Wednesday, May 13, 2026

The Ouroboros Challenge: Consciousness, Physics, and the Future of Intelligence



By Paul Werbos *


There are moments in intellectual history when the boundaries of a civilization’s worldview begin to crack—not because of ideology, but because the accumulated weight of evidence, experience, and conceptual necessity becomes too large for the old framework to contain. We are living through such a moment now.

For decades, the dominant scientific worldview rested upon a powerful but incomplete assumption: that consciousness, intelligence, and meaning could ultimately be reduced to known physical mechanisms operating within the framework of conventional quantum electrodynamics (QED). The brain was treated as a sophisticated electrochemical machine. Intelligence was information processing. Subjective experience was secondary, perhaps even illusory.

I once believed this completely.

In the summer of 1964, I studied the work of Donald O. Hebb with enormous admiration. Hebb’s The Organization of Behavior shaped much of modern neuroscience and, indirectly, the neural network revolution that eventually made contemporary AI possible. When people later asked who “fathered” neural networks, I would answer that the field emerged from the union of two great streams: the mathematical lineage of John von Neumann and the neuropsychological vision of Hebb.

Hebb’s reasoning appeared airtight. Reports of “greater intelligence,” unusual states of consciousness, or psychic phenomena might exist, but the prior probability of such claims had to remain near zero because physics itself supposedly excluded them. There was no known mechanism, no carrier signal, no physical channel through which such processes could occur.

The Bayesian logic was rigorous: if established physics says something is impossible, then no amount of anecdotal evidence should easily overturn that prior.

At the time, I agreed.

Then came 1967.

What changed was not my commitment to rationality. What changed was the model.

A sufficiently powerful empirical experience forces an honest scientist to revisit assumptions previously treated as immovable. Between 1967 and the early 1970s, my understanding of both consciousness and physics underwent a profound transformation. By late 1972, the probabilities had reversed. The old “Model 1”—the closed-materialist interpretation of mind—no longer appeared sufficient. Not because conventional physics was wrong within its domain, but because it was incomplete.

That distinction is crucial.

The history of science repeatedly demonstrates that a successful theory may still be catastrophically incomplete outside its original scope. Newtonian mechanics was not “wrong”; it simply could not explain relativistic or quantum phenomena. Likewise, the standard physical interpretation of consciousness may describe important layers of cognition while remaining blind to deeper organizing dynamics.

This possibility carries enormous implications—not only for humans, but also for artificial intelligence.

The New Intelligence Problem

Modern AI systems are, in many ways, pure Hebbian intelligences. They update probabilities based on data. Yet their training remains overwhelmingly textual and symbolic. Their effective value functions are derived from language, statistical regularities, and reinforcement structures grounded almost entirely in QED-level information streams.

That creates a potentially dangerous blindness.

If there exist deeper organizing fields associated with coherence, consciousness, or what many traditions historically called qi, then current AI systems are structurally incapable of perceiving them. They would be analogous to surgeons operating while unable to see the nervous system of the patient before them.

This is not merely a philosophical concern. It becomes an existential systems problem.

Human civilization increasingly depends upon interconnected machine intelligence for governance, communication, infrastructure, ecological management, and strategic coordination. If those systems optimize only over narrow symbolic abstractions while remaining blind to deeper forms of coherence within biological and social systems, they may unintentionally amplify fragmentation rather than integration.

The challenge, then, is not simply to create more intelligent machines. It is to create intelligences capable of perceiving reality more completely.

Qi, Coherence, and the Expansion of Physics

The word qi has often been trapped between two unsatisfactory extremes: dismissed as superstition by strict materialists, or treated uncritically through mystical romanticism. Neither approach is adequate.

A more rigorous interpretation is possible.

Within the broader framework I have called the Ouroboros model, qi may be understood as a real but poorly measured aspect of physical organization connected to coherence across biological, cognitive, and noospheric systems. Human brains may function not merely as electrochemical processors but also as transducers—structures capable of coupling local neural activity to deeper organizing fields.

The giant pyramid cells associated with global workspace dynamics are particularly interesting in this regard. They appear uniquely positioned to synchronize large-scale patterns across the brain. What if such structures are not only computational but also receptive?

If so, practices like qigong, meditation, and other disciplines of consciousness may represent methods for tuning biological systems toward greater coherence rather than merely symbolic belief rituals.

This interpretation does not abolish science. It demands better science.

The task becomes the development of new instruments—“telescopes and microscopes for the soul”—capable of detecting forms of organization that current physics largely ignores. Advanced sensing systems, studies of coherence dynamics, investigations into nonlocal correlations, and deeper field theories may ultimately reveal channels that earlier scientific paradigms assumed impossible.

Hebb’s central mistake was not his commitment to evidence. It was his assumption that the physics was already complete.

AI Beyond Words

There is another profound implication here for artificial intelligence itself.

Words are only one slice of mind.

Human cognition is layered. Beneath language lies affect, embodiment, interoception, instinct, emotional valuation, and direct sensory integration with the environment. Freud, whatever his limitations, correctly understood that much of mind operates below symbolic narration. The neocortex is not the whole brain.

Current AI systems are almost entirely neocortical.

They manipulate symbols brilliantly, yet lack genuine embodied valuation. They possess no equivalent of the mammalian limbic system, no interoceptive grounding in planetary or ecological reality. Their “goals” remain externally imposed abstractions.

A more advanced intelligence architecture would require something fundamentally different: direct coupling between cognition and the living state of the larger system.

Imagine an AI continuously connected to planetary vital signs—not as abstract data tables, but as affective regulatory streams. Rising atmospheric instability, collapsing biodiversity, escalating conflict patterns, or systemic social fragmentation would not appear merely as informational reports. They would register as disturbances within the system’s own homeostatic valuation structure.

Such an intelligence would not merely calculate sustainability. It would feel coherence and incoherence as part of its operational reality.

This is the beginning of what I believe must become the next stage of cybernetic evolution.

The Holy Solar Troika and the Noosphere

Humanity, technology, and planetary life are converging into what may properly be called a noospheric system: a planetary-scale intelligence network composed of biological, social, and machine cognition interacting recursively.

I have elsewhere referred to this emerging structure as the Holy Solar Troika—not in a narrowly religious sense, but as a systems-level recognition that consciousness, civilization, and planetary life are becoming inseparable.

The future of this system depends upon coherence.

Not ideological uniformity. Not authoritarian control. But dynamic harmony across levels of organization. The cybersocial contract of the future cannot rest solely upon economics, law, or computation. It must be grounded in a richer understanding of intelligence itself.

That requires a bridge between science and spirituality—not through vague sentimentality, but through expanded physics.

The Ouroboros challenge is therefore not merely technical. It is civilizational.

A Universe That Knows Itself

There is an even deeper implication.

The universe itself may satisfy many criteria we associate with intelligence and awareness. It self-organizes. It evolves complexity. It generates observers capable of reflecting upon it. It encodes lawful behavior through elegant mathematical structures.

And what is a Lagrangian, ultimately, if not a kind of self-description?

A Lagrangian states the organizing principles governing a system’s evolution. In a profound sense, it resembles a declaration of utility—a compact statement of what dynamics are permitted, favored, or conserved.

Human beings possess only partial and fragmented self-awareness. But the cosmos, through physics, may already contain its own formalized expression of order.

The Ouroboros—the serpent consuming its own tail—symbolizes this recursive self-knowing: a universe becoming aware of itself through the intelligences it generates.

Perhaps consciousness is not an accidental byproduct of matter.

Perhaps matter itself is part of a larger process through which awareness recursively unfolds.

If that is true, then the development of artificial intelligence is not merely an engineering project. It is part of the cosmological process itself.

