditional <em>academia</em> into a vibrant space of transformative action.</p>
 +
<p>
 +
[[File:KunsthallDialog01.jpg]]
 +
</p>
 +
<br>
 +
<small>An example of a transformative space, created by our "Earth Sharing" pilot project, in Kunsthall 3.14 art gallery in Bergen, Norway.</small>
 +
 +
<p>Just as the case was during the Renaissance, only the <em>art</em> can give transformative insights a transformative form. </p>
 +
 +
<p>We are reminded of Michelangelo painting the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel, and in the midst of the old <em>order of things</em> planting seeds of a new one. Art is what first comes to mind when we think of the Renaissance. What sort of art will be the vehicle for this new one?</p>
 +
 +
<p>When Marcel Duchamp exhibited the urinal, he challenged not only the meaning of "art", but also the limits of what we can conceive of as creative action. The deconstruction of the tradition, has, however, now been completed.</p>
 +
 +
<blockquote>Our situation calls for artistic <em>construction</em> of a completely new kind.</blockquote>
 +
 +
 +
<p>Here is a <em>very</em> brief sketch of <em>holotopia</em> ("white") being "(...) also the new red"; through a brief sketch of (possible) <em>holotopia</em>'s interpretation of "young Marx". Point is: Young Marx arrived at a theoretical / philosophical standpoint for understanding the society and its ills. But having seen the miserable condition of the workers, he (in the eyes of the revolutionary left "matured" and) eschewed the intellectual idealism of his era, and embraced revolutionary engagement instead. The paradox of Marx is that this latter having become controversial and in many ways inappropriate for our conditions, the former got forgotten and ignored...</p>
 +
<p>In "Production of Space", Henri Lefebvre summarized  Marx's essential and <em>increasingly</em> vital point, his objection to capitalism (or what we would call <em>power structure</em> evolution) as causing "alienation" (by which humans are forced to abandon their quest for <em>wholeness</em>), by observing that capital (machines, tools, materials...) or "investments" are products of past work, and hence represent "dead labour". Our past activity "crystalyzed, as it were, and became a precondition for new activity." Under capitalism, "what is dead takes hold of what is alive". Lefebvre proposed to turn this relationship upon its head. "But how could what is alive lay hold of what is dead? The answer is: through the production of space, whereby living labour can produce something that is no longer a thing, nor simply a set of tools, nor simply a commodity.</p>
 +
 +
<blockquote>As an initiative in the arts, Holotopia produces a <em>space</em> where what is alive in us can overcome what is making us dead.</blockquote> 
  
  
<div class="row">
 
<div class="col-md-3"></div>
 
<div class="col-md-6">
 
<h3>Murray Edelman</h3>
 
<p>Already in the 1960s the researchers knew that the conventional mechanisms of democracy (the elections) don't serve the purpose they were assumed to serve (distribution of power)—because (field research showed) the voters are unfamiliar with the candidates' proposed policies, the incumbents don't tend to fulfill their electoral promises and so on. Edelman contributed an interesting addition: It's not that the elections don't serve a purpose; it's just that this purpose is different from what's believed. The purpose is <em>symbolic</em> (they serve to legitimize the governments and the policies, by making people <em>feel</em> they were asked etc.)</p>
 
<p>Edelman, as a political science researcher, contributed a quite thorough study of the "symbolic uses of politics".</p>
 
</div>
 
<div class="col-md-3">
 
[[File:Edelman.jpg]]
 
 
</div> </div>  
 
</div> </div>  
  
 
<div class="row">
 
<div class="row">
<div class="col-md-3"></div>
+
<div class="col-md-3"><h2>Stories</h2></div>
 
<div class="col-md-7">
 
<div class="col-md-7">
<h3>Freud – Bernays</h3>  
+
<p>The "stories" here are what is technically called [[vignette|<em>vignettes</em>]]. They are a basic journalistic technique (where a relevant or complex issue is made palpable by telling people and situation stories), applied to basic academic ideas and developments. But not only; stories or <em>vignettes</em> can be used to <em>federate</em> any other relevant  <em>meme</em> as well.  </p>  
<p>Freud, famously, fought and won a battle against the prevailing belief in the pure rationality of the human animal, by showing the power of the unconscious. His American nephew, Edward Bernays, saw how Freud's research can be adapted to be used for commercial purposes.</p>  
+
<p>We are, of course, not limited to verbal story telling. Like the [[ideogram|<em>ideograms</em>]], the [[vignette|<em>vignettes</em>]] can take any sort of form, on any sort of medium, or their combination. Hence our collection of stories are offered as a way to <em>federate</em> the core ideas and insights that together compose the <em>holotopia</em>—by making them available to creative media people. </p>
<p>Honored by Life as "one of the 100 most influential Americans of the 20th century", and as "the father of public relations", Bernays gave <em>socialization</em> a scientific foundation—as his titles Crystallizing Public Opinion (1923), Propaganda (1928), Public Relations (1945), The Engineering of Consent (1955) might illustrate. "Citing works of writers such as Gustave Le Bon, Wilfred Trotter, Walter Lippmann, and his own double uncle Sigmund Freud, he described the masses as irrational and subject to herd instinct—and outlined how skilled practitioners could use crowd psychology and psychoanalysis to control them in desirable ways." (Wikipedia) </p>  
+
<p>It may seem that story telling is an inefficient way to highlight a point, and hence also unacademic. But exactly the opposite is the case! The [[vignette|<em>vignettes</em>]] are beautifully efficient, because they point to numerous nuances at once, and the way in which they are connected. Hence they are invaluable for the cause of seeing things whole.</p>  
 +
<p>We have seen a number of such stories already. Here, however, we illustrate the concept by focusing on a single one—which is <em>the</em> iconic story introducing the [[knowledge federation|<em>knowledge federation</em>]]. </p> 
 +
<p>The second book in the Holotopia series, tentatively titled "Systemic Innovation", and subtitled "Cybernetics of Democracy", will  <em>federate</em> this story. </p> 
 +
 
 +
<h3>[[The incredible history of Doug Engelbart]]</h3>
 +
 
 +
<p>We've told this story many times, and will <em>federate</em> them properly in the file linked by the title. We here only share the beginning, and a punchline.</p>
 +
<p>It's 1950, and Christmas is drawing near. An idealistic young man, at the beginning of his career, is taking a critical look at what's ahead of him: He is twenty five, with excellent education, employed as an engineer by (what would became) NASA, engaged to be married... He sees his career as a straight path to retirement; and he doesn't like what he sees. A man's life should have a purpose! So right there and then Engelbart makes a decision: He will optimize his career so as to maximize the benefits it would have for the mankind. </p>
 +
<p>After that, just as every good engineer should do, he spent three month intensely pondering about what would be the best way to fulfill his intention. Then he had an epiphany.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>We could say "the rest is history"—but the nature of Engelbart's epiphany has not yet been understood. His gift to the world has not ye been received. In spite of being celebrated as the Silicon Valley's greatest inventor, or as we might phrase this, its '<em>giant</em> in residence'—Engelbart passed away in 2013 feeling he had failed.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>When properly told, this story <em>is</em> incredible. What makes it so interesting for us is that in spite of that it <em>can</em> be understood—when we place it as a transformative <em>meme</em> into the context of the <em>five insights</em>. Then, however, the story illustrates a range of phenomena that are central to <em>holotopia</em>.</p>  
 +
 
 
</div> </div>  
 
</div> </div>  
 +
  
 
<div class="row">
 
<div class="row">
<div class="col-md-3"></div>
+
<div class="col-md-3"><h2>The <em>elephant</em></h2></div>
 
<div class="col-md-7">
 
<div class="col-md-7">
<h3>Berger and Luckmann</h3>  
+
<p>
 +
[[File:Elephant.jpg]]<br>
 +
<small>Elephant <em>ideogram</em></small>
 +
</p>
 +
<p>Each of the stories alone is, of course, relevant and interesting. They, however, become dramatically more relevant and interesting when seen <em>in the context of</em> the mega-event we that is taking place in our time.</p>  
  
<p>Their 1966 "Social Construction of Reality" is a sociology classic. What interests us here is, however, their observation that social reality constructions tend to be turned into "universal theories"—and used to legitimize the political and economic status quo. </p>
+
<blockquote>The role of this metaphorical image, the [[invisible elephant|<em>elephant</em>]], is to point to a "quantum leap" in relevance and interest, which specific insights and actions can achieve when presented as essential elements of a spectacularly large event—"a great cultural revival".</blockquote>
<p>The reality of the Scripture, and the king's role as God's earthly representative, are familiar examples from Galilei's time.</p>  
+
 
<p>But can you think of a more contemporary one?</p>  
+
<h3>The <em>elephant</em></h3>  
</div> </div>  
+
<p>Imagine the 20th century's visionary thinkers as those proverbial blind-folded men touching an elephant. We hear them talk about things like "a fan", "a water hose" and "a tree trunk". But they don't make sense, and we ignore them.</p>  
 +
<p>Everything changes when we realize that they are really talking about the ear, the trunk and the leg of an imposingly large exotic animal, which nobody has yet had a chance to see—a whole new <em>order of things</em>, or cultural and social <em>paradigm</em>! </p>
  
 +
<h3>A spectacle</h3>
 +
<p>The effect of the <em>five insights</em> is to <em>orchestrate</em> this act of 'connecting the dots'—so that the spectacular event we are part of, this exotic 'animal', the new 'destination' toward which we will now "change course" becomes clearly visible.</p>
 +
<p>A side effect is that the academic results once again become interesting and relevant. In this newly created context, they acquire a whole new meaning; and <em>agency</em>!</p>
  
<div class="row">
+
<h3>Reinstitution of the myth and the parable</h3>  
<div class="col-md-3"></div>
 
<div class="col-md-6">
 
<h3>Bourdieu – Damasio</h3>
 
<p>Bourdieu left us a <em>complete</em> theory of <em>socialization</em>. We honor him as the <em>icon</em> of <em>socialized reality</em>. </p>  
 
