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Burning mirrors reveal the intensity of nature’s power

Con­vex reflec­tive sur­faces ­focus light from the sun into a fixed point. At this apex, the pow­er of the ­con­cen­trat­ed sun­light can result in fire.

“The rays of the sun seemed a more spir­i­tu­al way of cre­at­ing fire than human hands”
— John Per­lin, Whole Earth Cat­a­log, Win­ter 1999

The ancient tech­nol­o­gy of har­ness­ing and redi­rect­ing the sun’s pow­er was used mil­len­nia ago. Archimedes, the Greek math­e­mati­cian, physi­cist, engi­neer, inven­tor, and astronomer, employed burn­ing mir­rors to set fire to invad­ing Roman war­ships. The Romans then adopt­ed the same tech­nol­o­gy for their own ends. The tech­nol­o­gy was also used in ancient Chi­nese and Incan cul­tures to light fires for the peace­ful pur­pos­es of cook­ing and ceremony.

Burn­ing mir­rors reveal how the pow­er of nature has been har­nessed by humans for dif­fer­ent pur­pos­es. This also shows how the inten­tion behind a technology’s use is as sig­nif­i­cant as the tech­nol­o­gy itself. Archimedes’ burn­ing mir­rors chan­neled forces of nature for a process of destruc­tion. Mil­len­nia lat­er, sci­en­tists work­ing on the Man­hat­tan Project fig­ured out how to assert fur­ther con­trol over nature by split­ting the atom in order to cre­ate a nuclear weapon. The manip­u­la­tion of nature for the pur­pos­es of war­fare has had world-chang­ing con­se­quences. We should be hum­bled by the pow­er­ful ener­gies that nature stores and releases.

To pro­tect the sacred­ness of life, we are remind­ed of the impor­tance of liv­ing inten­tion­al­ly with­in the bound­aries of nature and not attempt­ing to assert con­trol over it. To recon­nect with the peace­ful pow­er of burn­ing mir­rors, we won­der what it will feel like to light a fire for cook­ing by focus­ing the sun’s rays, or make cer­e­mo­ni­al offer­ings in this way. How might we be uplift­ed by dis­play­ing rev­er­ence to life-giv­ing sources like the sun in our dai­ly activ­i­ties? How might we rein­te­grate an intu­itive spir­i­tu­al­i­ty from chan­nel­ing nature’s ener­gy with­in our technologies?

We can begin by explor­ing var­i­ous ways to live clos­er to nature. Arcology—a mashup of archi­tec­ture and ecology—presents a mode of cre­at­ing eco­log­i­cal­ly low-impact habi­tats for humans. In the Amer­i­can South­west, Arcosan­ti stands as a liv­ing exam­ple of this con­cept.* There, in this desert loca­tion, about 80 res­i­dents live and work togeth­er in an archi­tec­tur­al set­ting con­scious of the nat­ur­al land­scape in which it’s inte­grat­ed. In the Unit­ed Arab Emi­rates, the exper­i­men­tal Mas­dar City ambi­tious­ly attempt­ed to become a thriv­ing city with build­ings that could adapt to the weath­er through­out the day. While the large scale project of Mas­dar City is cur­rent­ly on hold, we can still con­tin­ue to con­jure up inspi­ra­tion and search for more nuanced ways to incor­po­rate nature into the archi­tec­ture of our lives.

Peo­ple and plan­et will all ben­e­fit from human endeav­ors becom­ing more envi­ron­men­tal­ly con­scious. Wher­ev­er there are healthy liv­ing soils, there’s a good chance of find­ing healthy liv­ing peo­ple. The notion of burn­ing mir­rors can serve to inspire a clos­er, and more respect­ful, rela­tion­ship between tech­nol­o­gy and nature. Our hypoth­e­sis is that the more we learn to con­verge nature and tech­nol­o­gy, the more we will feel con­nect­ed to the pow­er and pur­pose of who we are meant to be in every con­ceiv­able way.

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In Between

Transcend the noise

Lis­ten up. Turn off the TV. Turn down the radio. Put down your phone. Take a break from the news. Look around. Nature res­onates with life in all dimensions.

“The capac­i­ty to dri­ve away a thought once and for all is the door to eter­ni­ty. The infi­nite in an instant.”
— Simone Weil

Where we place our atten­tion directs our real­i­ty. Emerg­ing from a peri­od in which our atten­tion has been con­fis­cat­ed, reclaim­ing our agency over our atten­tion rep­re­sents an impor­tant step toward liberation.

