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  • 05:26, 14 November 2025Project Society (hist | edit) ‎[6,077 bytes]Mbauwens (talk | contribs) (Created page with " =Description= Chor Pharn: "Half a century ago, most adults in industrial nations belonged to an institution larger than themselves. They worked in a ministry, a factory, a union, or a firm that promised lifetime employment. They voted for parties that offered plans measured in decades. They paid taxes that built roads, dams, and schools in their name. Even leisure had a collective rhythm: weekend sport, summer holidays, the nightly news at a fixed hour. Life was lived...")
  • 04:09, 13 November 2025Decelerationist (hist | edit) ‎[601 bytes]Mbauwens (talk | contribs) (Created page with " = to be contrasted with Accelerationism =Description= * '''Decel / doomer''' From a tweet cited by Adam Tooze: "I gotta hand it to the e/accs: “decel” is a beautiful turn of phrase. It effortlessly links “decelerationist” to the reviled “incel,” making it a perfect all-purpose slur for anyone advocating more than zero tech regulations or who’s unwilling to raze a neighborhood in service of a new chip factory." (https://adamtooze.substack.com/p/wh...")
  • 03:54, 13 November 2025Rural Communals in France (hist | edit) ‎[4,683 bytes]Mbauwens (talk | contribs) (Created page with " =Context= Michel Bauwens: The 'Communaux' are the remnants of common rural property in France, attached to villages. There are (were ?) still about 100k of them, but they are under legal threat of a new process of 'Enclosures' =Discussion= Translated excerpt from a interview with the anthropologist Philippe Descola: (interview conducted by Olivier Chavanon et Jean-François Joye.) '''* "What does the rediscovery of ancestral land commons, also known as "communau...")
  • 03:46, 13 November 2025National Interest (hist | edit) ‎[4,381 bytes]Mbauwens (talk | contribs) (Created page with " '''* Book: Philip Cunliffe. The National Interest.''' URL = =Review= Heather Penatzer: "Cunliffe offers a more prescriptive intervention. Asserting from the outset that “the age of globalism is over,” he argues that “we should replace the political, legal and infrastructural legacy of hyperglobalization—or globalism—with a new international order, based around the national interests of individual nation-states.” Those national interests, Cunliffe claims...")
  • 03:43, 13 November 2025Collapse of Global Liberalism (hist | edit) ‎[2,236 bytes]Mbauwens (talk | contribs) (Created page with " '''* Book: Philip Pilkington. The Collapse of Global Liberalism.''' URL = =Review= Heather Penatzer: "Pilkington defines liberalism as “the Enlightenment ideology par excellence that sought to level and ‘rationalize’ social and political relationships.” He devotes the first half of the book to a theoretical critique, treating liberal ideology as a system of ideas that intermediates all relationships, whether political, social, economic, or moral. As an Enl...")
  • 03:15, 13 November 2025Brazilianization of the World (hist | edit) ‎[1,595 bytes]Mbauwens (talk | contribs) (Created page with " * Article: Alex Hochuli. The Brazilianization of the World. American Affairs Journal, URL = =Summary= Chor Pharn: "What Hochuli actually argues (the load-bearing theses) * End of high modern feedback. The twentieth-century state—“confident machines forged in war”—no longer delivers coordinated outcomes; legitimacy and capacity decay in the capitalist core, exposed by Covid and persistent policy paralysis. * Brazil as preview, not exception. The traits l...")
  • 02:45, 13 November 2025Development in Progress (hist | edit) ‎[6,712 bytes]Mbauwens (talk | contribs) (Created page with " '''* Article: Development in Progress. The concept of progress is at the heart of humanity’s story. The Consilience Project, Jul 16, 2024''' URL = https://consilienceproject.org/development-in-progress/ =Excerpts= ==Contextual Introduction== Introduction to the Critique of the Progress Narrative, the context for the Consilience Project article: "The concept of progress is at the heart of humanity’s story. From the present, it is possible to imagine a future of...")