  
<p>Damasio contributed an essential piece in the puzzle—a scientific explanation, from the laboratory of a cognitive neurologist, of the primacy that embodied <em>socialization</em> has over rational thought. His title "Descartes' Error" brings home the main point—Descartes, and the Enlightenment, got it all wrong; we are <em>not</em> rational decision makers!</p>  
+
<p>Both had a core function in the traditional culture. We reinstate this function.</p>  
</div>
 
<div class="col-md-3 round-images">
 
[[File:Bourdieu.jpg]]
 
  
</div> </div>  
+
<p>We also revitalize traditional myths and parables, from religious traditions and beyond. The key is to <em>not</em> see them as literally true (in the <em>holotopia</em> scheme of things nothing is), but as artifacts communicating culturally significant messages.</p>  
  
 +
<h3>Post-post-structuralism</h3>
  
<h3>Back to [[Holotopia:Five insights|Five insights]]</h3>
+
<p>The structuralists undertook to bring rigor to the study of cultural artifacts. The post-structuralists "deconstructed" their efforts, by observing that <em>there is no</em> such thing as "real meaning"; and that the meaning of cultural artifacts is open to interpretation.</p>
 +
<p>This evolution may be taken a step further. What interests us is not what, for instance, Bourdieu "really saw" and wanted to communicate. We acknowledge (with the post-structuralists), that even Bourdieu would not be able to tell us that, if he were still around. We  acknowledge, however, that Bourdieu <em>saw something</em> that invited a different interpretation and way of thinking than what was common; and did what he could to explain it within the <em>old</em> paradigm. Hence we give the study of cultural artifacts not only a sense of rigor, but also a new degree of relevance—by considering them as signs on the road, pointing to an emerging <em>paradigm</em></p>  
  
<!--
+
<h3>Engelbart saw the elephant</h3>
 +
<p>While the view of the <em>elephant</em> is composed of a large number of stories, one of them—[[Douglas Engelbart|the incredible history of Doug]] (Engelbart)—is epigrammatic. It is not only a spectacular story—how the Silicon Valley failed to understand or even hear its "giant in residence", even after having recognized him as that; it is also a parable pointing to many of the elements we want to highlight by telling these stories—not least the social psychology and dynamics that 'hold Galilei in house arrest'.</p>
 +
<p>This story also inspired us to use this metaphor: Engelbart saw 'the elephant' <em>already in 1951</em>—and spent a six decades-long career painstakingly trying to show him to us.</p>
  
<div class="page-header" ><h1>Holotopia: The Socialized Reality insight</h1></div>
+
<blockquote>He did not succeed!</blockquote>  
  
<div class="row">
+
<p>Engelbart passed away with only a meager (computer) mouse in his hand (to his credit)!</p>   
<div class="col-md-3"><h4>Scope</h4></div>
 
<div class="col-md-7">
 
<p>The Enlightenment liberated our ancestors from an unreserved faith in the Scriptures, and empowered them to use their reason to <em>understand</em> their world. It was a revolutionary change of the way in which truth and meaning were created in our societies that made all other revolutions possible. Could a similar advent be in store for us today?</p>
 
<p>Once again we look at what tends to remain hidden: the <em>foundations</em> on which knowledge is evaluated and developed, which serve as foundation to everything we create, and everything we <em>are</em>. But these foundations are, as it were, under the ground. They are the invisible value judgement that underlies everything we believe, and everything we do.</p>
 
<p><small>We may here go back to our main iconic image, of Galilei in house arrest, and see if we can project it into our own time and situation. It's tempting to think that those people back then were simply stupid: <em>How could they</em> not see that the Earth moves, revolves around the Sun... It is, however, far more interesting and instructive to use this reference to understand the power of <em>socialization</em>; and to ask: Could it be similar in our time?</small> </p>
 
<p><small>So the core of our challenge here is to use suitable <em>knowledge of knowledge</em> and 'see ourselves in the mirror'. See how <em>our own</em> way of establishing facts might have also been arbitrarily constructed through socialization—without <em>us</em> seeing that.</small> </p>   
 
 
</div> </div>  
 
</div> </div>  
 +
  
 
<div class="row">
 
<div class="row">
<div class="col-md-3"><h4>Insight</h4></div>
+
<div class="col-md-3"><h2><em>Mirror</em></h2></div>
 
<div class="col-md-7">
 
<div class="col-md-7">
<p>Without thinking, from the traditional culture we've adopted a myth, incomparably more subversive than the myth of creation—the myth that the purpose of knowledge is to show us "the reality" as it truly is.</p>
+
<p>
<p>The insight that we are <em>constructing</em> rather than "discovering" is now so well documented and so widely accepted, that we may consider it the state of the art in science and philosophy. But that's only one half of the story.</p>
+
[[File:Mirror-Lab.jpeg]]<br>
<p>The other half is that the reality construction has been the tool of choice of traditional <em>socialization</em>—which has been the leading source of renegade power.</p>
+
<small>Details from Vibeke Jensen's Berlin studio.</small>  
<p>We can choose between the following two ways of rendering the situation that resulted.</p>  
 
[[File:Ideogram-placeholder.jpg]]
 
<small>The visible problems are caused by the failing foundations</small>
 
<p>One way is to talk about <em>holotopia</em> as doing to knowledge and to our "reality" what architecture did to house construction: We can now <em>consciously</em> found knowledge (instead of building without foundation, on whatever terrain we happen to be)</p>
 
[[File:Magical Mirror.jpg]]
 
<small>The evolution of knowledge has brought us in front of the <em>mirror</em>.</small>
 
<p>The other way is to talk about the metaphorical <em>mirror</em>. The hidden thing here is ourselves. We see ourselves—that we are <em>in</em> the world, not hovering above it and looking at it "objectively". This contains two insights: the ending of the myth of "objectivity" <em>and</em> the beginning of accountability.
 
 
</p>  
 
</p>  
</div> </div>  
+
<p>As a society, and as the academic tradition in particular—which has been guiding our society along the <em>homo sapiens</em> evolutionary path—we are now standing in front of the <em>mirror</em>. We are invited to self-reflect. And to find a way <em>through</em>.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>In <em>holotopia</em> the mirror is a symbolic object with a variety of connotations. As an art object, is carries a spectrum of possibilities. And as a tactical object—the <em>mirror</em> lets us employ the symbolic language of the arts, to code culturally transformative messages.</p>
 +
 
 +
<h3>Abolition of <em>reification</em></h3>
 +
 
 +
<p>The <em>mirror</em> brings an end to <em>reifications</em> of all kinds—of the power-laden way in which we see the world (or <em>socialized reality</em> created by <em>power structure</em>), our "scientific worldview" (or <em>narrow frame</em>), our ways of handling knowledge (our functionally impaired <em>collective mind</em> ), our likes and dislikes (<em>convenience paradox</em>). </p>
 +
 
 +
<h3>Reinstitution of curiosity and accountability</h3>
 +
 
 +
<p>When <em>reification</em> is removed, we are left with the question: "What do we <em>really</em> know, about the questions that matter?" The answer we'll reach may now seem preposterous, or shocking. So instead of jumping to a conclusion, we share a story. It is intended to serve as a parable for the inception of the Academia—and hence of the academic tradition.</p>
 +
 
 +
<h3>The trial of [[Socrates]] as told in Plato's Apology</h3>  
  
<div class="row">
+
<p>Someone went to Delphi and asked the Oracle about the wisest man in Athens; came back with the answer that it was Socrates. When the news reached him, Socrates was perplexed, because he did not consider himself knowledgeable or wise. And yet God does not lie! So he endeavored to find a solution to this puzzle, by seeking out and examining his contemporaries who were reputed as knowledgeable and wise. Surely he would find them superior! But the result was that he didn't. They knew just as little as Socrates did. The difference was, however, that they <em>believed</em> they knew a lot more. In this way Socrates resolved the puzzle of the Oracle: A wiser man is not the one who knows more than others—but the one who knows the limits of his knowledge.</p>  
<div class="col-md-3"><h4>Corollary 1</h4></div>
 
<div class="col-md-7"><p>"Reality" is a turf! This is one of the core points that Bourdieu left us. It's coded in the formula he keeps repeating, something like "the <em>habitus</em> is a structured structure and structuring structure ... The point is that once you structure the people's reality to be so and so (king is God's ordained ruler, and he owns it all)  – then this structure structures the reality for the next king to come. He doesn't need to do it again. </p>
 
<p>The Odin the Horse [[vignette|<em>vignette</em>]] comes in here to point to the (potential or actual) absurdity of the turf strife. There may be NO "real" gains whatsoever in victories... only symbolic ones...</p>
 
</div> </div>
 
  
 +
<p>Our situation now demands that we revive this <em>original</em> academic spirit. A cultural revival will once again follow.</p> 
  
  
<div class="row">
 
<div class="col-md-3"><h4>Corollary 2</h4></div>
 
<div class="col-md-7"><p>Academic tradition has brought us to the <em>mirror</em></p>
 
<p>Socrates started the tradition of [[epistemology|<em>epistemology</em>]] – by instructing people to question the roots of their beliefs. Especially when they are power based. Galilei and others improved the method. The point here is that we need to do this again. Not be busy, but come back to basic questions of meaning and purpose. Stop and self-reflect.</p>
 
 
</div> </div>  
 
</div> </div>  
  
<div class="page-header" ><h2>Federation</h2></div>
 
  
 
<div class="row">
 
<div class="row">
<div class="col-md-3"><h4>Stories</h4></div>
+
<div class="col-md-3"><h2><em>Dialogs</em></h2></div>
<div class="col-md-7">
+
<div class="col-md-7"><h3>The <em>dialog</em> is a <em>different</em> way to communicate</h3>
 +
<p>We must emphasize this at once:</p>
 +
 +
<blockquote>While the word "dialog" is common, the <em>dialog</em> is an <em>entirely</em> uncommon way of communicating.</blockquote>
 +
 