The moment we open our phones we are com­press­ing our sphere of choice into the apps which all vie for our atten­tion. When we set our phones aside, we get to opt out of the “atten­tion econ­o­my”. In that less medi­at­ed space, we open our­selves to the world in a more recep­tive state. We receive the oppor­tu­ni­ty to explore and see what serendip­i­ty pro­vides us.

As writer Dan Nixon points out in his arti­cle about how atten­tion con­sti­tutes a way of being alive to the world, “there can be beau­ty and won­der in the unadorned act of ‘expe­ri­enc­ing’.”* In this sense, pure expe­ri­ence offers a con­nec­tion to the eter­nal, because there is no dis­trac­tion plac­ing our atten­tion in a fixed place or time, Nixon posits that atten­tion, as a form of unmedi­at­ed expe­ri­ence, relates to what Simone Weil referred to as “the infi­nite in an instant”. We are inspired by this frame­work for atten­tion, and feel that think­ing of atten­tion, as expe­ri­ence, and not a resource, is an impact­ful way to reclaim author­i­ty in our indi­vid­ual roles with­in an inter­con­nect­ed existence.

Along our way for­ward, we rec­og­nize the val­ue of get­ting lost as it teach­es us how to bet­ter deal with uncer­tain­ty. Free of over­stim­u­la­tion, we may well find our­selves more prone to bore­dom, which we must soft­en of all its neg­a­tive con­no­ta­tions. Bore­dom leads to cre­ativ­i­ty and opens up space for pause and intro­spec­tion. Still­ness and soli­tude allow con­scious­ness to rest. A healthy amount of idle time is not only good for us, but makes us more cre­ative. It may even be crit­i­cal to our hap­pi­ness. With only wan­der­ing thoughts for enter­tain­ment, we tune into what our bod­ies might be telling us or what we have buried deep in our psy­ches. These inner secrets, unearthed from deep with­in our­selves, can deliv­er the insights that will help pro­pel us on the path toward regen­er­a­tive living.

“Intro­spec­tor”, devel­oped by PCH for Cartier
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In Between

Infinity in an instant

Amidst the chaos of trade wars, mil­i­tary inter­ven­tions, human­i­tar­i­an crises, extreme weath­er, and injus­tice every­where, peace also exists, and is attain­able through the com­bined efforts of count­less com­mit­ted individuals.

It’s easy to get lost in a moment, lost in one­self, in thought, in action, but get­ting lost is not always so bad. Some­times get­ting lost allows us to become present. Pres­ence is a nec­es­sary con­di­tion for calm, thought­ful, and advan­ta­geous deci­sions to be made.

When we make deci­sions based on urgency, we are often stressed, and there­fore do not make the best deci­sions. When we can plan, con­sid­er con­se­quences, and think about what we’re going to do before we do it, we make more informed, and gen­er­al­ly, wis­er deci­sions. Our abil­i­ty to mod­el in our brains what we think might hap­pen is a unique gift. And, if we use this gift in con­cert with a pos­i­tive mind­set, we can make even more capa­ble decisions.

Think­ing about archi­tec­ture to sup­port sus­tain­able liv­ing sys­tems helps us look into a pos­i­tive future. These mind­ful activ­i­ties also bring us into clos­er con­nec­tion with the infi­nite. Sim­i­lar to how dis­tanc­ing from ego enhances aware­ness from a self­less per­spec­tive, there is a great abun­dance of ener­gy and pow­er in the infi­nite for it con­tains all of life in count­less forms. In think­ing for­ward on a glob­al and local scale, we feel all busi­ness activ­i­ty should address: soci­etal progress and well­be­ing, inter­con­nec­tiv­i­ty, glob­al equi­tabil­i­ty, and pre­serv­ing authen­tic­i­ty in every rela­tion­ship, expe­ri­ence, and environment.

With a rise in col­lec­tive syn­chronic­i­ty, indi­vid­ual author­i­ty and respon­si­bil­i­ty for one’s own ener­gy remains para­mount. Integri­ty, empow­er­ment, and the free­dom to define one’s best self at the ben­e­fit, and not expense, of any oth­er life will be the pil­lars of per­son­al, soci­etal, and envi­ron­men­tal stew­ard­ship. It’s time to blend our abil­i­ties. It’s time to pro­duce a bal­anced ver­sion of what phys­i­cal and dig­i­tal inter­ac­tion can be.