  • 05:33, 12 November 2025SciencePedia (hist | edit) ‎[3,734 bytes]Mbauwens (talk | contribs) (Created page with " =Description= Chor Pharn: ""In Beijing, a team of engineers and researchers have built what they call SciencePedia — a replacement not for Wikipedia’s content, but for its logic. They started from a simple but radical question: What if we could store not conclusions, but the reasoning that produced them? Most scientific writing compresses centuries of trial and error into tidy equations and summaries. You see what was discovered, but not why it must be true. This...")
  • 05:27, 12 November 2025Dark Factory Infrastructure (hist | edit) ‎[2,336 bytes]Mbauwens (talk | contribs) (Created page with " =Description= < "an industrial chain and more like an autonomous organism." > Chor Pharn: "The first place where the new intelligence became visible was the factory floor. When engineers in Shenzhen switched off the lights, production didn’t stop. Robots assembled entire vehicles in complete darkness because nothing there required eyes. The cameras were infrared, the sensors ultrasonic, the rhythm unbroken. What startled even the designers was that the machines...")
  • 04:37, 12 November 2025China's Two Mountains Theory of Green Industrialization (hist | edit) ‎[8,452 bytes]Mbauwens (talk | contribs) (Created page with " =Discussion= Adam Tooze: "As recently as the early 2000s China was a chronically power-poor society. Answering that poverty with coal power was an achievement, but it created the world’s greatest pollution disaster. Cleaning that up whilst delivering more and more electricity is a spectacular achievement of development. Creating a world-leading new industry to produce solar panels, wind turbines, batteries and EV adds to the success. This is the achievement of mil...")
  • 04:24, 12 November 2025Crecimiento (hist | edit) ‎[1,784 bytes]Mbauwens (talk | contribs) (Created page with " =Status= ==2025== Ipe News: * VC-funded and tokenized SEZs, good idea?? "A controversy about the development of the Digital Special Economic Zone (DSEZ) in Argentina erupted last week. A leaked pitch deck surfaced online showing the non-profit Crecimiento had plans to start a for-profit to run the zone infrastructure, prompting a wave of references to the $LIBRA scandal (February’s launch of a memecoin promoted by Milei). Crecimiento quickly clarified that no tok...")
  • 04:20, 12 November 2025Quantitative Analysis on Globalization, Development and Global Governance (hist | edit) ‎[2,177 bytes]Mbauwens (talk | contribs) (Created page with " '''* Article: From the Washington towards a Vienna Consensus? A quantitative analysis on globalization, development and global governance. By Arno Tausch.''' URL = https://www.academia.edu/68007298/From_the_Washington_towards_a_Vienna_Consensus_A_quantitative_analysis_on_globalization_development_and_global_governance =Summary= "This publication empirically evaluates and develops core aspects of the literature on global governance. Analyzing world social, gender, ec...")
  • 04:16, 12 November 2025State-Based Industrial Policy as the Cause of the Asian Miracle (hist | edit) ‎[2,573 bytes]Mbauwens (talk | contribs) (Created page with " '''* Article: Industrial Policy, Asian Miracle Style. Reda Cherif and Fuad Hasano. Journal of Economic Perspectives—Volume 39, Number 4—Fall 2025—Pages 101–126''' URL = https://pubs.aeaweb.org/doi/pdfplus/10.1257/jep.20251448 =Summary= "In this paper, we address the following question, paraphrasing a comment from Lucas (1988): Is there some action a government of countries like Ghana or Colombia could take that would lead their economy to grow like the Asian...")
  • 03:54, 12 November 2025Kevin Jones on the Turn to Commons-Based Property (hist | edit) ‎[2,879 bytes]Mbauwens (talk | contribs) (Created page with "This text is written in the context of Neighborhood Economics and the author Kevin Jones calls it the collective turn. But what he describes is a turn towards common stewardship and even property models. =Discussion= Kevin Jones: ==I. From Entrepreneurship to Shared Ownership== "Entrepreneurship remains the spark — but shared ownership is the stabilizer. - Employee-owned businesses and cooperatives anchor jobs and dignity in place. - Collective purchasing, tool l...")