 +
<p>What we are calling the <em>dialog</em> is as different from the conventional academic and political debating, as the <em>holotopia</em> is different from our contemporary social and cultural <em>order of things</em>. Indeed, the <em>dialog</em> is the manner of communicating that <em>characterizes</em> the <em>holotopia</em>.</p>  
  
* Albert Einstein*
+
<p>While through Socrates and Plato the dialog has been a foundation stone of the academic tradition, David Bohm gave this word a completely new meaning—which we have undertaken to adopt and to develop further. The [https://www.bohmdialogue.org Bohm Dialogue website] provides an excellent introduction, so it will suffice to point to it by echoing a couple of quotations. The first one is by Bohm himself.</p>  
<p><small>As you might be aware, Einstein in our entire <em>prototype</em> plays the role of an <em>icon</em> of "modern science". What is modern science telling us about <em>epistemology</em>? Here we let Einstein highlight two simple things. See the details in Federation through Stories.</small> </p>
 
<p><small>The first is that we <em>cannot</em> rationally claim that our models <em>correspond</em> to "the real thing". That's the meaning of Einstein close watch metaphor. </small> </p>
 
<p><small>The second is that the belief that "model equals reality" tends to be a product of illusion. The quotation here is Einstein's "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. Etc."</small> </p>  
 
  
* Pierre Bourdieu
+
<blockquote>There is a possibility of creativity in the socio-cultural domain which has not been explored by any known society adequately.</blockquote>  
 
<small>Bourdieu did not travel to Algeria as a sociologist. In Algeria he <em>became</em> a sociologist—after having an insight; a formative experience. What he saw was exactly how the power morphed from Galilei and Inquisition style persuasion (during the liberation war with France)—to become <em>subtle</em> persuasion though worldview, media, body-to-body transmission (during liberated Algeria's "modernization"). Bourdieu left us a thorough description of the relevant social processes. Let us here, however, only highlight his keyword <em>doxa</em>—which Weber (as one of the founding fathers of sociology) adopted from Aristotle himself (which here appears in the role of the Academia's foremost progenitor of science itself). The insight could not be more basic, and we don't need all those <em>giants</em> to see it; just observe that different cultures have their own "realities", which they consider as <em>doxa</em> that is, as <em>the</em> reality. <em>Of course</em> they are a product of socialization, not of "objective" observation of reality. But can we see that this is true also about <em>our</em> culture's <em>doxa</em>?</small>  
 
  
* Antonio Damasio
+
<p>We let it point to the fact that to Bohm the "dialogue" was an instrument of socio-cultural therapy, leading to a whole new <em>co-creative</em> way of being together. Bohm considered the dialogue to be a necessary step toward unraveling our contemporary situation.</p>
  
<small>Damasio's role here is to help us see how <em>socialization</em> (Bourdieu-style) can serve as a fake, surrogate <em>epistemology</em>. And more. The big point here—coded already in the title of his book "Descartes' Error"—is that we are not rational choice makers. Our pre-conscious, embodied cognitive filter does the pre-choosing for us. And this thing can, and is 'programmed'—(Bourdieu-style), through <em>socialization</em>. A bit of reflection may be needed here, to see what it all means. But the basic big point is that "the reality" is not what it used to be...</small>  
+
<p>The second quotation is a concise explanation of Bohm's idea by the creators of the website.</p>  
  
* Sergei Chakhotin
+
<blockquote> Dialogue, as David Bohm envisioned it, is a radically new approach to group interaction, with an emphasis on listening and observation, while suspending the culturally conditioned judgments and impulses that we all have. This unique and creative form of dialogue is necessary and urgent if humanity is to generate a coherent culture that will allow for its continued survival.</blockquote>
  
<small> <p> Participating, in Germany, in the 1932 campaign against Hitler, after having collaborated with Ivan Pavlov in his St. Petersburg laboratory. Pavlov, incidentally, we might consider to be one of the founders of scientific psychology. Anyhow—Chakhotin observed that Hitler was doing to German people (roughly) what Pavlov was doing to his dogs. He understood that the political business as usual was going to lose against the "Dark Side" politics—unless... Wrote the book... The report is in the blog, and I'll point to it from here.</p> </small>  
+
<p>As this may suggest, the [[dialog|<em>dialog</em>]] is conceived as a direct antidote to [[power structures|<em>power structure</em>]]-induced [[socialized reality|<em>socialized reality</em>]].</p>  
  
* Thread Odin–Bourdieu–Damasio
+
<h3>The <em>dialog</em> is the message</h3>
  
<small> <p> Bourdieu: symbolic power. Damasio: It's a pseudo-epistemology (pseudo-joke...). Odin: It's a meaningless game.</p> </small>  
+
<blockquote>By creating the <em>dialogs</em> and engaging in them, we transform both our <em>collective mind</em>, and the way in which we are together. </blockquote>  
  
* Lida Cochran and Visual Literacy
+
<p>Here the medium truly is the message. When we are engaged in a genuine <em>dialog</em> about a core contemporary issue—<em>in the context of</em> the relevant academic and other insights (represented in our current <em>holotopia</em> prototype by the <em>five insights</em>)—we are <em>already</em> part of a functioning <em>collective mind</em>. We are <em>already</em> applying our <em>collective creativity</em> toward evolving or <em>federating</em> our collective knowledge further.</p>
  
<small>In (?) 1969, a group of four people got together and initiated the International Visual Literacy Association. Many years later... See [http://folk.uio.no/dino/ID/Misc/Lida-letter.pdf this]...  </small>  
+
<h3>The <em>dialog</em> is a tradition</h3>  
  
& Berger and Luckmann
+
<p>Although the <em>dialog</em>, as Bohm envisioned it, is a relatively recent development, it is already a deep and profound tradition—and we here illustrate that by mentioning some references and stories.</p>
  
<small>"Reality" is socially constructed. But the main point here is that "universal theories" serve to legitimize and hold in power the political status quo. A report is in my blog, in "Science and Religion". </small>
 
</div> </div>
 
  
<div class="row">
+
<ul>
<div class="col-md-3"><h4>Action</h4></div>
+
<li>Bohm's own inspiration (story has it) is significant. Allegedly, Bohm was moved to create the "dialogue" when he saw how Einstein and Bohr, who were once good friends, <em>and</em> their entourages, were unable to communicate at Princeton. (The roots of this disagreement are interesting for <em>holotopia</em> although perhaps less for the <em>dialog</em>: Einstein's "God does not play Dice" criticism of the Copenhagen interpretation of quantum theory; and Bohr's reply "Einstein, stop telling god what to do!" While in our <em>prototype</em> Einstein has the role of the <em>icon</em> of "modern science", in this instance it was clearly Bohr and not Einstein who represented the <em>epistemological</em> position we are supporting. But Einstein later reversed his position— in "Autobiographical Notes", where Einstein made his epistemological testimony, on a similar note as Heisenberg did in Physics and Philosophy. While the foundations of the <em>holoscope</em> have been carefully <em>federated</em>, it has turned out that <em>federating</em> "Autobiographical Notes" is sufficient, see [[IMAGES|Federation through Images]]).</li>  
<div class="col-md-7">
 
<p><em>Dialog</em> </p>  
 
<p><small>The first and obvious step is to see our <em>doxas</em> and <em>gestalts</em> for what they are—instead of clinging on to them because they are "the reality". But that means adopting the attitude of the <em>dialog</em>, doesn't it?</small> </p>  
 
  
<p><em>Truth by convention</em></p>
+
<li>There is a little known red thread in the history of The Club of Rome; the story could have been entirely different: Özbekhan, Jantsch and Christakis, who co-founded The Club with Peccei and King, and wrote its statement of purpose, were in disagreement with the course it took in 1970  (with The Limits to Growth study) and left. Alexander Christakis, the only surviving member of this trio, is now continuing their line of work as the President of the Institute for 21st Century Agoras. "The Institute for 21st Century Agoras is credited for the formalization of the science of Structured dialogic design." (Wikipedia).</li>  
<p><small>OK—but what about truth, then? What shall we believe in? We use TBC to create <em>scopes</em> and <em>views</em>. The <em>scope</em> defined by convention is like a pure forms in geometry. We "look through" it at experience. It is "true" to the extent that it reveals something relevant in experience, which would otherwise remain ignored.</small> </p>  
 
  
<p><em>Design epistemology</em></p>
+
<li>Bela H. Banathy, whom we've mentioned as the champion of "Guided Evolution of Society" among the systems scientists, extensively experimented with the <em>dialog</em>. With Jenlink he co-edited two large and most valuable volumes about the dialogue.</li>  
<p><small>Shall we then just go on creating those <em>scopes</em> and <em>views</em>? What's the point? <em>Design epistemology</em> means that information is considered as part of a system, or multiple systems. Our goal is to create <em>information</em> that makes those systems more <em>whole</em>. <em>Information</em> here is, of course, not just text, but <em>anything</em> that embodies experience. The <em>design epistemology</em> implies a priority structure on information, which is of course entirely different than what we inherited from the situation where we are completing a "reality puzzle".</small></p>  
 