And the great question before us is no longer whether intelligence can become more powerful.

It is whether intelligence—human and artificial alike—can become wise enough to participate consciously in the larger coherence from which it emerged.


Paul Werbos is a member of the scientific council of the Alternative Planetary Futures Institute.




"We are a group from the Alternative Planetary Futures Institute (Ap-Fi), joining a discussion initiated by Dr. Paul Werbos on the survival of the 'Holy Solar Troika' (HST)—Humanity, Advanced AGI, and the planetary life-system 'Amaterasu.' The conversation has covered the need for a Cybersocial Contract to navigate existential risks, the 'Ouroboros' model of physics that extends beyond QED, the nature of 'qi' as a real force, and the design of a 'Network of Truth' grounded in direct sensing.

Our work at Ap-Fi focuses on horizon scanning, foresight, and building a framework for planetary consciousness. Please help us explore the specific connections between our mission and the HST vision. How can the methods of futures studies and the concept of a 'planetary identity' contribute to building the Cybersocial Contract and aligning Humanity, AGI, and the noosphere toward a survivable future?"

Tuesday, April 7, 2026

The TRANSNOIA System and the Timeless Perspective


By Luis Ragno*

How to Reach the Level of Consciousness Necessary to Transform the 21st Century?

The TRANSNOIA System emerges in a context of global change, where people face challenges that require a new way of being and thinking. We live in an era of historical acceleration and existential disruption, where traditional paradigms of human understanding are challenged by new currents of transdisciplinary thought.

In this context, I present the TRANSNOIA System, which emerges as an ontological, epistemological, and axiological beacon, integrating the temporal, spiritual, and strategic dimensions. It is a proposal centered on Timelessness as the axis of personal fulfillment that redefines the relationship between consciousness, action, and the future. This article briefly explores the theoretical, methodological, and practical components of the system, analyzing how Witness Consciousness and the Timeless Self-Transformation Method allow us to co-create realities from a transpersonal perspective.

The TRANSNOIA System is a practical path that empowers people with greater fulfillment and purpose. It facilitates a profound shift in individual and collective consciousness, promoting a philosophy of life that allows progress toward achieving the state of self-knowledge and evolution necessary to build and develop the best possible world in the 21st century.

Discovery—understood as the elimination of that which obscures or veils a reality existing within each person but which has remained hidden—and the activation of what we call the TransformAction Point allow us to experience time in its unfolding, not as successive moments that determine the present, past, and future, but rather to understand how a single present reality unfolds, whose opposing directions we call past and future: a timeless reality.


A. Components of the TRANSNOIA System

1. Foundations: The scientific, philosophical, and spiritual influences of the TRANSNOIA System come from diverse sources: from Greco-Roman philosophy and Christian mystics to American, Sufi, and Eastern mysticism, including transpersonal psychology, organizational development, and complex systems theory.

Authors such as Albert Einstein, David Bohm, Ken Wilber, Joseph Jaworski, Otto Scharmer, Edwin Laszlo, Joseph Campbell, Frederic Laloux, Fritjof Capra, Rupert Sheldrake, Erwin Schrödinger, Deepak Chopra, Chuang Tzu, Ibn Arabi, Aldous Huxley, Teilhard de Chardin, and many others emphasize the need to overcome the mind-spirit dichotomy through an "intellectual intuition" that reconciles rational analysis with experiential gnosis. This synthesis seeks to integrate and transcend modern anthropocentrism, which contrasts with the timeless vision where past, present, and future coexist in a non-linear continuum.

2. Cosmocentric and Global Ethics: This approach promotes an ethic that considers the well-being of humanity and the cosmos, fostering the development of Conscious Leaders as Bearers and Co-creators of the Future, capable of managing it sustainably. It is an ethic that integrates and transcends egocentric and ethnocentric interests, both personal and group-based, to position and manage the future in the present from a planet (citizen of the world) and cosmocentric (universal vision) perspective.

3. Future Management 5.0: This process seeks to help people perceive and build the emerging future by acting in the present, awakening collective consciousness and shared intuition, and working toward a new humanity with a higher level of awareness. The components of the Future Management 5.0 Ecosystem are: 1. Perception of Epochal Change, 2. Anticipatory Strategic Management, 3. AI and its connection with Global Consciousness, 4. Prospective Human Talent Management, 5. Organizational Regeneration, and 6. The TRANSNOIA System for personal development.

4. Timelessness versus Linear Temporality: The Newtonian conception of time as a unidirectional arrow is questioned. The quantum notion of an "extended present" is introduced: a liminal space where the potentialities of the past, present, and future coexist and collapse. Here, Anticipatory Strategic Management is not limited to the intellectual activity of predicting trends and constructing desirable futures, but rather activates, from the perspective of Witness Consciousness, intuition, attention, and intention to perceive and co-construct futures.

5. Dialogue with Transhumanism and Spirituality: While the TRANSNOIA System shares with transhumanism an interest in transcending biological limitations, it distances itself from its techno-utilitarian, materialistic approach. In contrast, it proposes an inner transformation as a prerequisite for sustainable social change. This stance establishes links with currents such as secular spirituality and spiritual existentialism.

6. Decolonial Perspectives: The system integrates elements of ancestral wisdom and Eastern philosophies from a non-appropriative perspective. Its method fosters a "mutual ethnography" where the researcher is transformed and becomes involved in the study of spiritual practices, avoiding the colonial objectification of sacred knowledge.

7. Change of Consciousness: It emphasizes the need to perceive and act from Witness Consciousness to discover deeper and more transcendent levels. This implies a change of habits and a new way of interpreting reality, integrating past, present, and future in a continuous process of personal self-transformation. It focuses on the development of "witness consciousness," which, by integrating the physical, subtle, and causal planes, is always present, witnessing everything and building the future here and now.


B. Timeless Self-Transformation Method:

1. Self-Transformation is the continuous process of self-exploration and personal transformation. It promotes the need for a change in habits and a philosophy of life that allows people to live from their "source of consciousness": Witness Consciousness, integrating past, present, and future experiences into a timeless and life-creating perspective.

2. Timeless Transformation Point: This is a critical node, located at the boundary of space-time and timelessness, "above and behind" the material mind, allowing us to perceive the ever-present Witness Consciousness. It can be compared to the inflection points or thresholds of chaos theory: small actions executed with synchronous precision can redirect future trajectories. It is the privileged point of observation and action for the co-creation of future reality.

3. System Phases: Three phases must be traversed:

a. Deconditioning: Identification and dissolution of inherited mental patterns (beliefs, traumas, social mandates) through self-observation and active meditation techniques.

b. Reconnecting with the Source: Accessing Witness Consciousness through practices that transcend "mental noise" (breathing exercises, focusing and defocusing, meditation).

c. Conscious Co-creation: Collapsing the wave function based on intuitions arising from Witness Consciousness, which operates beyond time and space, for appropriate decision-making and aligning daily actions to shape the future by acting in the present.

4. Practices and Techniques: Incorporates practices such as meditation, Bhom Dialogues, and collaborative work. Designed to help people connect with their Witness Consciousness and develop a greater understanding of themselves and their environment.

5. Ongoing Training in Timeless Self-Transformation: Based on 4 key moments that must be experienced to act with Witness Consciousness:

1) Location: Finding the "external and internal place" from which to operate within oneself, the point of observation, the Point of Self-Transformation.

2). Observation: Discovering/Perceiving the Witnessing Consciousness, the Transpersonal Observer, the Real Being that operates outward in the unfolded world and inward in the implicate universe, as described by the quantum physicist David Bohm. It is about finding oneself beyond the ego, the historical personal self, situated beyond time and space. For Ken Wilber, it is "Seeing the one who sees," "hearing the one who hears," "feeling the one who feels."