  • 03:32, 12 November 2025Kara Dansky in Defense of Sex-Based Rights (hist | edit) ‎[2,898 bytes]Mbauwens (talk | contribs) (Created page with " =Discussion= Kara Dansky et al. : "This letter is for the women who’ve recently joined the fight, especially those brave enough to speak publicly for the first time. You’re doing vital work, often at great personal cost. Many of us have walked the same path: the shock of realizing what’s happening, the anger, the instinct to find common ground and say, surely there’s a reasonable middle way. It’s completely understandable to want compromise. But those of us...")
  • 06:55, 11 November 2025Industrial Commoning (hist | edit) ‎[1,267 bytes]Mbauwens (talk | contribs) (Created page with " =Contextual Quote= ==The Chinese Model of Industrial Commoning creates a global development model== "China today exports more than products. It exports the capacity to industrialise. Across Asia, Africa, and Latin America, countries are building power grids, transit systems, and manufacturing lines with Chinese equipment because it works and it is affordable. Panels, batteries, turbines, robotics, and vehicles arrive at a fraction of the price once charged by We...")
  • 04:46, 11 November 2025ACTionism (hist | edit) ‎[745 bytes]Mbauwens (talk | contribs) (Created page with " '''= "The art of finding your people and taking collective action".''' URL = http://www.actionism.space =Description= "ACTionism is the art of finding your people and taking action - together. You know that feeling when you look around you and see what needs changing, but wonder if you're alone in caring? You're not. And you have more power than you think. We reject the tired narrative that you're either a passive subject or an isolated consumer. What you are is...")
  • 03:19, 11 November 2025Wise Agency (hist | edit) ‎[4,032 bytes]Mbauwens (talk | contribs) (Created page with " '''= "“wise agency”: accomplishing with wisdom, or accomplishing the right thing, in the right way, at the right time, for the right reason, and with the right people."''' [https://lessfoolish.substack.com/p/the-wise-agency-accomplish-consciously] Graph at [https://substackcdn.com/image/fetch/$s_!FoOc!,w_1456,c_limit,f_webp,q_auto:good,fl_progressive:steep/https%3A%2F%2Fsubstack-post-media.s3.amazonaws.com%2Fpublic%2Fimages%2F63a0a05e-7516-48a5-ac44-7f992b058b32_1...")
  • 03:11, 10 November 2025World Machines (hist | edit) ‎[1,825 bytes]Mbauwens (talk | contribs) (Created page with " =Description= Chor Pharn: "The idea of world-machines belongs to the writer and systems theorist Venkatesh Rao. In a series of essays and the collaborative reading project Contraptions Book Club, he proposed that history can be read as a succession of machines, each built to coordinate a planet increasingly aware of itself. The first “modernity machine,” he suggests, was assembled between 1200 and 1600, during the Mongol and Islamic ages of exchange. It ran on na...")
  • 03:05, 10 November 2025Mnemonic Stack (hist | edit) ‎[18,853 bytes]Mbauwens (talk | contribs) (Created page with " < " '''The world will divide not by ideology but by phase discipline—by who can keep their clocks together long enough to build'''. " > - Chor Pharn [https://thecuttingfloor.substack.com/p/the-mnemonic-stack] =Description= Chor Pharn: "The new world-machine has just been switched on. It is no longer enough to study energy, capital, or intelligence; what demands invention is temporal governance itself. The question for our century is simple: how will civilisation...")
  • 00:59, 10 November 2025Health Sharing P2P Insurance in China (hist | edit) ‎[2,306 bytes]Mbauwens (talk | contribs) (Created page with " =Status= Exodus2 (2021): "How China is winding down "people's" insurance replacement: Mutual aid platforms, a cheap alternative to health insurance, are closing in China. Such services were popular - as a rule, they did not even require regular contributions, but they collected enough through crowdfunding to, for example, pay for someone's surgery for tens of thousands of dollars. They were used by tens or even hundreds of millions of people in China. The idea was p...")
