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Collective Intelligence

Reflection On Value

Reflections of Change

There are times when you reflect on your life – or should be. At times, it causes you to re-evaluate everything you know – when you come to some ‘truth’ that suddenly explains the world in a new and previously unexpected way. At other times, the reflection causes you to realize that you’re not good at certain things and very good at others. Still others simply reinforce whatever you already know.

Reflection requires time and honesty. As simple as these two may sound, massaging time out of our lives remains a daunting task – arguably more so in a world so connected. Honesty, too, can be difficult as individuality can be so easily substituted with ‘popular honesty’, where the inner compass is replaced by an outer compass.

Even as a few of us speak and write more and more of collective intelligence and how we’re part of a larger entity – our own species as a genus unto itself – do we think that because we are only smaller parts of a larger organism that we do not need to reflect?

It seems to me that out of all the species that we communicate effectively with, we’re the only one that reflects – and fewer and fewer people seem to be doing it. On the internet, social media has become more of a circulation system for ‘me too!’ than an area where we can reflect on ourselves as individuals and our own roles within a greater whole. Many measure worth in popularity when most – if not all – good new ideas started off in the realm of unpopularity. Many measure worth in financial terms, where a startup company that provides little actual value other than money becomes ‘successful’. Compounded, popularity drives money and money drives popularity – but where is the actual value? Or, as a society, is that all we are?

I wonder.

Democracy, Collective Intelligence, Social Media and Mankind

There are many people who are writing things these days, be it in the halting and truncated thoughts of Twitter or the flow of status updates on other social networks such as Facebook, Google+ or LinkedIn. There was a world before where this was not possible, where one could not share as much as one can now, where one could not read so much of others thoughts.

It was a much quieter world. There were books, magazines, encyclopedias, and those literate would often spend at least a month for a continuation of some journal or the other we subscribed to. Within that space, we had time to do more thinking on our own. In the case of the computing magazines, such as ‘Compute!’, we might have to debug typos in code that kept it from working as it was supposed to. In the case of other things, we had time to reflect or act – to reflect on and perhaps even accept views from these pieces of paper bound together with glue and a need to transmit information across distance and time. Radio and television, too, allowed culture to seep to parts far removed from their origins.

There’s no need to say that the world before mass media, too, was quieter. In all, we consider our change as progress because we cannot turn back the clock; we must accept that it is progress and move forward. Good and bad ideas float around our sphere of influence in an almost quantum state – almost devoid of the prior limitations of distance and time. Once a message could take months or even years to reach a destination on this planet - we now complain when we have microseconds of latency with a server. We wish to know what is going on all the time; we wish to share what is going on all the time.

But why do we wish to share this information so readily, why do we wish to stay on top of what is going on in the world with so much abandon? We are descendants of people that tore their lives from a world not as we see it now, who shaped it to birth further generations. Values were different; geography was more important in that the distances meant a need for being able to depend on those around you. The ever diminishing world we have created has robbed us of the geography that instilled many of the values we still hold dear – things such as family, such as supporting a local economy over entities that exist in our minds and propagate themselves through our world on servers we created. In our efforts, we create a new identity for ourselves by our actions and inactions.

We have traded our time of reflection and thought for more information, faster and faster. We multitask more and more as we focus on one thing at a time less and less. Laws exist now for people who would type on a nefariously small keyboard while driving – and the thought that this is a bad thing seems to miss the newer generations entirely as they strive to constantly stay in communication with their own digital tribes.

We plunge forward, hoping that things like technology can better connect us and allow us to come to solutions to problems. We bat around terms like ‘collective intelligence’ and ‘smart mobs’ as if there is no downside to the problem – and when those problems become apparent, we downplay their effects. This is what mankind has done with every leap and bound in communication – some make the case that it’s the end of the world and others make the case that it’s the beginning of the world. Few recognize that both sides are correct; that the end of one thing is itself a beginning of another.