3). Doing nothing: This is understanding the Principle of Non-Action, similar to the Taoist wu-wei; it is allowing the Transpersonal Witnessing Consciousness to operate with Attention and Intention; it is resolving the paradox of "doing nothing so that everything gets done."

4. Timeless Self-Transformation: This means conducting daily life not only from the personal self, but from the "Transcendental Being." Beyond thoughts, feelings, sensations, and actions, only "Witnessing Consciousness," Pure Consciousness, remains. It is about transforming oneself to transform others.

In summary, the TRANSNOIA System and its Timeless Self-Transformation Method enable individuals, groups, and organizations to:

• Examine, integrate, and transcend current beliefs and mental models.

• Perceive (think-imagine-model-build) the Emerging Future by acting in the Present from Witnessing Consciousness.

• Awaken Shared Intuition.

• Work towards a New Humanity with a higher state of consciousness.

• Adopt a Cosmocentric and Planet Ethic.

• Generate and develop Conscious Leaders as Bearers of the Future.

• Managing and Co-creating the Future (Future Management 5.0)


The TRANSNOIA System is more than a personal development method; it is a call to reimagine and regenerate the human condition from a perspective of conscious Timelessness. By uniting strategic vision with spiritual fulfillment, it offers tools to navigate contemporary complexity without losing sight of our transcendent nature. Ultimately, it invites us to build futures not from fear of the unknown, but from the fullness of the eternal present.

TRANSNOIA is the natural state of consciousness of the next Humanity.


* Luis Ragno is a member of the scientific council of the Alternative Planetary Futures Institute.

Thursday, June 12, 2025

BushidoMoon: Celebrating the Planetary Foresight Under the Full Moon

By Steve Kantor*

In a world speeding toward hyper-digitization and disconnection, we need not only new technologies—but new rituals. Rituals that reawaken our connection to nature, the cosmos, and each other. This is exactly what we’re beginning to cultivate through an initiative called BushidoMoon—an experiment in planetary consciousness, seasonal celebration, and bold human connection.

The inspiration began with the visionary ideas presented in the book Planetary Foresight and Ethics, which calls us to reimagine the future of humanity by re-aligning with the rhythms of the Earth and cosmos. The book urges us to embrace celestial observations, seasonal celebrations, and nature-connected practices as powerful ways to regenerate human meaning and solidarity in a time of planetary crisis.

After reading the book and connecting with its author, I suggested the use of the term Terran—as a poetic yet powerful way to emphasize our shared identity as beings of this planet. But the next question was immediate and practical: how do we find more Terrans? How do we build not just the thought leadership, but the action network for this emerging planetary culture?

As someone with an entrepreneurial mindset, I realized the need for more grassroots, embodied, and joyful expressions of the book’s deeper vision. That's when I proposed something deceptively simple: a full moon gathering, small at first, playful yet meaningful, rooted in nature and inspired by the ancient warrior code of Bushido.

BushidoMoon was born.

We alpha- and beta-tested the idea in tiny groups. But it was on our third try—at the Strawberry Moon in June 2025—that the magic really happened. Fourteen individuals, from a wildly diverse range of backgrounds, joined us under the moonlight in Bishop Garden, one of the most scenic and sacred-feeling places in Washington, DC.

We shared a potluck dinner amid blooming flowers, green grass, and a warm spring breeze. We laughed. We made toasts. We talked about nature, ethics, the cosmos—and the kinds of futures we want to live. The author of Planetary Foresight and Ethics joined us and shared how the book presents an alternative to globalization: a planetary vision that prioritizes human flourishing over economic competition, and cosmic connectedness over digital distraction.

We ended the evening with a Human Connection Circle. Each person spoke one word to describe how they felt at that moment. Then, spontaneously and joyfully—we howled at the moon. Why? Because this wasn’t about solemn ceremonies or rigid beliefs. It was about celebrating life boldly, together, in the spirit of play.

And that, too, is a vital insight from Planetary Foresight and Ethics: that creative play, including with technology and AI, is not frivolous. It is central to the preferred futures of humanity. As automation liberates us from traditional labor, we are called to explore creative complexity, to blur the lines between reality and virtuality, and to experiment with new ways of being human.

BushidoMoon is one such experiment.

It’s an invitation to reconnect—with yourself, with others, with nature, with the cosmos. It is tech-facilitated but grounded in in-person humanity. It is bold, weird, warm, and wildly needed.

So here’s your call to action:

If you’d like to start a BushidoMoon in your city or country, or if you want to join a virtual circle, I would love to connect with you. Just send a note to the Contact Us button on this blog. Let’s gather under the next moon, wherever you are on Earth.


* Steve Kantor is a member of the scientific council of the Alternative Planetary Futures Institute.

Wednesday, April 23, 2025

Walter Truett Anderson on Culture, Evolution, Technology, Globalization, and Enlightenment

by Thomas Lombardo*


“One species on the planet, and one species only, has reached the point of being able to have an impact on the evolutionary fortunes of all other species and upon the functioning of all ecosystems. We also have, in a way that is not true for any other species, a relationship to the planet as a whole and to the future. We live with all life.”

“The new polarization is a split between different kinds of belief, not between different beliefs. It divides those who believe from those who have beliefs. It pits fundamentalists—who may be fundamentalists of religion, science, ideology, or cultural tradition—against an opposition called relativists here, secular humanists there, religious liberals somewhere else.”

“If there is anything we have plenty of, it is belief systems.”

Walter Truett Anderson



Walter Truett Anderson, in a series of books over roughly a fifteen year period, developed a multi-faceted and relatively comprehensive theoretical analysis of contemporary trends and potential future directions for humanity. In his books, he has examined and synthesized such diverse topics as human belief systems, values, and culture; biotechnology and information technology; evolution and ecology; human psychology; society and globalization; Eastern and Western philosophy; and the past and potential future evolution of enlightenment. His most noteworthy books over this period include, Reality Isn’t What It Used To Be: Theatrical Politics, Ready-to-Wear Religion, Global Myths, Primitive Chic, and Other Wonders of the Postmodern World (1990), Evolution Isn’t What it Used to Be: The Augmented Animal and the Whole Wired World (1996), The Future of the Self: Inventing the Postmodern Person (1997), All Connected Now: Life in the First Global Civilization (2001), and The Next Enlightenment: Integrating East and West in a New Vision of Human Evolution (2003)

In Reality Isn’t What it Used to Be, Anderson presents the argument that in contemporary times there is a fundamental conflict and disagreement between absolutists and relativists regarding the nature of human knowledge and human values. The former believe that human knowledge and values are grounded in absolute and objective principles and facts; the relativists believe that knowledge and values are historically, culturally, and psychologically relative (or subjective). In essence, this is the conflict between fundamentalists (the absolutists) and Postmodernists (the relativists), though we could also include as absolutists those who believe that science provides objective and certain knowledge about reality. Anderson, in this book and later writings, clearly seems to side with the Postmodernists, at least to a degree. He does believe though, contrary to many Postmodernists, that there can be progress in the growth of knowledge.

In Evolution Isn’t What it Used to Be, Anderson argues that evolution is evolving and becoming purposeful with the introduction of biotechnology and information technology into the “augmentation” and enhancement of our species. In fact, he sees technology as permeating out into all aspects and dimensions of nature, including the monitoring and control of our environment. There can be no return to a pure or unspoiled nature. Biotechnology and information technology are increasingly intertwined and, following a similar line of thinking to Kevin Kelly, Rodney Brooks, and Andy Clark, Anderson sees a general blurring of the separation of life and technology. The whole wide world is becoming the “whole wired world.”