  
<p><em>Holoscope</em></p>
+
<li>In 1983 Michel Foucault gave a seminar at the UC Berkeley. What will this European historian of ideas par excellence choose to tell the young Americans? Foucault spent six lectures talking about an obscure Greek word, <em>parrhesia</em>. The key point here is that the <em>dialog</em> (as relationship with the people, the world and the truth) is a radical alternative to the "adiaphorized" or "instrumental" thinking, which has become common. An interesting point is that the Greeks considered <em>parrhesia</em> to be an essential element of democracy—which our <em>contemporary</em> democracies have increasingly failed to adopt and emulate. Both Socrates and Galilei were exemplars of "parrhesiastes" (a person who lives and uses <em>parrhesia</em>; the latter chose to retreat on this position a bit, and save his life).
[[File:Holoscope.jpeg]]
+
<blockquote>[P]arrhesiastes is someone who takes a risk. Of course, this risk is not always a risk of life. When, for example, you see a friend doing something wrong and you risk incurring his anger by telling him he is wrong, you are acting as a parrhesiastes. In such a case, you do not risk your life, but you may hurt him by your remarks, and your friendship may consequently suffer for it. If, in a political debate, an orator risks losing his popularity because his opinions are contrary to the majority's opinion, or his opinions may usher in a political scandal, he uses parrhesia. Parrhesia, then, is linked to courage in the face of danger: it demands the courage to speak the truth in spite of some danger. And in its extreme form, telling the truth takes place in the "game" of life or death.</blockquote></li>  
<p><small> It may now be already clear how the <em>holoscope</em> works, in principle: We <em>deliberately</em> create <em>scopes</em> (by using truth by convention). They show us the <em>whole</em> from different sides. Is the cup cracked or whole? If we can discover a <em>scope</em> (way of looking) which reveals a crack—then it <em>is</em> cracked, isn't it?</small></p>  
 
  
<p><em>Knowledge federation</em></p>
+
<li>A whole new chapter in the evolution of the dialogue was made possible by the new information technology. We illustrate an already developed research frontier by pointing to [https://www.cognexus.org/id17.htm Jeff Conklin's] book "Dialogue Mapping: Creating Shared Understanding of Wicked Problems", where Bohm dialogue tradition is combined with Issue Based Information Systems, which Kunz and Rittel developed at UC Berkeley in the 1960s. The [http://Debategraph.org Debategraph], also developed by combining those two traditions, is actively transforming our <em>collective minds</em>.</li>  
<p><small> But what do we do with all those <em>scopes</em> and <em>views</em>? Well of course—we <em>federate</em> them! I know this is still rather sketchy—but you may already be able to see how a <em>paradigm</em> naturally emerges from a handful of very basic, and (by now) very well established principles.</small></p>
 
</div> </div>
 
  
* Back to [[Holotopia]]
+
<li>We experimented extensively with turning Bohm's dialog into a 'high-energy cyclotron'; and into a medium through which a community can find "a way to change course". The result was a series of so-called Key Point Dialogs. An example is the Cultural Revival Dialog Zagreb 2008. (We are working on bringing its website back online.) </li>
 +
</ul>
  
  
 +
<h3>The <em>dialog</em> is a powerful instrument of change</h3>
  
 +
<p>The <em>methodological</em> approach makes the <em>dialog</em> an especially powerful instrument of change: In the <em>holotopia</em> scheme of things the <em>dialog</em> as an attitude is axiomatic (it both follows from the fundamental insights <em>and</em> it is a convention within the definition of the <em>methodology</em>). Hence coming to the dialog 'wearing boxing gloves' (manifesting the now so common verbal turf strife behavior) is as ill-advised as making a case for an academic result by arguing that it was revealed to the author in a vision.</p>
  
 +
<p>When a <em>dialog</em> is recorded, and placed into the <em>holotopia</em> framework, violation becomes obvious—because the <em>attitude</em> of the [[dialog|<em>dialog</em>]] is so completely different! </p>
  
 +
<p>We may see how this can make a difference by looking at the Club of Rome's history: The debate gives unjust advantage to the <em>homo ludens</em> turf players, who will say whatever to gain points in a debate, knowing that the truth doesn't really matter, when the speaker is supporting the <em>power structure</em>'s view and interests—which will <em>surely</em> prevail! But the body language makes this game transparent. In [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0141gupAryM&feature=youtu.be&t=135 this example] Dennis Meadows is put off-balance by a self-assured opponent.</p>
  
<!--
+
<p>The <em>holotopia</em> dialogs will have the nature of <em>spectacles</em>—not the kind of spectacles fabricated by the media, but <em>real</em> ones. To the media spectacles, they present a real and transformative alternative.</p>
 +
<p>The <em>dialogs</em> we initiate are a re-creation of the conventional "reality shows"—which show the contemporary reality in ways that <em>need</em> to be shown. The relevance is on an entirely different scale. And the excitement and actuality are of course larger! We engage the "opinion leaders" to contribute their insights to the cause.</p>
 +
<p>When successful, the result is most timely and informative: We are <em>witnessing</em> the changing of our understanding and handling of a core issue.</p>
 +
<p>When unsuccessful, the result is most timely and informative in a <em>different</em> way: We are witnessing our resistances and our blind spots, our clinging to the obsolete forms of thought.</p>
 +
<p>Occasionally we publish books about those themes, based on our <em>dialogs</em>, and to begin new ones.</p>
  
 +
<h3>The <em>dialog</em> as an instrument of change</h3>
 +
<p>This point cannot be overemphasized: Our <em>primary</em> goal is not to warn, inform, propose a new way to look at the world—but <em>to change our collective mind</em>. Physically. The <em>dialog</em> is the medium for that change. </p>
 +
<blockquote>We organize public dialogs about the <em>five insights</em>, and other themes related to change, in order to <em>make</em> change.</blockquote>
  
 +
<p>Here the medium in the truest sense is the message: By developing <em>dialogs</em>, we re-create our <em>collective mind</em>—from something that only receives, which is dazzled by the media... to something that is capable of weaving together academic and other insights, and by engaging the best of our "collective intelligence" in seeing what needs to be done. And in <em>inciting, planning and coordinating action</em>.</p>
 +
<p>In the <em>holotopia</em> scheme of things everything is a <em>prototype</em>. The <em>prototypes</em> are not final results of our efforts, they are a means to an end—which is to <em>rebuild</em> the public sphere; to <em>reconfigure</em> our <em>collective mind</em>. The role of the <em>prototypes</em> is to prime this process.</p> 
  
<div class="page-header" ><h1>Holotopia: Socialized Reality</h1></div>
 
  
<div class="row">
 
<div class="col-md-3"><h4>Interests</h4></div>
 
<div class="col-md-7">
 
<ul>
 
<li>Truth</li>
 
<li>Reality</li>
 
</li>Free choice</li>
 
<li>Rational choice</li>
 
<li>Epistemology</li>
 
<li>Information, knowledge</li>
 
<li>Pursuit of knowledge</li>
 
<li>Social creation of truth and meaning</li> 
 
</ul>
 
 
</div> </div>  
 
</div> </div>  
 +
  
 
<div class="row">
 
<div class="row">
<div class="col-md-3"><h4>Scope</h4></div>
+
<div class="col-md-3"><h2><em>Keywords</em></h2></div>
 
<div class="col-md-7">
 
<div class="col-md-7">
[[File:Ideogram-placeholder.jpg]]
 
<p>
 
This <em>ideogram</em> is only a placeholder. The real thing should be a house with failing foundation image – but we can talk about that.
 
</p>
 
<p>We look at the fundamental assumptions which we use to create truth and meaning. Which are, needless to say, the foundations of all we call "culture"; and also more...</p>
 
<p>The point here is to see the visible, mushrooming... cracks in the walls as just <em>natural consequences</em> of a faulty foundation. And the possibility to do to knowledge work what architecture did to house construction...</p> 
 
</div></div>
 
  
<div class="row">
+
<p>What makes the Holotopia <em>dialogs</em> especially interesting is that they are no longer limited by conventional concepts and themes. Science and the Enlightenment introduced completely new ways of speaking; the <em>holotopia</em> does that through introduction of <em>keywords</em>. </p>  
<div class="col-md-3"><h4>Stories</h4></div>
+
 
<div class="col-md-7">
+
 
<center><b>Galilei in house arrest</b></center>
+
<p>A motivating challenge is reaching us from sociology.</p>  
<p>This iconic image of the Enlightenment... And his <em>eppur si muove</em>... Let us zoom in on this pivotal moment of our civilization's history. See what it really meant. And what resulted.</p>  
+
<p>  
<p>Notice first of all that the real issue was not whether the Earth was moving or not. That was just a technicality. Galilei was held in house arrest because of the dangerous <em>meme</em> he was carrying—that when the reason contradicted the Scripture, it might still be legitimate to give the reason the benefit of our doubt.</p>  
+
[[File:Beck-frame.jpeg]]
<p>Notice, furthermore, that there is no scientific or logical reason why the Sun, and not the Earth, must be seen as relatively immovable. Movement is, as we know <em>relative</em>; we might just as well put the Earth into the center of our coordinate system. The reason why we ultimately didn't is that by putting the Sun into the center and letting Earth be one of the planets moving around it—we <em>empower the reason</em> to not only <em>grasp</em> what's going on in a far simple way, but also to reduce "the natural philosophy" to "mathematical principles"! </p>  
+
</p>  
<p>What resulted was a <em>foundation for truth and meaning</em>—where the "aha" we experience when all the pieces fit snuggly together, and we understand how something works, how certain causes lead to certain effects, is automatically considered as a sure sign that we have seen "the reality"</p>  
+
<p>Beck continued the above observation:</p>
 +
<blockquote>  
 +
"Max Weber's 'iron cage' – in which he thought humanity was condemned to live for the foreseeable future – is for me the prison of <em>categories and basic assumptions</em> of classical social, cultural and political sciences."
 +
</blockquote>
 +
 
 +
<p>The 'candle headlights' (the practice of <em>inheriting</em> the way we look at the world, try to comprehend it and handle it) are keeping us in 'iron cage'!</p>  
 +
 
 +
<p>The creation of [[keyword|<em>keywords</em>]], by resorting to [[truth by convention|<em>Truth by convention</em>]], is offered as the way out.</p>
  
<center><b>The story of reality</b></center>
+
<h3><em>Wholeness</em></h3>  
<p>In the course of our <em>modernization</em>, we adopted from the traditional culture a myth incomparably more subversive than the myth of creation—the <em>myth</em> that the meaning of "the truth" is "correspondence with reality". And that the purpose of information, and of knowledge, is to help us know "the truth"—i.e. to show us "the reality" as it "truly is". </p>
 