  • 15:31, 9 November 2025Earth Reserve Assurance (hist | edit) ‎[6,529 bytes]Mbauwens (talk | contribs) (Created page with " =Discussion= ==On the Distinction Between ERA and UBiC Frameworks== Reflections on conceptual distance and possible dialogue between the Earth Reserve Assurance (ERA) framework and the Common Good Unit (UBiC) hypothesis. Michel Foata: '''1. Shared Intention''' "Both ERA and UBiC arise from the same foundational intuition: the monetary architecture of our economies no longer communicates the real state of the living world. Each framework seeks, in its own way, to...")
  • 04:48, 8 November 2025Waste as a Critique (hist | edit) ‎[4,617 bytes]Mbauwens (talk | contribs) (Created page with " '''* Book: Hervé Corvellec. Waste as a Critique. 2025 (open-access publication)''' URL = https://academic.oup.com/book/59620? =Description= Publisher: "This volume shows how waste in its manifold variety provides an innovative starting point for interrogating twenty-first-century society. Waste in and of itself, along with those who work with it, may suffer from social stigma. As an epistemological point of departure however, waste offers an advantageous platform...")
  • 04:03, 8 November 2025Ethereum Protocol Advocacy Alliance (hist | edit) ‎[3,152 bytes]Mbauwens (talk | contribs) (Created page with " '''= "Alliance to coordinate policy efforts among the teams building core onchain infrastructure".''' [https://paragraph.com/@epaa/announcing-ethereum-protocol-advocacy-alliance] URL = =Description= EPAA: "the Ethereum Protocol Advocacy Alliance to coordinate policy efforts among the teams building core onchain infrastructure. Together, we secure over $100 billion in assets through open, non-custodial protocols that operate without intermediaries. Drawing on our pr...")
  • 03:54, 8 November 2025Decentralized AI Agents (hist | edit) ‎[7,684 bytes]Mbauwens (talk | contribs) (Created page with " '''= DeAgents (DeAI): agents "that train, reason, transact, and even reproduce without human-in-the-loop".''' [https://thedrcenter.org/from-laws-to-ledgers-why-protocols-not-policy-must-tame-self-sovereign-ai/] =Description= Helena Rong and Botao 'Amber' Hu: "'''The Mirage of “Governable” Decentralized Intelligence''' In light of the current development of the “agentic web,” we are perhaps witnessing the birth of a new digital species: decentralized AI agen...")
  • 07:18, 7 November 2025Ideocritique (hist | edit) ‎[1,857 bytes]Mbauwens (talk | contribs) (Created page with " =Description= Tom Amarque: "Ideocritique may be defined as a method of analyzing, evaluating, and opposing ideological and religious systems through the disciplined application of critical thinking. It likewise entails opposition to all forms of critique of these systems that are themselves uncritical—those grounded not in reasoned analysis but in affective bias, resentment, prejudice, or mere opinion. While critical thinking is a general capacity, Ideocritique con...")
  • 03:46, 7 November 2025Process of Network Formation (hist | edit) ‎[6,974 bytes]Mbauwens (talk | contribs) (Created page with " =Discussion= Benjamin Life: ==Formalizing Networks: From Invisible to Visible== "Formalizing networks, making them visible and explicit, serves multiple essential functions. First, it enables better information flow. When organizations understand themselves as nodes within a network, they can share knowledge more intelligently, avoiding duplication while building on each other’s learning. Information becomes a resource that circulates through the system rather th...")
  • 03:42, 7 November 2025Mycelial Sensing Process (hist | edit) ‎[2,392 bytes]Mbauwens (talk | contribs) (Created page with " =Discussion= Benjamin Life: "This brings us to the mycelial sensing of networks, the intuitive, relational process of discovering how initiatives and organizations can best relate to one another within a larger ecological context. One of the most powerful aspects of networks is discovery. In graph theory terms, networks consist of nodes (entities) connected by edges (relationships). As we begin to see technological representations of these networks, layered, intercon...")