Yet with every leap and bound of technology, we seem to deluge ourselves with more information even as we sometimes do not communicate effectively. To combat this, governments and organizations that lobby governments try to protect people from themselves, creating intricate bureaucracies that – perhaps necessarily – hamper the flow of information to assure we do ourselves less harm, but these bureaucracies inherit from the prejudices of previous generations more readily because bureaucracy is not designed to change readily. Thus those prejudices of latter generations conspire against the future generations and in turn, the future generations conspire against the bureaucracies implemented and inherited from previous generations.

And to what end? Where once we had bureaucracies that staunched the flow of information into encyclopedias, we now have an online Wikipedia that anyone can edit but now where the new bureaucracies delete or edit as they see fit. We recreate what we destroy at every turn, attempting progress but almost always falling back to what we know.

Meanwhile, we talk about popularity as an analog for democracy and collective intelligence when de Tocqueville's observation was that the most important part of American democracy was discussion. By measuring popularity before discussion, we put the cart before the horse - truncating our ability much more severely than trying to communicate effectively important ideas and thoughts 140 characters at a time. The concepts of democracy and collective intelligence mean nothing if people don't bring value to the conversations, and that value is not to be found in following the crowd - it's to be found in reflection, thought and individuality and challenging the status quo.

Some write to be popular, few of those actually become popular, and when they do become popular they all too often become a slave to their popularity. Why? Self-preservation by sacrificing the self to popularity?

To better use social media, we need to step away from it more so that we can put more back into it, daring to be ourselves. I wonder sometimes whether we have the capacity to do this; maybe humanity is no more than a trampling herd of creatures that follow the popular wherever they go.

That's what I think, anyway. It's no wonder I'm not quite that popular. :-)

Tick

What makes you tick?

What makes me tick? Let me explain it to you, since I didn't always know myself. You'll have to be patient.

When you break any material into smaller parts, you cause the surface area of the material to increase. This, in turn, allows more ability to act as a catalyst or an active part of a process of change. Depending on the type of change, it could be considered to be something called progress.

Increased depth in a subject brings increased granularity of the knowledge of the subject. This, too, means that there's more surface area - but the surface area is an ongoing part of the knowledge of the material.

So lets say that this material is humanity. With all these wonderful new toys we've made - and they are wonderful, though many are dated and stupid like Tickle-Me-Elmo - we've increased our potential to be more granular. To increase our surface area. To mix our knowledge, enjoy the depth of it and also to remedy our lack of knowledge and the shallowness of what we know. When we focus on problems together, we can do wonderful things. We thought that we could do better with institutions as we knew them, but we've seen the down side of how we do institutions. Maybe part of that is because with one big block of material, we're slow to adapt.

We're molecules now, if we choose to be. We can all share what we know, we can all pass along information to the generations to come. We can discuss old ideas. We can take old ideas and make them better - or discard them if they demonstrate that they aren't as good as originally thought. We all have voices. We can all sing. We can all shout. It isn't just what some would like to sell from the bottom of their markets - it's about how we as a species can adapt and thrive more responsively.

The Sphere And The Institution

Our relationships exist in multidimensional spheres. To get there from here and further, we should probably get rid of some misconceptions.

Getting Grounded In The Sphere

A belief in institutions did not bring mankind committees, churches, governments, unions and other things. A belief in institutions did not bring mankind health-care, spaceflight, commercial flight and the Internet. This belief in institutions did not bring us an economy based on markets. This belief in institutions did not make democracy the least wrong system of government on Spaceship Earth. This belief in institutions did not give us the modern multinational corporation.

This belief also didn't give us the Public Domain, Copyright, Patents and prosecuting children for sharing. This belief didn't make invading countries by getting 'public opinion' swayed a good thing.

There is no belief in institutions. The belief that makes us do these things is a belief that if we work together we can do things greater than if we had acted individually. The belief in institutions is that for a relationship to be worthwhile it must be permanent and must never change. 'Bureaucracy protects', says the old wisdom.

Change is uncomfortable, unsettling and unavoidable. It haunts us every morning in the mirror more and more as we become older. Where once a young man might celebrate a single hair on the chin, he might later reflect on that and remember the happiness while staring at a sea of grey swimming around the islands of black - maybe that makes change more painful as we grow older. No one really knows.

The uncomfortable reality is that, despite our best efforts, things change and it seems that they are constantly changing faster than our institutions can accommodate.

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