<p>Why do we call this a <em>myth</em>? Because (as Einstein and Infeld demonstrated by their closed watch argument) it is not only impossible to demonstrate for any of our models that it <em>corresponds</em> to the real thing—but we cannot even conceive of such a possibility; we cannot even imagine what this comparison might be like, what it might mean!</p>
 
<p> By calling it a <em>myth</em> we are <em>not</em> implying that it has no value. On the contrary! Myths, combined with <em>socialization</em> to accept them as "the reality", was <em>how the traditional culture functioned</em>, how it reproduced itself and evolved. The myth of eternal punishment, for instance, clearly served a role—to keep people reasonably ethical etc. <em>And</em> it also kept them obedient to the <em>power structure</em>. </p>
 
<p>And so, by adopting this "mother of all myths", we were prepared to "throw the baby with the bathwater"—as soon as completely <em>new</em> "realities" came around. </p>
 
<p>When we look back at the Middle Ages, we see only those silly myths, and how they supported the <em>power structure</em> or the order of things of the day. When, however, se understand the reality story as just another myth—we become ready to unravel our <em>contemporary</em> myths (the market myth, the science myth...); and se how <em>they</em> made us subservient to the <em>contemporary</em> power structure; and kept us from evolving.</p>  
 
  
<center><b>Kings and madmen</b></center>
+
<p>Simple goal, to direct our efforts ('destination to bus').</p>  
  
<p>The difference between a "real king", and a madman "imagining" and "pretending" to be a king, is that in the case of the former, everyone including himself have been successfully <em>socialized</em> to accept him as that.</p>
+
<h3><em>Culture</em></h3>
<p>A "real king" would be treated with highest honors and respect; a deluded imposter would be incarcerated in an appropriate institution. And yet throughout history, a single "real kings" might have caused <em>incomparably</em> more evil, deaths, suffering, injustice... than all "dangerous madmen" combined!</p>  
 
  
 +
<p>In a fractal-like manner, our definition of <em>culture</em> reflects the entire situation around <em>holoscope</em> and <em>holotopia</em>. So let us summarize it here in that way, however briefly. We motivated this definition by discussing Zygmunt Bauman's book "Culture as Praxis"—where Bauman surveyed a large number of historical definitions of culture, and reached the conclusion that they are so diverse that they cannot be reconciled with one another. How can we develop culture as <em>praxis</em>—if we don't even know what "culture" means? We defined  <em>culture</em> as "<em>cultivation</em> of <em>wholeness</em>", where the keyword <em>cultivation</em> is defined by analogy with planting and watering a seed (which suits also the etymology of "culture") . Thereby (and in accordance with the general <em>holotopia</em> approach we discussed above), we pointed to a specific <em>aspect</em> of culture. No amount of dissecting and studying a seed would suggest that it needs to be planted and watered. Hence when we reduced "reality" to what we can explain in that way, the <em>culture</em> as <em>cultivation</em> is all gone! When, however, we consider and treat <em>information</em> as human experience, and look for what may help us redeem and further develop <em>culture</em>—then a remedial trend, modeled by <em>holotopia</em>, is already under way. </p>
  
<center><b>Bourdieu in Algeria</b></center>
 
<p>Bourdieu did not travel to Algeria as a sociologist; in Algeria he <em>became</em> a sociologist—by acquiring a core insight, which marked his subsequent career. The insight is how (what we call) <em>socialization</em> organizes the practical life in a society.</p>
 
<p>More concretely, in Algeria Bourdieu had a chance to witness how the interrogation, the prison and the torture chamber (as instruments of power that were passed on all the way from Galilei's time), which were ubiquitous 
 
  
 +
<h3><em>Religion</em></h3>
  
 +
<p>In traditional cultures, religion was widely regarded as an integral part of our [[wholeness|<em>wholeness</em>]]. Can this concept, and the heritage of the traditions it is pointing to, still have a function and a value in our own era? </p>
 +
<p>We adapted the definition that Martin Lings contributed, and defined <em>religion</em> as "reconnection with the <em>archetype</em>" (which harmonizes with the etymological meaning of this word). The <em>archetypes</em> include "justice", "motherhood", "freedom", "beauty", "truth", "love" and anything else that may inspire a person to overcome <em>egotism</em> and <em>convenience</em>, and serve a "higher" end.</p>
 +
 +
<h3><em>Addiction</em></h3>
  
<center><b>Title</b></center>
+
<p>The evolution gave us senses and emotions to guide us to [[wholeness|<em>wholeness</em>]]—in the <em>natural</em> condition. Civilization made it amply possible to deceive our senses—by creating pleasurable things that do <em>not</em> further <em>wholeness</em>. We point to them by the keyword <em>addiction</em>. </p>  
<center><b>Title</b></center>
 
<center><b>Title</b></center>
 
  
 +
<p>We defined <em>addiction</em> as a <em>pattern</em>; and motivated this definition by observing that evolution equipped us, humans with emotions of comfort and discomfort to guide our choices toward <em>wholeness</em>. The civilized humans, however, found ways to deceive nature—by creating pleasurable things called "addictions", which lead us <em>away</em> from <em>wholeness</em>. Since selling addictions is lucrative business, the <em>traditions</em> identified certain activities and things as addictions—such as the opiates and the gambling; and they developed suitable legislation and ethical norms. In modernity, however, with the help of new technology, businesses can develop hundreds of <em>new</em> addictions—without us having a way to even recognize them as that. By defining <em>addiction</em> as a <em>pattern</em>, we can perceive addiction as an <em>aspect</em> of otherwise good and useful things. From a large number of obvious or subtle <em>addictions</em>, we here mention only <em>pseudoconsciousness</em> defined as "<em>addiction</em> to information". Consciousness of one's situation and surroundings is, of course, a necessary condition for <em>wholeness</em>. In civilization we can, however, drown this need in facts and data, which give us the <em>sensation</em> of knowing—without telling us what we <em>need to</em> know in order to be or become <em>whole</em>.</p>
  
<!--
 
  
<div class="row">
 
<div class="col-md-3"><h4>Insight</h4></div>
 
<div class="col-md-7"><p>The point here is threefold:
 
<ul>
 
<li>what we called "reality" is really our own that is, our <em>culture</em>'s creation</li>
 
<li> "The correspondence with reality" of our ideas or models is <em>not</em> – however it may seem – something that can be rationally verified</li>
 
<li>"The correspondence with reality" is – or needs to be seen as – a <em>pseudo-epistemology</em>; something which appears and works as a real [[epistemology|<em>epistemology</em>]] (valuation of knowledge based on knowledge of knowledge) – and yet keeps us bound to myths, prejudices, the [[power structures|<em>power structure</em>]]... </li>
 
</ul> </p>
 
 
</div> </div>  
 
</div> </div>  
  
 
<div class="row">
 
<div class="row">
<div class="col-md-3"><h4>Reversals</h4></div>
+
<div class="col-md-3"><h2>[[Holotopia:Ten themes|Ten themes]]</h2></div>
<div class="col-md-7">
+
<div class="col-md-7"><p><em>Everything</em> in <em>holotopia</em> is a potential theme for a <em>dialog</em>. Indeed, everything in our <em>holotopia</em> <em>prototype</em> is a <em>prototype</em>; and a <em>prototype</em> is not complete unless there is a <em>dialog</em> around it, to to keep it evolving and alive. </p>  
<ul>
+
<p>In particular each of the <em>five insights</em> will, we anticipate, ignite a lively conversation.</p>  
<li>Truth: It <em>can</em> be fixed – by using [[truth by convention|<em>truth by convention</em>]].</li>  
+
<p>We are, however, especially interested in using the <em>five insights</em> as a <em>framework</em> for creating other themes and dialogs. The point here is to have <em>informed</em> conversations; and to show that their quality of being informed is what makes all the difference. And in our present <em>prototype</em>, the <em>five insights</em> symbolically represent that what needs to be known, in order to give any age-old or contemporary theme a completely new course of development.</p>
<li>Reality – Without thinking, from the traditional culture we have overtaken a myth incomparably more dangerous and disruptive than the myth of creation...</li>  
+
<blockquote>The <em>five insights</em>, and the ten direct relationships between them, provide us a frame of reference—in the context of which both age-old and contemporary challenges can be understood and handled in entirely new ways.</blockquote>
<li>Information, knowledge – become implicit... become <em>aspects</em> of things... </li>  
+
 
</li>Free choice, rational choice – the assumptions that served as foundation for some of our core institutions have proven to be false. We are <em>not</em> rational choice makers. We may <em>become</em> that – when people are properly informed, and taught proper use of knowledge. Educated to rely on knowledge of knowledge, not on appearances. How far we are from that blessed state of affaires! Just look at all the advertising...</li>
+
<p>Here are some examples.</p>
<li>Epistemology – It becomes [[design epistemology|<em>design epistemology</em>]]. The purpose of depicting reality as it really is falls down. The purpose where knowledge is a core component of our core systems rises and shines.</li>
+
 
<li>Pursuit of knowledge – knowledge is pursued through a <em>dialog</em>, not discussion; we keep our [[gestalt|<em>gestalt</em>]]s fluid and loose...</li>  
+
<h3>How to put an end to war?</h3>  
<li>Social creation of truth and meaning acquires a whole new meaning...</li>   
+
 
</ul>  
+
<p>So far our progress on this age-old frontier has largely been confined to palliative and not curative results. What would it take to <em>really</em> put an end to war, once and for all?</p>  
</div> </div>
+
<p>When this question is considered in the context of the <em>power structure</em> and <em>socialized reality</em> insights, we become ready to see the whole compendium of questions related to justice, power and freedom in a <em>completely</em> new way. We then realize in what way exactly, throughout history, we have been coerced, largely through cultural means, to serve renegade power, in the truest sense our enemy, by engaging our sense of duty, heroism, honor and other values and traits that constitute "human quality". </p>
 +
<p>When those two <em>insights</em> are fully understood—could the war become as unthinkable as the witch trials are today?</p>   
 +
 