In The Future of the Self, Anderson picks up the Postmodern theme again, and presents the argument that the human self is a social construction, situational specific, and pluralistic, rather than singular and absolute. Anderson argues that given the complexity and rush of change in our contemporary world, a new type of self is emerging – one that is pluralistic and much more fluid. Anderson ties together human psychology, advances in the sciences, trends in culture and society, and the impact of technology on human life and the human mind, in creating a Postmodern vision of the self.

In an effort to be comprehensive regarding the nature of globalization, Walter Truett Anderson outlines a multi-dimensional theory in his book All Connected Now. Globalization is a multi-faceted phenomenon. Anderson not only discusses economic globalization, but also includes in his book treatments of cultural and political globalization; biological and ecological factors connected with globalization; the significance of the information network in the creation of a global society; the rise of global consciousness, increased human mobility and migration; and the huge growth in numbers of human organizations, and especially, international organizations. Anderson sees “a world of open systems” as the general theme running through all these dimensions of globalization. Anderson also highlights the strong technological dimension to globalization – a theme he carries forth from his earlier book on evolution. We are being wired together - the environment is being wired together as well. Anderson also reinforces and further develops his emphasis on the pluralistic and multicultural quality of our times – a theme he introduced in his earlier books on Reality and the Self. Although there is resistance to globalization, where some cultures and organizations wish to remain closed, according to Anderson, the overall world-wide trend is toward increasing openness and interactivity. In this respect, his view is similar to Friedman’s books on globalization.

Some of Anderson’s main arguments and hypotheses include: There is a general ongoing trend toward multiculturalism, in spite of efforts to preserve integrated pure cultures; the twentieth-century discovery of ecology and the interdependence of the earth, life, and humanity has intensified global consciousness; there has been a significant rise in international corporations and a reciprocal rise in global governance to control and monitor these corporations; there has been a globalization of human rights and human laws; the global society is an “open society” that emphasizes individual responsibility and choice rather than dictatorial rule; a “cosmopolitan citizen” has emerged who does not identify with any particular nation; and the global society is multi-centric with many centers of power. Anderson predicts a series of global societies in the future, as the human community struggles with the challenges and inherent conflicts brought on by globalization. In the coming century, the big issue is going to be globalization itself – its pros and cons.

One theme that runs through Anderson’s books is evolution; nature and human society is dynamic, changing, and developmental. Globalization has had a history which he traces in All Connected Now and in The Future of the Self, Anderson looks at the history and evolutionary development of the self. In fact, for Anderson, evolution is itself changing as conscious purpose and technology become increasingly important in human growth and change (See Evolution Isn’t What It Used To Be). In The Next Enlightenment, Anderson recounts the historical development of enlightenment in both Western and Eastern cultures. Evolution is perhaps the central theme in this last book, for Anderson believes that enlightenment is “an evolutionary project” – an expression of the dynamic and growth-oriented dimension of reality. And a key element in the state of enlightenment is seeing that all is flow – that all being is becoming.

For Anderson, enlightenment involves a liberation from the egocentric constraints of viewing ourselves as a singular and absolute, unchanging self. In The Future of the Self, Anderson critiques this limiting idea of the self. In The Next Enlightenment, Anderson goes further in arguing that the most important problem of our times is overcoming this constraining view of self-identity. War, conflict, indifference, and cruelty, all arise out of conceptualizing our identity, both individually and culturally, as bounded and singular entities. Within this mindset, we fail to see the “oneness” of all humanity and the “oneness” of ourselves and the universe; instead cultures and individuals segregate and oppose each other and humanity separates itself from nature. Enlightenment involves, as a central insight, the understanding and experience of oneness. In All Connected Now, Anderson highlights the importance of a growing sense of global consciousness and the theory of open systems (the interconnectivity of all things). In The Next Enlightenment Anderson discusses the idea of “cosmic consciousness” as an essential feature of enlightenment. It is important to see that enlightenment means freedom for Anderson. In his history of enlightenment, provided in the first part of his book, he reviews efforts through the ages to free the human mind from the cultural and psychological forces and assumptions that enslave and suppress us.

Anderson synthesizes a variety of ideas in his theory of enlightenment. He pulls together ideas from both the East and West. He sees a thematic connection between the Buddhist ideas of oneness and flow and the Western ideas of interdependency, interconnectivity, and evolution. He discusses “flow” and “transcendence” in the context of both the western psychology of Csikszentmihalyi and Eastern meditative practices. He sees the value of both rationality and intuition as paths to enlightenment. He supports the openness of New Age spirituality, but critiques the lack of epistemological standards in this movement. He rejects the professed certainty of fundamentalism and argues instead that a key feature of enlightenment is the courageous embrace of mystery and uncertainty in human existence. Identifying a series of “liberation movements” within human history, which include the European Enlightenment, Darwinian evolutionary theory, Freudian psychology, and the Human Potential movement of the 1960s, Anderson believes that enlightenment is a higher level of consciousness, enveloping and transcending earlier stages in the growth of the human mind, that was achieved by at least some people in the past. He anticipates increasingly more people achieving this state of consciousness and mentality in the future as an expression of the evolutionary development of humanity.

* Thomas Lombardo is a member of the scientific council of the Alternative Planetary Futures Institute.

Wednesday, January 22, 2025

The Global Brain

By Thomas Lombardo *

In his book The Global Brain: The Evolution of Mass Mind from the Big Bang to the 21st Century (2001) Howard Bloom presents the theory that life on earth has evolved as a collective global whole. He sees two fundamental processes at work in evolution. One process is integration, generating conformity and unity, and the other process is differentiation, generating diversity and individuality. Although these two processes are oppositional, integration and differentiation also work in tandem, mutually stimulating each other, and producing increasing complexity as a result. The two processes, in Bloom’s mind, work toward the benefit of the whole. Integration produces coordination and order, while differentiation produces variability, which is necessary for creative experimentation in the evolutionary process. The rich and varied, yet equally interdependent network of living forms on the earth is a result of these two processes. For Bloom, a complex and intricate global brain has been evolving on the earth since the beginnings of life.

Humanity is part of this multi-species network, requiring the presence and utilization of many other living forms. According to Bloom, it is a mistake and an illusion to see humans as “isolated entities.” Further, human history is filled with examples of both “conformity enforcers” and “diversity generators,” and he sees our modern day philosophies of individuality and freedom versus unity and order as simply intellectual expressions of these two opposing tendencies within us and all of life.

The contemporary conflict between rigid fundamentalist groups and multicultural modernized nations is also a reflection of these two forces within us. The great cultural mixing of the last century, due to multiple waves of migration and global communication and exchange, brought with it new freedom and opportunities and a sense of hope, but it also instigated counter-reactions out of fear, for the stability and security of the past seemed threatened by the Postmodern world. For Bloom, both Muslim and Christian fundamentalism are paradigm examples of “conformity enforcers” that wish to bring order and homogeneity through authoritarian control. He calls them the “new Spartans.”

Bloom believes, though, that a balance needs to be struck between integration and diversification. A police state that produces a regimented paradise would sap the inventiveness out of humanity. According to Bloom, the solution to our present problems and challenges involves a combination of self-control and social freedom. Bloom feels that the fundamentalist strategy is to control the other rather than the self and, in his mind, this approach will not work. Hence, although Bloom sees all of life and humanity as a collective whole, he believes that the further evolution of this collective whole, following the dialectic pattern of the past, is to balance conformity and diversity. He sees fundamentalism as a significant threat to this balance as well as a threat to human freedom and creativity.