  • 03:37, 7 November 2025Computationalism (hist | edit) ‎[12,361 bytes]Mbauwens (talk | contribs) (Created page with " =Description= E.M. Burlingame: "This 21st-century doctrine supplants sacred scriptures with silicon wafers, inscribing its holy texts in lines of code and algorithms. Its unelected divine right monarchs—the “Silicon Sovereigns”—evangelize a dogma where terms like “neural networks,” “technological singularity,” and “artificial general superintelligence” transcend mere technical jargon to become sacrosanct articles of faith. In this emerging theology...")
  • 03:28, 7 November 2025David Ronfeldt on Rethinking Civil Society from a Network Society Perspective (hist | edit) ‎[9,709 bytes]Mbauwens (talk | contribs) (Created page with " = considerations in the context of the TIMN Framework, see Tribes, Institutions, Markets, Networks =Discussion= David Ronfeldt: "RETHINKING CIVIL SOCIETY FROM A TIMN PERSPECTIVE Defining “civil society” is a slippery task. The concept’s origins date back to ancient Greek philosophy. It gained its modern liberal momentum during the 18th and 19th Centuries when British Enlightenment philosophers Adam Ferguson, John Locke, Adam Smith, and German idealist G.F...")
  • 03:26, 7 November 2025David Ronfeldt on the Differences Between Tribes and Networks (hist | edit) ‎[8,999 bytes]Mbauwens (talk | contribs) (Created page with " =Discussion= David Ronfeldt: "KEY DIFFERENCES BETWEEN TIMN’S TRIBES AND NETWORKS To reiterate my revised understanding of TIMN, the Tribes form is as much about networks as is the Networks form. Tribes and Networks both rest on network forms of organization, belief, and behavior that are meant to assure mutual togetherness. Tribes and Networks qualify as network-centric forms in ways that further distinguish them from Institutions and Markets. As such, Tribes and...")
  • 11:37, 6 November 2025Bhutan’s Mindfulness City (hist | edit) ‎[1,337 bytes]Mbauwens (talk | contribs) (Created page with " =Description= IPE News: "Since we explored the origin story of the Gelephu Mindfulness City in Bhutan during our Startup Cities Live, it’s good to highlight how progressive they have been and the benefits for the network society industry. Earlier this year, Draper Nation ran an e-hackathon in Bhutan to develop the core tools of a borderless digital economy. Now, it is Edge City that visited the Bhutanese city to explore potential synergies. The trip is worth a loo...")
  • 04:06, 4 November 2025Frank Furedi on the Spirit of Populism (hist | edit) ‎[3,332 bytes]Mbauwens (talk | contribs) (Created page with " =Discussion= Frank Furedi: "he spirit of populism summed up Outwardly the spirit of populism appears as a backlash against the cultural politics of society’s elites. To be sure this spirit communicates sentiments that are hostile to cultural politics that seek to undermine the consciousness of nation, and which extoll the supposed virtues of multiculturalism, diversity, mass migration and gender ideology. However, the populist zeitgeist is not simply a negative reje...")
  • 02:56, 4 November 2025James Quilligan on the Social Contract for the Planetary Commons (hist | edit) ‎[1,546 bytes]Mbauwens (talk | contribs) (Created page with " Podcast via https://cpg.buzzsprout.com/2543607/episodes/17962803-a-social-contract-for-the-planetary-commons-a-conversation-with-james-quilligan =Description= “In this episode, we sit down with one of our hosts, James Bernard Quilligan. With over three decades of experience in international development and monetary policy—as both analyst and administrator—Quilligan now serves as Senior Research Fellow at the Center for New Critical Politics and Governance. In...")
  • 02:50, 4 November 2025Andreas Lind and Cecilie Friis on Planetary Policies (hist | edit) ‎[1,357 bytes]Mbauwens (talk | contribs) (Created page with " Podcast via https://cpg.buzzsprout.com/2543607/episodes/17981754-towards-planetary-politics-a-conversation-with-concito =Description= “In this episode, we speak with senior advisors Andreas Lind and Cecilie Friis from the Danish think tank CONCITO about their project From Planetary Boundaries to Planetary Policies. They explore how addressing the climate crisis requires confronting the broader web of interconnected environmental challenges—and how Earth-system sc...")