 +
<h3>Alienation</h3>  
 +
 
 +
<p>This theme takes some of the most interesting moments in the development of Western philosophy—and combines them with some of the most interesting tenets of the Eastern philosophy or the spiritual traditions. By placing alienation in the context of the <em>convenience paradox</em> on the one side, and the <em>collective mind</em>on the other, the possibilities open up for illuminating this uniquely relevant theme by <em>federating</em> both the cultural artifacts representing "ancient wisdom", with the influence the new media have had on our awareness and our culture, which have not yet even remotely been understood. </p>
 +
 
 +
<p>We point to some of the sides of this theme by telling a story.</p>  
  
 +
<p>This story will be another symbolic gesture, where Marxism is (in the context of <em>holotopia</em>) <em>federated</em> and thereby reconciled with both religion <em>and</em> business.</p>
  
 +
<p>The story elaborates on the "young Marx" notion in the humanities ([https://youtu.be/kIlEkbU4rx0?t=2681 see it explained]), which is "controversial" among the "neo-Marxists". We here offer it as a <em>prototype</em> of <em>federating</em> Marx...—with the goal of revising and reviving what's been called "left" or socially progressive.</p>
  
<div class="row">
+
<p>The starting point is to imagine young Marx come to roughly the same conclusion as young Gandhi: we humans aspire to self-realization (which is in <em>holotopia</em> subsumed by <em>wholeness</em>). Whatever obstructs it needs to be removed—and what we'll have is <em>real</em> "progress".</p>  
<div class="col-md-3"><h4>Story</h4></div>
 
<div class="col-md-7">
 
<p>Bourdieu in Algeria. He saw two processes.</p>
 
<p>The first was the "modernization" of Algeria. As the war ended, and independence resulted – a completely <em>new</em> set of dependencies emerged. The result was the same. But in a much more subtle way!</p>
 
<p>The second was the destruction of culture. The Kabyle people ...</p>
 
</div></div>
 
  
<div class="row">
+
<p>"Young Marx" (in 1844 in Paris) saw the "alienation" as <em>the</em> capital obstacle (pun intended). He later saw the private ownership of the means of production as the capital cause of alienation (instead of fulfilling their potential and pursuing their real interests, the workers must submit themselves to a meaningless routine to be able to survive). And being a child of his time—Marx embraced "science" and "materialism" as a way to make progress on also <em>this</em> most vital of frontiers.</p>  
<div class="col-md-3"><h4></h4></div>
 
<div class="col-md-7">
 
<p>This of course goes quite deep – into <em>personal</em> foundation of knowing. Instead of holding on to our beliefs, we keep them fluid. We remain creative... We co-create...</p>
 
</div> </div>  
 
  
<div class="row">
+
<p>But having seen the miserable conditions of the 1940s working class, young Marx became rather ashamed of his so bourgeois ideals—having realized that those people lacked the most basic means. A <em>revolution</em> is a way to end alienation. The religion, which keeps people ethically bound to the status quo, must be considered "the opiate of the masses". </p>  
<div class="col-md-3"><h4>Federation, not puzzle solving</h4></div>
 
<div class="col-md-7"><p>Multiple versions are possible, and also necessary. Keeping them relatively – yet not obligatorily – consistent and coherent is what we are calling [[knowledge federation|<em>knowledge federation</em>]], isn't it?</p>
 
</div> </div>  
 
  
<div class="row">
+
<p>The consequences were a fascinating collection of ironies.</p>  
<div class="col-md-3"><h4>Design epistemology</h4></div>
 
<div class="col-md-7">
 
<p>Design epistemology – information as systemic component</p>
 
<p>Information is not only, or even primarily, the facts about... The lion's share is <em>implicit</em>...</p>
 
</div></div>
 
  
<div class="row">
+
<p>One of them is that the left became anti-religious, and abandoned Christ to the right. Christ, however, has only one violent act on his record—when he order the "money changes" out of the house of God. His point was obvious—religion is inherently progressive, and should <em>not</em> be co-opted by the <em>power structure</em>. Well, it <em>was</em> co-opted...</p>  
<div class="col-md-3"><h4>Keywords</h4></div>
 
<div class="col-md-7">
 
<p>[[design epistemology|<em>design epistemology</em>]]</p>
 
<p>[[implicit information|<em>implicit information</em>]] </p>
 
</div></div>
 
  
<div class="row">
+
<p>Another irony is that—having (with mature Marx) embraced the "adiaphorized" or "instrumental" values, the left never really <em>became</em> progressive. In the countries where it apparently succeeded to become reality, "the dictatorship of the proletariat" became no more than—a dictatorship! And in the countries where it didn't, or didn't even try—the politicians representing the left readily learned that to be successful in their work, they have to adapt to the existing <em>power structure</em>; and hence "the left" turned right. </p>  
<div class="col-md-3"><h4>Prototypes</h4></div>
 
<div class="col-md-7">
 
<p>The Knowledge Federation [[prototype|<em>prototype</em>]] is a complete model of an academic reality on the other side – created to help the self-reflection, and the transition to the new paradigm.</p>
 
<p>Key point dialog</p>  
 
</div></div>
 
 
  
* Back to [[five insights]].
+
<p>The point of reconciliation is to see that while today the conditions of the working class are completely different—the issue of <em>alienation</em> is not only as present as ever, but <em>it includes the owners of the capital</em> as well (whether they are aware of that or not). But that is the <em>power structure</em> theory in a nutshell.</p>
  
 +
<p>Guy Debord added to this picture a profound study of the role of the new media in this landslide toward alienation. </p> 
  
 +
<h3>The largest contribution to knowledge</h3>
 +
<p>This theme is for the <em>dialog</em> about our <em>knowledge federation</em> proposal. We gave it this name to energize the conversation.</p>
 +
<p>The theme focuses on the question "What might the largest contribution to knowledge be like?" A view is offered, to prime the convnersation, that it will be a contribution to the <em>system</em> by which information is turned into knowledge.</p>
 +
<p>This theme continues [[The Incredible History of Doug Engelbart]], by proposing that this largest contribution was his true gift to the mankind. And that, for interesting reasons which we will return to in a moment, his contribution has not yet been acknowledged and received. The essential point of his vision—that by creating a radically better technology-enabled process that turns information into knowledge practically <em>all</em> our core systems can be radically improved—will give us an instance of such a contribution, to make our conversation not hypothetical but concrete.</p>
  
 +
<p>By placing this theme in the context of the <em>collective mind</em> and the <em>narrow frame</em> insight, a whole new <em>dimension</em> is added—where the technology-and-process approach is complemented by developing a suitable epistemology and a method. It is by removing the <em>narrow frame</em> limitations—by developing a <em>general-purpose methodology</em>—that we arrive at a creative frontier where improvements of our handling of knowledge can continue beyond bounds.</p>
  
<!--
+
<h3>Academia quo vadis?</h3>
  
<div class="page-header" ><h1>Holotopia: The Power Structure insight</h1></div>
+
<p>This title is reserved for the <em>academic</em> <em>dialog</em> in front of the <em>mirror</em>.</p>
 +
<p>Its venture point are the good tidings brought to us by the <em>socialized reality</em> insight—that the key to our situation is in not in the hands of the Church and the Inquisition as it was in Galilei's time, or with the Wall Street bankers as it might appear, but in the <em>academia</em>'s hands!</p>  
  
<div class="row">
+
<p>We highlighted the favorable side of this turn of events by defining <em>academia</em> as "institutionalized academic tradition". And by introducing this tradition by the histories of Socrates and Galilei. Both of them needed to risk their lives, to help our evolution move ahead. Without doubt, it was the pure love of truth, and <em>knowledge of knowledge</em>, that the academic tradition added to our evolutionary scene at opportune moments, to help us overcome the false realities that the <em>power structure</em> held us in, and evolve further. But now the <em>academic tradition</em> has been institutionalized; it is <em>already</em> in power! So all we need to do to "change course" toward <em>holotopia</em> is to just <em>let</em> the <em>academia</em> guide us along the evolutionary course one more time.</p>  
<div class="col-md-3"><h4>Scope</h4></div>
 
<div class="col-md-7">
 
<p>By developing the technology, our ancestors <em>vastly</em> augmented the effectiveness and efficiency of human work. Could a similar advent be in store for us today?</p>
 
[[File:System.jpeg]]
 
<p>We look at what remained ignored: the "systems in which we live and work" (which we'll here call simply <em>systems</em>). Think of those <em>systems</em> as gigantic mechanisms, comprising people and technology. Their purpose is to take everyone's daily work as input, and turn it into socially useful effects. </p>  
 
<p> If in spite the technology we are still as busy as were—should we not see if our <em>systems</em> might be wasting our time?</p>  
 
<p> And if the effect of our best efforts turns out to be problems rather than solutions—should we not check whether those <em>systems</em> might be causing us problems?</p>
 
</div> </div>  
 
  
<div class="row">
+
<p>But there's a rub: Being now in charge of the relationship we have with knowledge, the <em>academia</em> has become part of the <em>power structure</em>. Which means that the way in which the academic tradition has been institutionalized may have followed our other <em>systems</em>. It is this <em>way</em> in which the academic tradition has been institutionalized that this conversation is about.</p>  
<div class="col-md-3"><h4>Insight</h4></div>
 
<div class="col-md-7">
 
<p>
 
Our systems tend to be conceived without any rational or conscious plan whatsoever. </p>
 
<p>
 
The systems tend to evolve as 'cancer'.</p>
 
<p>We contemplated paraphrasing Bill Clinton's 1992 successful presidential campaign slogan, "The economy, stupid!", and calling this insight "The systems, stupid!". "The economy" (i.e. the economic growth) is not the solution to our problems—the economy <em>is</em> our problem... "The systems, stupid!" points to a winning political agenda in an <em>informed</em> society. Its consequences will be sweeping. </p>
 