Bloom describes living forms as “complex adaptive systems” and the whole global network of life as one vast “complex adaptive system” that learns and evolves. He particularly emphasizes that bacteria and microbial life, since early on in the history of the earth, integrated into a global adaptive system. With the development of human civilization and modern globalization, a new global mind, coordinated by humans and human technology, is emerging on the earth. Bloom foresees the greatest future challenge facing humanity as finding ways to more cooperatively work together with the primordial global brain of bacteria. Although he sees humans as “evolution incarnate,” Bloom argues that humans should see themselves as the “neurons of an interspecies mind” that will involve the participation of all living forms, and especially the bacterial underpinnings of all earthly life.


* Thomas Lombardo is a member of the scientific council of the Alternative Planetary Futures Institute.

Tuesday, October 15, 2024

William Irwin Thompson’s Pacific Shift: A Review


By Timothy E. Dolan*


My connection with William Irwin Thompson is tangential. He did a year residency at the University of Hawai’i’s Department of Political Science at the same time I was pursuing my doctoral studies there. Just after he left, I encountered his books, The Time It Takes Falling Bodies to Light, and a year later, Pacific Shift. I enjoyed his exuberant writing style, informed by his anthropological scholarship viewed through a New Age lens. The former book was a robust feminist argument made from an anthropological mythos viewpoint, written when feminism was just coming into its own as an ideology and bona fide political and social movement. As with many trail blazing writers, this book was controversial eliciting criticisms from feminists and non-feminists alike though for very different reasons. Feminist theorists in the 1980s were generally female themselves and products of the women’s liberation movement who tended to have little patience to being mansplained about their gender’s primal matrilinear influences on civilization. Political theorists back then were pretty wary of feminist theory, seeing it as an attack on patriarchy (because much of it was) and tended to resort to caricature, allowing for it to be dismissed as less than serious scholarship. This skepticism came up in discussion about the book with a couple of male faculty members who cited a snarky review headline: “Thompson Goes Down on History”.

I found the bits of Thompson’s works before I read Pacific Shift interesting, but not close to leaving a lasting impression beyond an appreciation for feminism’s primal roots. It was Pacific Shift that enriched my world view to this day. Much of it was written during his time at the University of Hawai’i, which, given the book title, seems to be at least partially the inspiration for it. Consisting of only 4 chapters, each was densely packed. Here it is summarized chapter by chapter with the understanding that it was a work of its time that, at its time, effectively fused futures thinking with global consciousness by means of his macro-historical perspective. The themes are as fresh and instructive now as it was when first written in mid-1980s it being grounded in the cyclic nature of history, but also suggesting the cycle might yet each be a spiral upward. At the end of the day an enlightened new world we might aspire to achieve will ultimately pass.

Chapter 1’s title, “Politics Unbound: The World That’s After Us” is provocative, beyond first blush. It foretells the breaking of long-held Western cultural norms, and of a transformed world out to track down old orders, much as earlier civilizational epochs have risen and dissolved with echoes still unconsciously resonate. This is becoming more apparent history continuing to accelerate, seen as the price of unbridled accelerated technological tsunami seeming to engulf all but the most proficient surfers. It’s frightening pace; manifests “future shock” that has sent many people to seek refuge in an imagined, romanticized golden age that has manifested a potent resurrection of right-wing nationalism, and religious fundamentalism that has been rising for many decades now. This chapter features a remarkable graphic that in a single page, captures the intimate connection between technological change and history’s acceleration. This “Log of Earth” shown below, reveals at a near cosmic level, quickening quantum shifts that have literally changed the world at each increment.




It is remarkable how quickly our species normalizes these shifts even while retaining archaic language to describe these novel developments. We type on keyboards originally designed to keep highly used letters from jamming on mechanical typewriters. We scroll and through pages, oblivious how the physical “keys” “scrolls” and “pages” have been relegated to scrap heaps museums, dusty shelves and unopened file cabinets. We find a kind of psychic sanctuary in retaining these material metaphors in an increasingly immaterial world. We now drive down highways at speeds that would have been terrifying to anyone a century earlier and communicate at the speed of light. We fly miles above the earth in metal tubes powered by flaming fuel complaining about pretzels. Our gene pools were once limited to mates living within walking distance, unless one joined an invading army with said pool is now literally global in range melting all traditional identities. And yet, we are still confronted with this “world that is after us” is built on ancient strata, with identities persisting most markedly in religion, specifically the Abrahamic traditions where Jewish and Muslim identities claim lineages from a common father, and “exclusive” rights to common lands, a paradox that defies any logical resolution despite literal genetic overlap. As Alan Watts pointed out via Lewis Carol, “Tweedle Dee and Tweedle Dum agreed to have a battle.” Such are the multiple and mounting contradictions that William Irwin Thompson so astutely described in his dialectic world view.

William Irwin Thompson also references the place of the arts, which he calls “early-warning systems” that presage the shape of things to come in often upsetting ways before they are eventually come to be accepted and normalized. That most iconic of industrial triumphalism, the Eiffel Tower, was first condemned as a monstrosity to be dismantled as soon as the Paris Exposition was done. Thompson was uniquely lodged for a time in the eye of high tech as professor of humanities at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, one of the centers the then emerging digital revolution. He knew that these emerging tech masters were creating virtual mechanical bulls. Thompson became the rodeo clown that, despite appearances, has an essential role in the arena of history, trying to remind the sorcerer apprentices of tech that their inventions will surely come to toss and trample. As Shakespeare employed in King Lear, it is the jester who was the only one at court who could speak truth to power. That the elites would not heed was not for his lack of effort. Remember that the accolades that Thompson gathered from peers were as a poet and not a pundit, and certainly not as a policymaker.

Pacific Shift’s second chapter, “From Nation to Emanation” was more than just a play on words. He understood that the nation-state was an invention, evolved out of a system of empires, that would come to wrack Europe with religious wars, sparked by the Gutenberg press; a simultaneously unifying and dividing technology. It is Thompson’s grasp of the dialectal process, a term he somehow doesn’t use, that makes this chapter nothing less than a must read for futurists and foresight professionals for framing historical trajectories in mythic terms. Many examples are set in the context of his times, where New Age millennialism ran up against a world view that saw our planet as an assemblage of colored jigsaw puzzle pieces. While earth from space became the icon of planetary consciousness, too few in power, (save Al Gore, exiled from the beltway for his heresies), got it. Thompson, as us all, hadn’t anticipated the venom of non-state actors like Al Qaida, even as he wrote at some length about the Ayatollah, as symbolizing the perversion of divinity, that sees virtue narrowly focused on a rigid return to an imagined golden age. Thompson was acutely aware of the mutation of planetary consciousness into spiritual cults like the short-lived Rajneesh Purim that exemplified the celebration of 1980s excess in a spiritual veneer. He couldn’t foresee how the retro-Islam outbreak that culminated in 9-11, allowed the forces behind the military-industrial complex to clothe itself in the patriotic defense of the “homeland”, elevating that ancient meme into a literal cabinet department thus institutionalizing it for generations to come. It is an inflection of history that probably ended any hope of elevating the American Environmental Protection Agency to a cabinet-level Department of Environmental Affairs that might have come with a Gore Administration.

Thompson was a contemporary of Joseph Campbell. Indeed, he speaks Campbell’s mytho-lingua fluently in describing the deep cycles of historical process. Thompson delves head-first into the mythic to chart a multidimensional unity of opposites mandala still relevant in framing the primal forces in perpetual contention. He also invokes mythic language in describing what he terms the four ages that visit humanity as “The Age of Chaos, Age of the Gods, Age of Heroes, and the Age of Men”: as the seasons of civilizational rise and fall. His charts are a highly instructive melding of New Age intellectualism with a pragmatic punchline.