  • 02:46, 4 November 2025Planetary Choices (hist | edit) ‎[921 bytes]Mbauwens (talk | contribs) (Created page with " '''= “podcast 'Planetary Choices' is created and produced by the Research Center for New Critical Politics and Governance.”''' URL = https://cpg.buzzsprout.com/ =Description= “he concept of 'The Planetary' has gained increasing traction in almost all scientific disciplines. From physics, to litterature, to history, law and economics - planetary thinking and policy making is taking more sophisticated shapes, amounting to an emerging new paradigm. In season 1, c...")
  • 01:52, 4 November 2025Civic Prophet (hist | edit) ‎[4,103 bytes]Mbauwens (talk | contribs) (Created page with " =Description= Gary Riccio: "Building on Henry Mintzberg’s (2015) tripartite schema of the public, private, and plural sectors, the Civic Prophet can be conceived as a mediating archetype that rebalances these domains through moral imagination rather than administrative or market power. While the public sector legitimizes itself through law and governance, and the private sector through efficiency and innovation, the plural sector—rooted in community, association,...")
  • 01:42, 4 November 2025Proximity Delusion (hist | edit) ‎[229 bytes]Mbauwens (talk | contribs) (Created page with " '''= "our inability to emotionally process events beyond our immediate spatial and social sphere".''' [https://richarddavidhames.substack.com/p/the-getting-of-wisdom-part-two] Category:Relational Category:Intelligence ")
  • 14:04, 3 November 2025Coasean Singularity (hist | edit) ‎[506 bytes]Mbauwens (talk | contribs) (Created page with " =Description= Via John Robb: "Firms form to minimize transaction costs (Coase). AI agents will significantly reduce transaction costs across the entire economy. If transaction costs decline markedly, the need to create firms would evaporate, necessitating a complete reevaluation of economics and market design as existing corporations dissolve and new markets emerge." (https://johnrobb.substack.com/p/an-economic-singularity) Category:Patterns Category:P2P T...")
  • 05:25, 3 November 2025Stephen DeMeulenaere on Redesigning Money for Regenerative Economies (hist | edit) ‎[2,542 bytes]Mbauwens (talk | contribs) (Created page with " Video via https://lightforestworld.substack.com/p/ep-21-redesigning-money-paths-to =Description= Dev Lewis: "We’ve been told a story that human society evolved from primitive barter to superior modern money. That linear story flattens thousands of years of value exchanged through reciprocity, mutual aid, and gift economies. Systems that nourished people and ecological relationships. Modern (fiat) money and its associated systems have a valuable role to play but i...")
  • 04:50, 2 November 2025Entropology (hist | edit) ‎[1,048 bytes]Mbauwens (talk | contribs) (Created page with " =Description= Via eoht: "In 1955, French anthropologist and philosopher Claude Lévi-Strauss, in his Sad Tropics, coined the term "entropology". In 1961, Levi-Strauss, in his A World on Wane, by Lévi-Strauss, defined things as follows: - ''“Entropology, not anthropology, should be the word for the discipline that devotes itself to the study of this process of disintegration in its most highly evolved forms.”'' The term can loosely be thought of as subjects in...")
  • 04:41, 2 November 2025Yogyakarta Principles (hist | edit) ‎[2,825 bytes]Mbauwens (talk | contribs) (Created page with " '''= charter which expresses the demand that states must cease registering sex on all legal documents, including birth certificates''' URL = https://yogyakartaprinciples.org/ =Description= "In 2006, in response to well-documented patterns of abuse, a distinguished group of international human rights experts met in Yogyakarta, Indonesia to outline a set of international principles relating to sexual orientation and gender identity. The result was the Yogyakarta Princ...")