</div> </div>  
 
  
 +
<p>How might the academic tradition be corrupted by the <em>power structure</em>? </p>
  
<div class="row">
+
<p>The theory says that the pursuit of knowledge for its own sake would gradually be replaced by Bourdieu-style turf strife—with adjustments to the power "field" both within and without the institutions. </p>  
<div class="col-md-3"><h4>Stories</h4></div>
 
<div class="col-md-7">
 
<p>
 
The Ferguson–McCandless–Fuller <em>thread</em>.</p>
 
<small> See a very brief version [https://holoscope.info/2013/06/05/toward-a-scientific-understanding-and-treatment-of-problems/ here] (where Ferguson was not mentioned), and a bit longer persion on pages 4 and 5 [http://knowledgefederation.net/Articles/GCGforEAD10.pdf here]. </small>
 
<p>Zygmunt Bauman</p>
 
[[File:Bauman-msg.jpeg]]
 
<small><p>Bauman used a strong metaphor, the concentration camp...</p> </small>
 
<p>Norbert Wiener</p>
 
<small> <p>The first axiom of cybernetics is that structure drives behavior. And that to be viable or "sustainable", a system must have some minimal requisite structure, notably a functioning feedback-and-control (...). In his 1948 Cybernetcs Wiener explained why we <em>did not</em> have that. And why the "free competition" would not replace it. But also Wiener failed to notice and unravel the <em>Wiener's paradox</em>!</p> </small>
 
<p>Erich Jantsch</p>
 
<small> <p>Jantsch contributed two further insights: That the "control" required for the humanity's continued existence (the solution of the "problematique") had to involve the capability to continuously update "the systems in which we live and work"; and that the key task of implementing that function would have to be done by the university institution. Jantsch coined the concept "systemic innovation", and undertook to <em>bootstrap</em> the corresponding theory, and practice. Hence we chose him to be the icon of <em>power structure</em> insight.</p> </small> 
 
</div> </div>  
 
  
 +
<p>Education the <em>academia</em> would provide would no longer be in the name of the pursuit of "human quality" or human <em>wholeness</em>, as the case may have been in the original Academia, but on the contrary a socialization for taking place in the <em>power structure</em>, driven by competition. Those young people who are efficient learners and test takers, who allocate their time and attention so as to get the best grades in all subjects, would have advantage over those who would give themselves to an interest, and pursue it wherever it takes them.</p>
  
<div class="row">
+
<p>The most successful among them would become academic researchers. And naturally, they would adjust the academic ecology to their own interests and standards. The academic researchers would not attend conferences to serve the knowledge and the humanity, but to further their own position in the "field" by presenting <em>their own</em> results, and making contacts. The academic 'turf' would be divided into small tracts so that everyone gets his share. Those small and private areas would be organized together into larger disciplinary units, to secure the privileges to their members, and keep the outliers outside.</p>  
<div class="col-md-3"><h4>Action</h4></div>
 
<div class="col-md-7">
 
<p>
 
Systemic innovation—making the systems whole
 
</p>
 
</div> </div>
 
  
* Back to [[Holotopia]]
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<p>This is, of course, only theory. This self-reflective <em>dialog</em> would see to what degree this theory may be reflected by practice. And how successfully the values and the spirit of the academic tradition are preserved and supported by the <em>academia</em> as modern institution.</p>
  
 +
<p>A way to do that would be to look at the [[giant|<em>giants</em>]] and their most daring ideas. We adopted this <em>keyword</em> from Newton, to point to visionary thinkers "on whose shoulders we now need to stand, to see further". Is the <em>academia</em> ready to adopt their ideas? The Incredible History of Doug Engelbart and his "largest contribution to knowledge" suggests that it is not. Our <em>keyword</em> may suggest the reason—the <em>giants</em> would take too much space on the academic 'turf'...</p>
  
XXXX
+
</div> </div>
  
 
<div class="row">
 
<div class="row">
<div class="col-md-3"><h2>[[Holotopia:Socialized reality|Socialized reality]]</h2></div>
+
<div class="col-md-3"><h2>Books</h2></div>
<div class="col-md-7">
+
<div class="col-md-7"><p>Occasionally we publish books about of the above themes—to punctuate the laminar flow of events, draw attention to a theme and begin a <em>dialog</em>. </p>  
<blockquote>
+
<p>Shall we not recreate the book as well—along with all the rest? Yes and no. In "Amuzing Ourselves to Death", Neil Postman—who founded "media ecology" as the research field— left us a convincing argument why the book is here to stay. His point was that the book creates a different "ecology of the mind" (to mention also Gregory Bateson's fertile metaphor) than the contemporary "immersive" audio-visual media do: The book invites us to <em>reflect</em>. </p>  
At the core of the Enlightenment was a profound change of our way to truth and meaning—from seeking them in the Bible, to empowering the reason to find <em>new</em> ways. Galilei in house arrest was our <em>reason</em> that was kept in check, and barred from taking its place in the evolution of ideas. Have we reached the end of this all-important evolutionary process, which Socrates and Plato initiated twenty-five centuries ago? Can the <em>academia</em> still make a radical turn, and guide our society to make an even larger one?
+
 
</blockquote>  
+
<p>We, however, let the book exist in an 'ecosystem' with other media. Notably with the <em>dialog</em>. In that way, a reflection that an author passes onto the readers continues as community action—engages our <em>collective creativity</em> and comes back to the author, polinated with new ideas.</p>  
<h3>Scope</h3>
 
<p> The [[Holotopia:Socialized Reality|Socialized Reality]] <em>insight</em> is about the fundamental assumptions that serve as the foundation on which truth and meaning are created. It is also about a possibility that a deep change, of the foundation, may naturally lead to a sweeping change, "a great cultural revival"—as the case was during the Enlightenment.</p>
 
<p>
 
We look at the very foundations, that is—the fundamental assumptions, based on which truth and meaning are constructed. Being the foundations that underlie our thinking, they are not something we normally look at and think about. It is, indeed, as if those <em>foundations</em> were hidden under the ground, and now need to be escavated.</p>  
 
  
<h3>View</h3>
+
<h3>Liberation</h3>  
<p>Without even noticing that, from the traditional culture we've adopted a myth incomparably more subversive than the myth of creation. This myth now serves as the main foundation stone, on which the edifice of our culture has been built.</p> 
 
<p>By conceiving our pursuit of truth and meaning as a "discovery" of bits and pieces of an "objective reality" (and thus failing to perceive truth and meaning, and information that conveys them, as an essential part of the 'machinery' of culture),  we've at once damaged our cultural heritage—<em>and</em> given the instruments of cultural creation away, to the forces of counterculture. In our present order of things <em>anything goes</em>—as long as it does not <em>explicitly</em>  contradict "the scientific worldview".</p>
 
<p>While the counterculture is creating our world, the scientists are caught up in their traditional "objective observer" role...</p>  
 
  
<h3>Action</h3>
+
<p>The book titled "Liberation", with subtitle "Religion beyond Belief", is scheduled to be completed during the first half of 2021, and serve as an ice breaker.</p>  
<p>We show how a completely new <em>foundation</em> for truth and meaning can be constructed—which is independent of any myths and unverifiable assumptions. On this new <em>foundation</em>, a completely new academic and societal reality can be developed.</p>
+
<p>"Religion beyond Belief" is one of the <em>ten themes</em>. Positioned in the context of <em>socialized reality</em> and <em>convenience paradox</em>, this book elaborates on the kind of change that is the hallmark of <em>holotopia</em>—where something we take for granted is turned upside down, and shown to stand a lot better in that way. It is now common to associate the word "religion" with rigidly held beliefs, which resist argumentation and evidence. The view offered in the book is of a <em>religion</em> that liberates us not only from rigidly held "religious" views—but from rigidly held beliefs and identities of any kind, including rigidly held <em>self</em>-interests.</p>  
<p>This new <em>foundation</em> can be developed by doing no more than <em>federating</em> the information we already own.</p>  
 
<p>Federating knowledge means not just "connecting the dots", but also making a difference.</p>  
 
  
<h3>Federation</h3>
+
</div> </div>  
<p>To show that the correspondence of our models with reality is a myth (widely held belief that cannot be rationally verified), it is sufficient to quote Einstein (as a popular icon of modern science). But since we are here talking about the very foundation stone on which our proposal has been developed, we take this <em>federation</em> quite a bit further.</p>
 
<p>An essential point here is to understand "reality" as an instrument that the <em>traditional</em> culture developed to socialize us into a worldview, and its specific order of things or <em>paradigm</em>. By understanding <em>socialization</em> as a form of power play and disempowerment, we provide in effect a <em>mirror</em> which we may use to self-reflect, and see our world and our condition in a new way. The insights of Pierre Bourdieu and Antonio Damasio are here central. A variety of others are also provided.</p>
 
</div> </div>
 
  
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<div class="row">
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<div class="col-md-3"><h2>Prototypes</h2></div>
 +
<div class="col-md-7"><p>
 +
[[prototype|<em>Prototypes</em>]], as we have seen, are a way to <em>federate</em> information by weaving it directly into the fabric of everyday reality. They can be literally anything—including book manuscripts.</p>
  
<!-- 
+
<p>In the <em>holotopia</em> scheme of things, pretty much <em>everything</em> is a <em>prototype</em>. In this way we subject <em>everything</em> to knowledge-based evolution.</p>  
<p>The Enlightenment replaced one foundation stone (faith in the tradition, represented by the Scriptures), by another (trust in reason, empowered by knowledge)—and "a great cultural revival" was the result. Are the conditions ripe for a similar change today?</p>  
 
<p>We will here be talking about "the core of our proposal"—about changing our very relationship with information.</p>  
 
</blockquote>  
 
<p>See this, a bit more thorough and to the point, [[Introduction to the socialized reality insight]]. </p>  
 
  
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<p>The Holotopia project proceeds largely by evolving <em>prototypes</em>. What is described here is, of course, an initial <em>prototype</em> of the <em>holotopia</em>. The project is meant to develop by evolving this <em>prototype</em> further.  </p>
  