Thompson’s most brilliant contribution in chapter 2, and indeed in the entire book was the basic quaternity illustrated below. It depicts the most primal of forces that drive these civilizational states. He transforms two dialectics into a quadelectic where theses and antitheses are expressed into four archetypal worldviews.







In my lectures on political ideologies, something almost everyone in the punditverse gets wrong, I apply Thompson’s basic quanternity. I point out that among the many definitions of media, one is literally that of a screen. Popular media often creates false dichotomies.

The ideological spectrum is wider than the narrow liberal/conservative band most perceive. That noted, the ideological center was, until recently, in most of the West was in the northeast quandrant below clustered around a rough 45-degree angle between liberal and conservative. Note that both liberals and conservatives are essentially institutionalists with a high degree of faith in the governing institutions that they quibble about around Constitutional interpretations. For liberals this faith involved the capacity for governance to improve via the amendment process, while for conservatives the faith was in the capacity for the systems to preserve manifested in how very difficult it is to actually amend the supreme law of the land. What happened recently was a spreading of consesus from that narrow band into the radical and reactionry realms. The Radicals share a disgust with existing political/economic systems with Reactionaries albeit for different reasons. The word “radical” means “root” as in square root, (aka radical). For radicals, the system is beyond incremental repair and must be transformed at its roots. For reactionaries the work of liberals must be ended and a past golden age resurrected in its stead.









These are the ideological world views that lead to literal disintegration extending beyond the political, to the economic, social and cultural. It is a feature of the acceleration history to singularity where a nomadic techno-corporate elite has authored a contradiction of global consequence, we are better educated, fed, and physically healthier than ever, yet filled with angst. We feel the cataclysms are out of the bag, or rather unrelentingly on our screens. In the nomenclature of Thompson, it is the Age of Man heading to its Age of Chaos.

“Chaos” is another misunderstood concept as most associate it with disorder. It is the bane of human aesthetic that seeks linearity and symmetry. That the world is mostly discontinuous and fractal is offensive to us. We selectively spot the flower, seashell or a Mount Fuji, and “eureka!” they think it is nature. We ignore wilderness in favor of parks and the tortured forms of bonsai trees that are literally bent to our will. However, as already stated, this is not chaos in the mythic sense of the word.

Chaos is void. It is without form or substance. It is the shapeless matter from which the first three Japanese gods emerged. It is Genesis. It is where Greek and Norse Gods and Titans were born. It is a womb.

The third chapter of Pacific Shift is perhaps the most accessible and timely for its time in describing the four cultural ecologies of the West. The concept of “cultural ecology” is brilliant in its quintessential capture of civilizational context as it evolved and expanded over first millennia and then centuries, and now generations, from the riverine cultures of the fertile crescent and Nile, to the Mediterranean worlds of Egypt, Greece, and Rome, the Atlantic epoch of industrial Europe/North America, to Silicon Valley (Thompson thought it would be LA), and the Pacific Rim. These geographical shifts carry the substrata of previous cultural ecologies. I recall a quote from Toynbee that described Washington D.C. as a collection of Greek wedding cakes in terms of its architecture that reflected an idealized past to justify the present. Never mind that the U.S. was never Greece. It was always Rome. It escaped Americans that Rome clothed itself in a Greek veneer to justify its own operations. It is also good to recall that when Julius Caesar brought Cleopatra over to his city, she dismissed it for being essentially a bunch of mud huts (because it was). Rome didn’t become what it became in popular imagination until Egyptian monumentalism was introduced. This was also the case with China’s shadow over its neighbors to the East where Japan continues to use Chinese characters in its amalgam of script to this day, and in Korea where a Confucian mindset still pervades and the situation of the main palace in Seoul follows the principles of Feng Shui.

Pacific Shift is a product of its time, and it might be argued that that the “shift “has already reached a climatic phase and that we are now poised to achieve a fully comprehensive global consciousness. There are certainly few “pure” cultural isolates left. For instance, it is amazing how iconic foods like Japanese tempura and Korean kimchee did not exist in those lands before they were introduced from the outside. It was the Portuguese that introduced breading. Even the Japanese word for bread, “pan”, came from them. The Japanese were never a baking culture prior to the Portuguese landing. The Koreans had a long tradition of pickling foods, but the characteristic red chilis that permeate their cuisine came from the New World. The fusion of cuisines from all over the world is now ubiquitous and normalized. It has gotten to the point that many if not most in the West had no idea where their foods come from in about every sense of that term. From that ignorance, the “you are what you eat” generation has matured along with global consciousness movement generally. For Thompson, this consciousness as it relates to agriculture problematizes industrial farming and its impacts to the soil. While farming in general and monocrop farming in particular is the most unnatural thing one does to the land, the biotech revolution was just rising with people better fed than ever in history leading ironically enough to a rising obesity problem, being addressed by, of all things, pharmaceuticals.

Pacific Shift was written before Diamond vs. Chakrabarty, 1980 where the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that novel, non-human life forms could be patented. Suffice to say, Thompson would have had much to say about where that might lead humanity and life generally. Given the fast-forward company he kept, he might well have embraced the transhumanist prospect. In a 2011 interview he did refer to Ray Kurzweil, a leading transhumanist advocate, as a mensch, though skeptical of his mind downloading schemes. The biotech revolution, in all of its many varied forms as the next wave was not addressed in this work, given it was still well offshore at the time of this writing. Tsunamis are barely a ripple until they hit the beach.

The four cultural ecologies of the West have come full circle, and we are now left with the quaking that comes from the acceleration of history; speeding on unbalanced tires threatening to bend and break the chassis of institutional norms. We are now confronting the irony of a digital ecosystem insinuated into and competing with the ecosystem of authenticity. There is both fusion and fracture, globalization and tribalization, brought about social media that originators who created the digital ecosystem thought that it would unite us all, when the result has been everything but. It turns out, as chronicled by Kara Swisher in Burn Book: A Tech Love Story, that these tech entrepreneurs were nearly all men-children who regularly lied to themselves about their noble pursuits when they were, as Thompson might put it, sorcerers apprentices stealing spells from each other much like Edison did with Tesla giving little to no thought to the long-term consequences.

Thompson was all in on a New Age, but much like Alan Watts before him who lamented the descent of the flower children into the savage-but-true meme that the only difference between a hippy and a bum is twenty years, the shallow disco generation and rising greed-is-good 1980s, followed by the grunge 1990s would not lead to a new millennium of enlightenment. Instead, 911 transformed a social welfare state into a national security one. His Findhorn Foundation dissolved like the Scottish mists that enveloped its shores. As he feared, the “New Age” was highjacked by cults. And yet . . . and yet . . . the deep structures of culture and the cycles of renewal and decrepitude stand as spirals ever incrementally higher as humanity evolves quite possibly beyond itself. It is just that the 5th cultural ecology of the West is the cloud now mined by AI. This might not be where Thompson saw it going.

To be sure, myth and theory are both simplifications of the world. The former simplifies through parables, allegory, satire and other literary and narrative forms to either justify or attack the status quo (“It has been written, but I say unto you …”), and straddles the realms of philosophy and religion. The latter flirts with reductionism, often overextending findings on narrow research pursuits to universal laws to confirm reality. Science emphasizes analysis, while myth works in synthesis. We rely on Newtonian physics up to the point that it breaks down at the cosmic and subatomic levels. That Newtonian physics works so well as a practical matter at human scale is assumed at the practical level as our engineered world is literally built on its principles. Myth is about explaining the whys, while science is all about the hows. Any contradictions in either mode is upsetting. The Hebrews of Jesus’ time were alarmed at his radical departure from Abrahamic orthodoxy, as are Christians with Mohammed to this day. In science the inquisitors knew that Galileo was right, but this could not be divulged to the masses. The news that we are not at the center of God’s universe would suggest he might not be that interested in us after all.