At this point, look­ing for­ward, the sin­gle biggest con­trib­u­tor to arriv­ing at the foun­da­tion for a pos­i­tive future a gen­er­a­tion from now will be mass adop­tion of cir­cu­lar prin­ci­ples and pat­terns in our eco­nom­ic and indus­tri­al­ized sys­tems. Cir­cu­lar­i­ty, in this sense, means both deriv­ing ways to keep resources in use as long as pos­si­ble and also ensur­ing that all parts of a cor­re­spond­ing sys­tem ben­e­fit from those resources. This approach resem­bles the cir­cu­la­to­ry sys­tems of our bod­ies, in which net­works of blood, blood ves­sels, and the heart all work togeth­er to sup­ply oxy­gen and nutri­ents through­out the body and remove unnec­es­sary waste. * There’s no short­age of exam­ples to bor­row from nature when it comes to cir­cu­lar­i­ty. From the solar sys­tem itself with orbital arcs, shape of plan­ets, to the struc­ture of a sim­ple food chain, to more per­son­al mat­ters like men­stru­al cycles, humans are sur­round­ed by the cycli­cal nature of cir­cu­lar­i­ty, and ben­e­fit tremen­dous­ly from incor­po­rat­ing its struc­ture into our col­lec­tive activities.

“Imple­ment­ing cir­cu­lar econ­o­my oppor­tu­ni­ties would result in a decrease in con­sump­tion of non-renew­able resources, includ­ing fos­sil fuels, by 49% in 2030 and 71% in 2040.” — Ellen MacArthur Foun­da­tion, The Cir­cu­lar Econ­o­my Oppor­tu­ni­ty for Urban and Indus­tri­al Inno­va­tion in Chi­na (2018) **

“The acci­dent is an invert­ed mir­a­cle, a sec­u­lar mir­a­cle, a rev­e­la­tion. When you invent the ship, you also invent the ship­wreck; when you invent the plane you also invent the plane crash; and when you invent elec­tric­i­ty, you invent elec­tro­cu­tion… Every tech­nol­o­gy car­ries its own neg­a­tiv­i­ty, which is invent­ed at the same time as tech­ni­cal progress.” — Paul Vir­ilio, 1999

As we learn from the mis­takes of tech­nolo­gies built around neu­ro-feed­back loops designed to manip­u­late people’s behav­ior and sen­sa­tions, we become more aware of what we decide to inte­grate into our lives and how those micro-deci­sions play a major role in how we per­ceive real­i­ty. The more we incor­po­rate a mind­set of resilience, recep­tive­ness, and adapt­abil­i­ty into our prac­tices, the more that we can lever­age inno­va­tion to help guide approach­es to a glob­al par­a­digm of morality.

Tap the source of uni­ver­sal con­nect­ed­ness. Through a greater aware­ness of inter­con­nec­tions, we can revise our social and eco­nomic sys­tems with heal­ing and har­mo­ny in mind.

“In the long term, it’s not a ques­tion of if things go wrong, but when. The eth­i­cal con­cerns of inno­va­tion thus tend to focus on harm’s min­i­miza­tion and mit­i­ga­tion, not the absence of harm alto­geth­er.” 
— Tom Chatfield

“His­to­ry shows that every tech­ni­cal appli­ca­tion from its begin­nings presents cer­tain unfore­see­able sec­ondary effects which are more dis­as­trous than the lack of the tech­nique would have been.” – Jacques Ellul, 1954

We need to be mind­ful of how we approach technology’s expo­nen­tial effects. In the last decade, the buzz­word of “dis­rup­tion” described how indus­tries served by long­stand­ing busi­ness mod­els were upend­ed by the appli­ca­tions of new tech­nol­o­gy. Dis­rup­tion became a kind of syn­onym for inno­va­tion. Now, as we approach 2020, we can see that this mod­el of dis­rupt­ing the sta­tus quo through nov­el solu­tions to exist­ing chal­lenges, is insuf­fi­cient to heal human­i­ty on the whole. Heal­ing is a process, not a set of solu­tions. Think­ing of dis­rup­tion as a met­ric for suc­cess is prob­lem­at­ic. We became so wrapped up in a quest for solu­tions that we for­got we’re not here to solve life. What we can solve, how­ev­er, are the prob­lems we’ve cre­at­ed that dis­rupt life. Prob­lems like fam­i­lies not being fed or hav­ing ade­quate shel­ter or sim­ply get­ting to spend enough time togeth­er. In this way, the focus of inno­va­tion can become more tied to holis­ti­cal­ly-revis­ing sys­temic, eco­nom­ic stan­dards. A sus­tain­able, social­ly desir­able, and eth­i­cal­ly accept­able mod­el for busi­ness will also have to be accept­able for the plan­et on the whole.

