Realigning economic mechanisms toward a goal of purpose, rather than profit, will play a huge role in shifting how industrial research and development is conducted. Circularity, as a principle and pattern, will allow the future course of innovation to be aligned with infinite possibility. To this effect, innovation will move out of the shadows as a fringe and risk-oriented facet of conventional business, and become a primary factor in evolving human and (inter)planetary potential.
Align: Subchapter II.
Innovate according to universal laws
Inspire Innovation with Principles of Nature
Think beyond physical and mental limits with respect to planetary boundaries. Forge optimized standards based on evolutionary power through cycles of memory and change.
“You must be shapeless, formless, like water. When you pour water in a cup, it becomes the cup. When you pour water in a bottle, it becomes the bottle. When you pour water in a teapot, it becomes the teapot. Water can drip and it can crash. Become like water my friend.” — Bruce Lee
When we are blessed with a view of the ocean, we feel a sense of calm. This sensation occurs in relation to the inherent connection between the water in our bodies and the water of Earth’s own body. Suddenly, all that is constantly moving around inside seems to settle. Waves still crash on the shore, but out toward the horizon, the surface is calm, steady, and continuous.
Earth is in a state of dynamic non-equilibrium, a constant state of change. As human activity accelerates the changes on our planet, and as we increasingly incorporate machine learning and extended intelligence into human interactions, it’s critical we reenforce the primacy of life. To do so, we are reminded to model our ideas and actions after nature. In this way, our vision for innovation from 2020 to 2050 centers on our capacities to realign society based on regenerative principles and patterns sourced from nature’s evolving laws.
Aligning awareness of universal laws with the practice of our discipline can serve to sharpen our understanding of the guiding forces that help us progress forward. There are several laws of nature which might not be commonly known or referenced in everyday situations, yet can certainly provide positive influence for the practice of innovation.
One of the most felt, and also complicated, laws of nature is the law of love. Where does this powerful force come from and how does it take us over? When we feel love’s effects, our emotional intelligence is pulled unwaveringly in its desired direction. There are many forms of love that humans have sought to name, like platonic love, which describes a non-romantic love, such as experienced through shared wisdom. Greek language offers several more variations on love. Philia is the name for brotherly love. Philautia means love for oneself. Eros signifies erotic love. Agape expresses a love for God (or any concept of a higher being). Love occurs in countless ways.
We believe that we should not limit ourselves to acknowledging the variations on how love can be expressed. We also strongly feel that no version of love is really complete until one learns to love oneself. And to love ourselves, we must make no judgement about our faults. Rather, we can improve a great deal from accepting our faults as instrumental to how we become who we are. In order to access our capacity for unconditional love—that is, to love without expectation of receiving anything in return—it’s essential we first understand what conditions we have already set for ourselves. What obstacles do we place in our own way based on what we think we need from others? To advance beyond our self-imposed limitations, we need to understand why we are the way we are and what we are going to do to change for the better. Ultimately, we can learn to shape our experiences through a guiding principle of love as a powerful and multi-dimensional force.
“What you seek is seeking you.” — Rumi
Rumi’s poems relate beautiful expressions of foundational forces which are revealed through mystic awareness. The law of attraction states that thoughts or actions originating from within each of us will attract mutual energy and action from others. An example of this resonant quality might be that you meet someone who has been working on a similar project, or struggling with a similar challenge as you, and you naturally feel yourself drawn to them, looking to align with them along this shared course of interest. This convergence with others helps all involved through collaborative exchange. There are countless ways in which the law of attraction can manifest relevance in one’s own personal journey. We believe in the benefit of being open to receiving guidance from wherever our intuition and attention leads.
The law of correspondence tells us that our outer world is nothing more than a reflection of our inner world. In other words, what we think and how we feel influences what we say and what we do. And, this then in turn affects the reality we experience. Associative connections appear between different energies and matter because all things are inherently connected by virtue of existing.