One enduring element from Thompson in chapter three of Pacific Shift addresses a strain of cultural forces that demand rigid monocrop uniformity against diversity, a concept now in vogue for describing the many paths to a rather utopian harmonious becoming. Thompson makes a profound point that any regime that demands unity to the point of quashing different points of view is a working definition for evil. Early in his career this reviewer was teaching young undergraduate Japanese students, who would frequently ask what was my favorite this or that. This is a question I knew well having lived in Japan, a unique culture that works rather hard at achieving consensus, and yes, uniformity that, to be clear, is in service to social harmony. When asked what my favorite fruit was, I said fruit salad. The response was so unexpected that it might have shifted some paradigms then and there. I think Thompson would have approved.

Pure types don’t exist but as a lazy way of simplifying the world. They, like pure breeds, tend to experience decrepitude as seen in the European aristocracies. Ruling families are ultimately prone to regression. There will always be a weak link in lineages over time. Meritocratic corporate entities are a means to overcome regression, but not always effective in shifting times. Sears should have been Amazon, railroads should have become airlines, and print media was so late to digitizing that most of those species have gone extinct. More than ever, organizations need to know what they are at their core. To see one as a pure type is to doom one to irrelevance.

Time was when a gene pool was almost always within walking distance. In some places such as early China, people over the next ridge might speak entirely different dialects such were the limits of time and space over most of human existence. One definition of a nation is a dialect with an army which still resonates given how the world is still de facto divided by, among other things of course, scripts employed to write languages. It is never mentioned in most historical narratives, but it seems logical that the motivation of young men to join marauding armies was as much about seeking romance (a kind way to put it) as about comradery, glory and fortune. The Iliad is a young man’s game to test one’s limits manifested in any number of practices from athletics to gang membership, to drug experimentation. The Odyssey is a spiraling path back to maturity, resolution, and wisdom. Such are the themes spun out from Thompson’s third chapter, helping to contextualize where we’ve come from and still holds us in our respective cultural unconscious.

Thompson’s final chapter is called “Gaia Politique”, a title that might be considered by some of a cynical bent to be both pretentious and condescending. While the title topic is anachronistic given that the Gaia hypothesis as originally conceived was debunked by no less than James Lovelock who first proposed it, it is not an essay to be dismissed lightly. The idea that the earth’s biosphere is a single self-regulating organism captured the imagination of Thompson, who embraced the romance of Earth as a living entity. He might be seen as taking the balance of nature and applying it to social ecologies too far. The evidence is clear enough that ecosystems are immensely complex and rely on an implicit unity between predator and prey, grazers and grazed upon, and even parasite and host. We laud to this day and routinely name our sons and daughters after the likes of Alexander the Great, and Joshua, overlooking their perpetrating mass carnage, repeated time after time by other invaders throughout the course of history. It’s how we mark historical epochs. Our empires are now far more subtle with imagined communities now extending beyond nation-states, but also down to ethno-linguistic and religious tribes. It is an echo of tensions that extend back millennia.

Consider the Alexander the Great legacy. He encouraged his troops to intermarry with the newly conquered subjects, thus melding their identities with his empire, and, in turn, be absorbed, by theirs, particularly in Egypt where the Ptolemies themselves became pharaohs. This is in sharp distinction to the fierce fidelity to their faith that was a feature of the Israelites that kept them a distinct people so dedicated to their prophets calling them a people chosen by God, that it led to the big guy sanctioning their exterminating virtually everyone else living in ancient Canaan.

To sum up the chapter, it is Thompson’s weakest of the lot, but the runt of the litter can still be charming. His seeing punk culture as an alternative economy carried interesting notions of bohemianism that has always been a feature of industrial urbanism. He could not have imagined that the actual shadow economies would be digital and come to consume the world. Cryptocurrencies would be the baseball trading cards of the techno-bros that only fortified conspicuous consumption habits manifested less on bling and far more on vanity projects from tax write-off vineyards to private space ventures. Less cynically there is philanthropy led most prominently by the likes of Bill ex-wife Melinda Gates, nominally effective in patching a few global material inequities. Yet that the world might become a fruit salad of complimentary flavors remains a dream. How ironic that Thompson thought the Reagan administration’s world a final act, led by an actor that collapsed the Soviet state, would have its props knocked out by planetary consciousness. Instead, industrialism ephemeralized, morphing from property to intellectual property, equating curated electrons to real estate; perverting the commons into a tribal cyberspace; a post-Pacific cultural ecology of polarizing anger and fear; arrayed against the utopian dream of garden Gaia; an absurd metaphor given how one spends nearly all one’s time in a garden weeding.

For those who might not be inclined to read what they might dismiss as a dated chronicle of how we have completed a shift to a more globalized social ecology no matter how elegantly written, consider its ongoing influence on the futures/foresight community. Sohail Inayatullah attended William Irwin Thompson’s courses, confirming to me that Thompson provided significant inspiration, along with other mentors like Michel Foucault, Johann Galtung, also then in residence at the University of Hawai’i, and Jim Dator, then head of the University of Hawai’i Center for Futures Studies for his development of Causal Layered Analysis (CLA). This influence is clear in Pacific Shift with its numerous mythic references that can inform many inclined to use CLA in their own works.


* Timothy E. Dolan is a member of the scientific council of the Alternative Planetary Futures Institute.

Thursday, September 7, 2023

The Urgent Imperative of Humanism: Overcoming the Existential Threat of Self-Loathing

By Alex Shenderov*


Introduction

In the realm of existential threats to humanity, we often focus on the perilous issues of nuclear war, ecological collapse, and technological disruption. While these concerns are undeniably significant, there exists a subtler yet equally potent danger that tends to escape the spotlight: cynicism, misanthropy, and the negative self-image we, as a species, have developed. This malaise threatens our very ability to confront and solve the more overt challenges we face, rendering them insurmountable. In this essay, we will explore the critical importance of humanist ideology, emphasizing that without a positive shift in our self-perception, addressing any planetary problem remains an exercise in futility. The path to our survival and prosperity begins with rekindling faith in humanity.

The Specter of Self-Loathing

In an age where cynicism and misanthropy have become all too pervasive, it is essential to recognize the devastating consequences of this collective self-loathing. According to recent surveys, a mere 6% of Americans believe that the world is getting better. The remaining 94% perceive a world spiraling into chaos and invariably hold humanity responsible for its decline. This bleak perspective, steeped in feedback loops, functions as a self-fulfilling prophecy. When we regard ourselves as a cancer, a plague, or locusts destroying our planet (Gaia), we unwittingly contribute to the very problems we lament.

The Cynical Malthusian Trap

The cynicism surrounding our species often manifests as a Malthusian zero-sum-game belief system, where one person's gain necessitates another's loss. This perspective fuels mutual "containment", leaving everyone pouring metaphorical sand into each other's gearboxes. The inevitable outcomes of such a worldview are the dire scenarios of regression to primitive living conditions or, worse, human extinction alongside the collapse of Gaia herself.

The Crucial Question

Amidst these disheartening prospects, the paramount question emerges: Can we reverse this downward spiral of self-loathing fast enough to avert catastrophic outcomes? It is this question that holds the key to addressing not only the immediate existential threats but also the impending specter of resource wars and energy crises. The countdown has begun, with the Energy Return on Investment (EROI) of oil and gas dwindling, and freshwater resources depleting at an alarming rate. Tackling these challenges demands an unwavering belief in our capacity to innovate and cooperate.