  • 04:32, 2 November 2025Exonets (hist | edit) ‎[2,017 bytes]Mbauwens (talk | contribs) (Created page with " =Discussion= David Ronfeldt: "Today’s cutting-edge ideas about networks — e.g., “decentralized autonomous organizations” (DAOs), “distributed cooperative organizations” (DisCOs), “open value networks” (OVNs), holacracy, holarchy, and the like — look insufficient for scaling upwards, downwards, and sideways to structure a new realm. Something grander, bigger in scale, more interconnectable across “silos,” perhaps “cosmo-local,” looks needed. A...")
  • 04:30, 2 November 2025From Tribes, via Networks, to Exonets (hist | edit) ‎[7,779 bytes]Mbauwens (talk | contribs) (Created page with " = a 2025 update to David Ronfeldt's TIMN framework, i.e. Tribes, Institutions, Markets, and Networks =Contextual Quote= < "''Tribes is about emphasizing inter-personal kinship, lineage, identity, solidarity, community, sharing, etc. to form a close-knit society. In contrast, information-age Networks is ideally about reaching out to others while emphasizing openness, inclusion, collaboration, etc. in flat network designs.''" > =Discussion= David Ronfeldt: ==...")
  • 03:38, 2 November 2025Biomimicry Index (hist | edit) ‎[766 bytes]Mbauwens (talk | contribs) (Created page with " = "indicator for assessing how well human organizations respect the principles of living systems." [https://de-seta.com/mes-creations] =Description= De Seta: "The Biomimicry Index is a conceptual indicator for assessing how well human organizations respect the principles of living systems. It allows for the evaluation of what I consider to be the five fundamental principles of life: cellular structure, the capacity for growth and complexification, metabolism, homeos...")
  • 06:00, 1 November 2025Noospherics (hist | edit) ‎[3,573 bytes]Mbauwens (talk | contribs) (Created page with " = proposal, by Francis Heylighen, "for a new science of how ideas evolve, interact, and self-organize across the planetary web of minds" [https://francisheylighen.substack.com/p/why-we-need-a-science-of-noospherics] =Description= Francis Heylighen: "Noospherics seeks to understand the dynamics of the world’s collective mind much as biology studies the living cell or ecology studies the biosphere. It asks: * How do ideas form, combine, and evolve through commun...")
  • 01:51, 1 November 2025Framework for Understanding Pathologies in Advanced Artificial Intelligence (hist | edit) ‎[718 bytes]Mbauwens (talk | contribs) (Created page with " '''* Article / dedicated website: Psychopathia Machinalis: A Nosological Framework for Understanding Pathologies in Advanced Artificial Intelligence. by Nell Watson and Ali Hessami.''' URL = https://www.psychopathia.ai/? =Description= "As artificial intelligence (AI) systems attain greater autonomy and complex environmental interactions, they begin to exhibit behavioral anomalies that, by analogy, resemble psychopathologies observed in humans. This paper introduces...")
  • 03:17, 30 October 2025Technocalvinism (hist | edit) ‎[1,457 bytes]Mbauwens (talk | contribs) (Created page with " '''= "the idea that technological development is preordained beyond human control".''' [https://blog.cosmos-institute.org/p/technocalvinism] =Discussion= Luke Drago: "Technocalvinism: the idea that technological development is preordained beyond human control, leaving you blameless for your actions. It’s named after John Calvin’s concept of double predestination: the idea that God preordains who is saved and who is damned to hell before their first breath. Techn...")
  • 00:37, 29 October 2025Achieving Post-Growth Well-Being Within Planetary Boundaries (hist | edit) ‎[1,404 bytes]Mbauwens (talk | contribs) (Created page with " '''* Article: Post-growth: the science of wellbeing within planetary boundaries. Kallis, Giorgos et al. The Lancet Planetary Health, Volume 9, Issue 1, e62 - e78''' URL = https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lanplh/article/PIIS2542-5196(24)00310-3/fulltext =Abstract= "There are increasing concerns that continued economic growth in high-income countries might not be environmentally sustainable, socially beneficial, or economically achievable. In this Review, we explore...")
  • 16:48, 28 October 2025Superstructure (hist | edit) ‎[980 bytes]TiberiusB (talk | contribs) (Created page with "Develop this page... ")
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