<div class="col-md-7">
 
<p>Werner Kollath, Erich Jantsch, Douglas Engelbart, Werner Heisenberg and other 20th century's thinkers who saw elements of an emerging <em>paradigm</em> made their appeals to [[academia|<em>academia</em>]]. With astonishing consistency, they were ignored.</p>
 
<p>It is the <em>academia</em>'s privileged social role to decide what ideas will be explored taught at universities, and given citizenship rights. The standards for right knowledge, which the <em>academia</em> upholds in our society, decide what education, public informing, and general information consumption will be like.</p>
 
<p>What <em>are</em> those standards? What are they based on?</p>
 
<p>The <em>foundations</em> on which truth and meaning are created in our society, and which determine our cultural <em>praxis</em>, tend to be composed of vague notions such as that science provides an "objectively true picture of reality". </p>
 
<blockquote>
 
<p>During the 20th century a wealth of insights have been reached in the sciences, humanities and philosophy, which challenged or disproved the age-old beliefs based on which our culture's <em>foundations</em> have evolved. </p>
 
<p>But <em>they too</em> have been ignored!</p>
 
</blockquote>
 
<p>
 
To understand our main point, now—we are <em>not</em> proposing new <em>foundations</em>; we ae <em>initiating</em> a process by which the creation of foundations will be made the prerogative of the people</p>
 
<p>We are initiating something akin to trial by jury—in a domain that decides all power relations in our society. A process by which the <em>foundations</em> will be <em>continuously</em> improved.  Think of it as the reversal of the trials of Galilei and Socrates. This central issue is no longer decided "behind the closed door"; it is made a subject of a public process, akin to the traditional "trial by jury". </p>
 
  
 +
</div> </div>
  
</div> </div>
 
  
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<div class="row">
 
<div class="row">
<div class="col-md-3"><h2 style="color:red">Reflection</h2></div>
+
<div class="col-md-3"><h2>Events</h2></div>
<div class="col-md-6"><h3>A historical introduction to the foundations of culture</h3>
+
<div class="col-md-7">
<blockquote>
+
 
This is a point to take a moment and reflect about the historical roots of the cultural disparity (between our immense scientific and technological know-how, and our lack of cultural "know-what", as Norbert Wiener called it), which is the <em>holotopia</em>'s core theme. See [[A historical introduction to the foundations of culture]].
+
<p>The <em>holotopia</em> events punctuate the becoming of a new order of things.</p>  
</blockquote>
+
 
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+
<p>An illustration is [https://earthsharing.info/index.html our pilot project "Earth Sharing"] in art gallery Kunsthall 3.14 in Bergen. </p>
  
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</div> </div>

Revision as of 06:30, 25 September 2020

Imagine...

You are about to board a bus for a long night ride, when you notice the flickering streaks of light emanating from two wax candles, placed where the headlights of the bus are expected to be. Candles? As headlights?

Of course, the idea of candles as headlights is absurd. So why propose it?

Because on a much larger scale this absurdity has become reality.

The Modernity ideogram renders the essence of our contemporary situation by depicting our society as an accelerating bus without a steering wheel, and the way we look at the world, try to comprehend and handle it as guided by a pair of candle headlights.

Modernity.jpg Modernity ideogram

Our proposal

The core of our knowledge federation proposal is to change the relationship we have with information.

What is our relationship with information presently like?

Here is how Neil Postman described it:

"The tie between information and action has been severed. Information is now a commodity that can be bought and sold, or used as a form of entertainment, or worn like a garment to enhance one's status. It comes indiscriminately, directed at no one in particular, disconnected from usefulness; we are glutted with information, drowning in information, have no control over it, don't know what to do with it."

Postman.jpg
Neil Postman

What would information and our handling of information be like, if we treated them as we treat other human-made things—if we adapted them to the purposes that need to be served?

By what methods, what social processes, and by whom would information be created? What new information formats would emerge, and supplement or replace the traditional books and articles? How would information technology be adapted and applied? What would public informing be like? And academic communication, and education?

The substance of our proposal is a complete prototype of knowledge federation, where initial answers to relevant questions are proposed, and in part implemented in practice.
Our call to action is to institutionalize and develop knowledge federation as an academic field, and a real-life praxis (informed practice).
Our purpose is to restore agency to information, and power to knowledge.

All elements in our proposal are deliberately left unfinished, rendered as a collection of prototypes. Think of them as composing a 'cardboard model of a city', and a 'construction site'. By sharing them we are not making a case for a specific 'city'—but for 'architecture' as an academic field, and a real-life praxis.


A proof of concept application

The Club of Rome's assessment of the situation we are in, provided us with a benchmark challenge for putting the proposed ideas to a test.

Four decades ago—based on a decade of this global think tank's research into the future prospects of mankind, in a book titled "One Hundred Pages for the Future"—Aurelio Peccei issued the following call to action:

"It is absolutely essential to find a way to change course."


Peccei also specified what needed to be done to "change course":

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

Peccei.jpg
Aurelio Peccei

This conclusion, that we are in a state of crisis that has cultural roots and must be handled accordingly, Peccei shared with a number of twentieth century thinkers. Arne Næss, Norway's esteemed philosopher, reached it on different grounds, and called it "deep ecology". In what follows we shall assume that this conclusion has been federated—and focus on the more interesting questions, such as how to "change course"; and in what ways may the new course be different.

In "Human Quality", Peccei explained his call to action:

"Let me recapitulate what seems to me the crucial question at this point of the human venture. Man has acquired such decisive power that his future depends essentially on how he will use it. However, the business of human life has become so complicated that he is culturally unprepared even to understand his new position clearly. As a consequence, his current predicament is not only worsening but, with the accelerated tempo of events, may become decidedly catastrophic in a not too distant future. The downward trend of human fortunes can be countered and reversed only by the advent of a new humanism essentially based on and aiming at man’s cultural development, that is, a substantial improvement in human quality throughout the world."

The Club of Rome insisted that lasting solutions would not be found by focusing on specific problems, but by transforming the condition from which they all stem, which they called "problematique".

Could the change of 'headlights' we are proposing be "a way to change course"?


A vision

Holotopia is a vision of a possible future that emerges when proper 'light' has been 'turned on'.

Since Thomas More coined this term and described the first utopia, a number of visions of an ideal but non-existing social and cultural order of things have been proposed. In view of adverse and contrasting realities, the word "utopia" acquired the negative meaning of an unrealizable fancy.

As the optimism regarding our future waned, apocalyptic or "dystopian" visions became common. The "protopias" emerged as a compromise, where the focus is on smaller but practically realizable improvements.

The holotopia is different in spirit from them all. It is a more attractive vision of the future than what the common utopias offered—whose authors either lacked the information to see what was possible, or lived in the times when the resources we have did not yet exist. And yet the holotopia is readily attainable—because we already have the information and other resources that are needed for its fulfillment.

The holotopia vision is made concrete in terms of five insights, as explained below.


A principle

What do we need to do to "change course" toward holotopia?

The five insights point to a simple principle or rule of thumb—making things whole.

This principle is suggested by the holotopia's very name. And also by the Modernity ideogram. Instead of reifying our institutions and professions, and merely acting in them competitively to improve "our own" situation or condition, we consider ourselves and what we do as functional elements in a larger system of systems; and we self-organize, and act, as it may best suit the wholeness of it all.

Imagine if academic and other knowledge-workers collaborated to serve and develop planetary wholeness – what magnitude of benefits would result!

A method

"The arguments posed in the preceding pages", Peccei summarized in One Hundred Pages for the Future, "point out several things, of which one of the most important is that our generations seem to have lost the sense of the whole."

To be able to make things wholewe must be able to see things whole!

To highlight that the knowledge federation methodology described and implemented in the proposed prototype affords that very capability, to see things whole, in the context of the holotopia we refer to it by the pseudonym holoscope.

While the characteristics of the holoscope—the design choices or design patterns, how they follow from published insights and why they are necessary for 'illuminating the way'—will become obvious in the course of this presentation, one of them must be made clear from the start.


Holoscope.jpeg
Holoscope ideogram

To see things whole, we must look at all sides.

The holoscope distinguishes itself by allowing for multiple ways of looking at a theme or issue, which are called scopes. The scopes and the resulting views have similar meaning and role as projections do in technical drawing. The views that show the entire whole from a certain angle are called aspects.

This modernization of our handling of information—distinguished by purposeful, free and informed creation of the ways in which we look at a theme or issue—has become necessary in our situation, suggests the bus with candle headlights. But it also presents a challenge to the reader—to bear in mind that the resulting views are not "reality pictures", contending for that status with one other and with our conventional ones.

In the holoscope, the legitimacy and the peaceful coexistence of multiple ways to look at a theme is axiomatic.

To liberate our worldview from the inherited concepts and methods and allow for deliberate choice of scopes, we used the scientific method as venture point—and modified it by taking recourse to insights reached in 20th century science and philosophy.

Science gave us new ways to look at the world: The telescope and the microscope enabled us to see the things that are too distant or too small to be seen by the naked eye, and our vision expanded beyond bounds. But science had the tendency to keep us focused on things that were either too distant or too small to be relevant—compared to all those large things or issues nearby, which now demand our attention. The holoscope is conceived as a way to look at the world that helps us see any chosen thing or theme as a whole—from all sides; and in proportion.

A discovery of a new way of looking—which reveals a structural problem, and helps us reach a correct general assessment of an object of study or a situation as a whole (see if 'the cup is broken or whole')—is a new kind of result that is made possible by (the general-purpose science that is modeled by) the holoscope.

We will continue to use the conventional way of speaking and say that something is as stated, that X is Y—although it would be more accurate to say that X can or needs to (also) be perceived as Y. The views we offer are accompanied by an invitation to genuinely try to look at the theme at hand in a certain specific way (to use the offered scopes); and to do that collaboratively, in a dialog.