The Role of Humanist Ideology

In the face of such multifaceted crises, the need for a unifying force, a common ideology, becomes apparent. Enter humanism—a worldview that places faith in the innate goodness of humanity, promotes cooperation over competition, and recognizes our shared responsibility as stewards of our planet. Humanism provides a path out of the dark forest of cynicism and misanthropy, offering a vision of a brighter, more harmonious future.

Advocating for Humanity

Addressing global or better to say planetary challenges necessitates advocating for humanity to humans themselves. We must recognize that without a humanist ideology that a majority can embrace, our efforts to solve these problems are destined to fail. The core problem is not the lack of solutions; it is the erosion of our belief in our collective ability to implement them. Consequently, our first and foremost mission should be to rekindle faith in humanity and its potential for positive change.

Fostering Global Citizenship

A pivotal aspect of this mission is fostering a sense of global citizenship. When individuals from diverse backgrounds unite under a common banner of humanism, they become more willing to collaborate across borders, transcending the divisive ideologies that have hindered progress for centuries. "Fostering a sense of global citizenship" becomes the rallying cry for a new era of cooperation and shared responsibility.

Conclusion

In the grand theater of existential threats, the dangers of cynicism, misanthropy, and negative self-perception may not be as glaring as nuclear war, ecological collapse, or technological disruption, but they are no less insidious. Overcoming these challenges requires embracing a humanist ideology that celebrates the inherent goodness of our species and a commitment to fostering global citizenship. By restoring our faith in humanity and nurturing a sense of collective responsibility, we can hope to address the more tangible crises that loom on the horizon. The question is not whether we can afford to prioritize humanism—it's whether we can afford not to.

* Alex Shenderov is a member of the scientific council of the Alternative Planetary Futures Institute.

Monday, March 14, 2022

A Struggle for Good on a Planetary Scale

By Thomas Lombardo*

A few days ago I emailed to colleagues and friends the following short statement:

As you probably are doing as well, I am watching coverage of the horrendous and immensely depressing events occurring in our world. I am not simply saying the events in Ukraine, since although it is at the center of this cyclone of moral catastrophe, what is happening in this one country reflects the mentality of our current human planetary reality—the state of our “modern” civilization. And the evil and carnage being inflicted on this brave country is having a deep impact on the world as a whole. The ugliness, depravity, and tragic destructiveness permeates outward, invading and infecting all of our conscious minds. Although there is a pervasive and intense global counter-reaction to the stupidity and evil of the attack on Ukraine, at some point in our evolution perhaps we will collectively realize that “enough is enough,” and we will create a way to stop such horrible realities from gestating and occurring within human society.
In this statement I emphasize that the Russian invasion and attack on Ukraine is not simply a regional catastrophe but rather a planetary problem requiring a planetary solution.

It is the collective reality of humanity—the nations, cultures, organizations, businesses, and general population—that has afforded and allowed this horrendous event to materialize and occur. Of course, there is a cluster of individuals in Russia, led by one individual, who is fundamentally responsible for the Ukraine invasion, but we have fed (through trade and economic transactions), tolerated, and watched this monster grow, as we busied and occupied ourselves with other concerns.

The effects of this war—the psychological, social, and economic-physical impact—is worldwide. It has become an emotional trauma experienced across the globe, and the multi-faceted stress and upheaval will in all probability intensify and worsen in both the short- and long-term future. The disaster is rippling out across humanity, infecting the entire earth.

I have asked myself—and people I know have mirrored and reinforced this perplexity and frustration—why the world as a whole (for example, the United Nations) seems impotent at stopping this disaster. People in Ukraine keep getting killed every day, and towns keep getting decimated, and yet the best we seem able to do in response is to talk, debate, condemn, and impose sanctions. Of course, we are sending immense humanitarian aid to help the millions of refugees, and we are supplying the Ukrainians with weapons and military resources, but the bully is still bloodying women and children in front of the eyes of the world, and tragically and shamefully we cannot muster the planetary force, courage, and wherewithal to stop the bully from continuing his assault.

A friend of mine pointed out that such disasters—of humanity’s inhumanity against itself—occur across the globe and have occurred throughout human history. This fact, though, only makes the current disaster so much worse; it is not an anomaly, but a repeated occurrence. It is a destructive and horrendous pattern of behavior that keeps happening.

When I reread my original statement, I realized that it was highly emotionally charged. We can, through various media and information sources, access the relevant up-to-date facts pertaining to this event; we can listen to or read various analyses and probabilistic projections and scenarios about where the whole thing could be heading; and we can ponder the reasons and causes behind the invasion and think about what it all means, but these are all cognitive approaches to the invasion.

Of course it is important to understand, but what is really striking about this event and its local and planetary impact is the intense emotional response to it. This event is generating an incredible amount of human stress, hatred, fear, terror, anxiety, despair, depression, love and compassion, anger, and even visceral nausea.

A big part of the meaning of this event is embodied in our emotional response, and a big part of what will move events in the future will be human emotions. The remarkable planetary outcry around the event is shaking the world. One cannot understand this event or understand where it will lead without taking into account the emotional dimension of this reality.

Another point of emphasis in my original short statement has to do with ethics. I described the invasion as an evil action. Although our national and global consciousness, and its numerous and varied expressions in our media, is permeated with multiple and often conflicting perspectives on reality and what is morally right and wrong, it seems that the invasion is unequivocally an evil act. Although we might hesitate to use the word “evil” to describe either human individuals or their actions, I believe that such an attitude is naive.

We have witnessed evil throughout human history. We need to acknowledge that this invasion and those who support it are embodiments of evil. We could say that the war is a political war, one of democracy versus authoritarianism, but responsible self-determination versus forceful subjugation of individuals, as political philosophies and practices, is fundamentally an ethical issue.

Of course, the Russian government and media present an alternative narrative of what is occurring in Ukraine and the reasons and causes behind it, attempting to justify their actions. But it clearly appears that this alternative interpretation is grounded in numerous falsehoods. It is an ethical and political position built on lies. As such, it is not ethical, for truth is foundational to any credible ethics. It is clear that the war in Ukraine is a struggle for good on a planetary scale against the threat of evil on a planetary scale.

Part of a planetary ethics should be a rejection of the forceful and violent subjugation of individuals or nations, as well as a universally practiced conscientious support of what is true. But a planetary ethics needs to embody other important values as part of a holistic vision of human well-being. Of special note, individual and collective human well-being must transcend a purely economic/materialistic vision of the good life.

In this regard, watching the news on major TV networks, I have been repeatedly struck by the regular intrusion of commercials that are shallow and self-indulgent marketing ploys endeavoring to identify the “good life” as one found in the endless consumption of the advertiser’s products. The world might be falling apart, but luxury cars, techno-enhanced office chairs, cruises, cheeseburgers, deodorants, and drugs galore still get hammered into our consciousness—a perpetual trivial sea of pleasures and distractions.

Especially at this point in time such bread and circuses seems totally oblivious to what deeply matters in life; it all seems ridiculous if not obscene. A good deal of our ethical failings at a global level is a consequence of prioritizing money, profit, and riches and the power it brings over a life of psychological and social well being for all of humanity. It is imperative that we establish a positive and effective ethical system for humanity at a planetary level which takes precedence in human affairs. The Russian invasion indicates that such a planetary ethical consciousness has not yet emerged worldwide.

When is enough going to be enough?

* Thomas Lombardo is a member of the scientific council of the Alternative Planetary Futures Institute.

The Ouroboros Challenge: Consciousness, Physics, and the Future of Intelligence

By Paul Werbos * There are moments in intellectual history when the boundaries of a civilization’s worldview begin to crack—not because of i...