“As above, so below.” — from The Emerald Tablet
The Emerald Tablet is an Egyptian-Greek wisdom text about the cosmos, mind, the divine, and nature. The origin of the text is unknown, while the text is attributed to a teacher named Hermes Trismegistus. The essence of the philosophers’ stone is said to be held within the text’s esoteric lines. Having first appeared in a book written in Arabic between the 8th and 6th centuries, the text of the Emerald Tablet gained wide reception during the 1200s in Europe. Sir Isaac Newton’s translation of the text appeared in his work with alchemy. He interpreted the beginning of the text to say, “That which is below is like that which is above and that which is above is like that is below to do the miracles of one only thing. And as all things have been and arose from one by the mediation of one: so all things have their birth from this one thing by adaptation.”
We tend to gravitate toward the people, places, and ideas that resonate with our intuition. The law of gravity reveals the heavy influence that is exerted upon all matter. Gravity is also relative. The gravity on Earth is greater than the gravity on the moon. Gravity shows us the importance of context in respect to its relevance. In the middle of space, where gravity seemingly does not exist, the effects of gravity are still present on account of dark matter. These effects also remind us how that which we cannot see is nonetheless incredibly significant and worth consideration.
The universe operates by many mysterious properties. Imagine all the times you’ve thought of someone and then that person calls you on the phone. This phenomena is more than coincidence; it relates to laws of manifestation. When we give our attention to something, we share the power of our intention and energy with that entity, and give it greater momentum to be summoned into our lives.
“Everything in the field of time is dual: past and future, dead and alive, being and nonbeing.” — Joseph Campbell
Laws of polarity or duality speak to Newton’s third law, which states that for every action there is an equal and opposite reaction. Whatever state we’re in (such as joyous or sad, hot or cold), we are well served to remember it represents only one end of a spectrum. Awareness of polarity reminds us that beyond the realm of duality lives the eternal. We are interested in how this law can give greater insight into how our actions are involved in the push-and-pull nature of polarity. What role do we play in this process? All our actions, and even our observations, have consequences that are bound by polarity. In quantum mechanics, photon polarization describes how light can behave as a wave function, which collapses into a particle as soon as that wave is observed at a certain point. Interestingly enough, the particle cannot turn back to a wave. This quandary is also expressed in the play Arcadia by Tom Stoppard, in which the character Thomasina wonders at the oddity that a swirl of jam can blend into pudding, but cannot return to the original shape of its initial swirl. In our physical reality, matter behaves according to laws of polarity. Yet, we can place this phenomena in perspective, and wonder at what it might mean to transcend this state of duality as a means for accessing the supreme power of the eternal.
Finally, the law of harmony offers a grand organizing principle for life. It states that all that exists will ultimately be brought into balance; that an underlying mechanism of the universe is to arrange relationships of all kind in harmony with one another. While moments of disharmony surely occur—such as a ripple in calm water—any disturbance to harmony is temporary. Eventually, through the law of harmony, balance will be restored. The law of harmony serves as a kind of baseline principle to keep in mind when undergoing any act of creativity. Think of music, and how songs are arranged according to the law of harmony. When in tune, the frequencies of different instruments align and we hear a harmonious sound that profoundly moves our emotional, physical, and spiritual states. Of course, any expression of disharmony—like instruments not in tune or playing dissonantly together—can be jarring. Yet, through continued effort, harmony comes back into existence. It’s as if the universe is an extraordinary orchestra of diverse elements playing at all times and our task is to find a way to join in its phenomenal melody and rhythm.
Approaches to innovation can benefit immensely from the translation of these universal laws into positive principles for future-based initiatives. Innovation is a vital part of an evolutionary process, that can be understood in terms of imagination, technical ability, and ingenuity. The choice is ours to better infuse innovation with the laws of nature, love, harmony, attraction, and evolution through infinite cycles of renewal.