“The world is not a prob­lem to be solved; it is a liv­ing being to which we belong. It is part of our own self and we are a part of its suf­fer­ing whole­ness. Until we go to the root of our image of sep­a­rate­ness, there can be no heal­ing. And the deep­est part of our sep­a­rate­ness from cre­ation lies in our for­get­ful­ness of its sacred nature, which is also our own sacred nature.” — Thich Nhat Hanh 

As long as the impe­tus for inno­va­tion, with­in the busi­ness sec­tor, remains engrained in the cur­rent eco­nom­ic sys­tem of cap­i­tal­ism, we don’t have much of a chance at affect­ing the kinds of change that we des­per­ate­ly need. This is why the val­ue of slow­ing down and being more atten­tive to the true needs of life is so important.

Now’s the time to fig­u­ra­tive­ly lift a flame to mon­ey. We can feel the flick­er­ing embers begin to catch fire beneath the sod­den dead­wood of an old, stag­nant world­view in which prof­it defines val­ue. By insert­ing more uplift­ing val­ues, like integri­ty, in place of cor­rupt­ing prin­ci­ples, like prof­it, the entire machin­ery of our eco­nom­ic sys­tem will shift its gears into much more flu­id and empow­er­ing dynam­ics. As we learn to bet­ter incor­po­rate eco­nom­ic stim­u­lus pack­ages to cir­cu­late cap­i­tal to areas that have suf­fered from neglect and more of the pop­u­la­tion thrives, ideas will be able to cas­cade around ways to heal dam­aged rela­tion­ships between peo­ple and planet.

Chal­lenges don’t exist in vac­u­ums. Each chal­lenge we encounter has a rela­tion­ship to anoth­er, most like­ly larg­er, prob­lem. Eco­nom­ic injus­tice is con­nect­ed to greed and a desire for dom­i­na­tion. Eco­nom­ic jus­tice will arise through rela­tion­ships found­ed on sol­i­dar­i­ty and a desire for coop­er­a­tion. In order to inno­vate our way beyond the con­ven­tions con­strain­ing our abil­i­ty to live sus­tain­ably on this plan­et, we need to con­sid­er risks in terms of rela­tion­ships. How might our own seem­ing­ly inde­pen­dent deci­sions affect oth­ers? By con­sid­er­ing the con­nec­tions between how we live and the con­di­tions of our cur­rent eco­nom­ic sys­tem, we can bet­ter see where the prob­lems emerge. With this knowl­edge we can begin to break open empow­er­ing def­i­n­i­tions of wealth, aid, and exchange.

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In Between

Searching for a theory of everything

From sci­en­tif­ic co­nundrums to the dra­ma of dai­ly life, how can we make sense of every­thing being con­nect­ed when we
can feel so torn apart?

The human species does not like a ques­tion left unan­swered. The unex­plained must be explained. It feels impor­tant to us that we try to sat­is­fy our var­i­ous curiosi­ties. Ever since the days of our ear­li­est ances­tors, we’ve been on a per­pet­u­al search to under­stand the universe.

Along the way toward this knowl­edge, we became sto­ry­tellers. We began telling our­selves cre­ation myths. These myths were attempts to derive some sense of mean­ing out of the mys­ter­ies of nature. Why does every­thing we see around us appear as it does? Where did it all come from? What is the cause that led to any per­son being present at a giv­en moment?

The ear­li­est reli­gious sto­ries jus­ti­fied and shaped the soci­ety around them. Some craft­ed epic tales of a con­flict between good and evil, and our role with­in this bat­tle. Some helped to estab­lish social class­es in their tellings of the dif­fer­ences between peo­ple. Regard­less of the detail, they all share one gen­er­al pur­pose: to cre­ate order from the appar­ent chaos of the world.

Despite an entire­ly dif­fer­ent method­ol­o­gy, sci­ence seeks to answer these same ques­tions. It just takes a more evi­dence-based approach toward deter­min­ing the exact nature of the universe.

Gen­er­al rel­a­tiv­i­ty and quan­tum field the­o­ry are the two dom­i­nant the­o­ries of physics that have looked to shed light on these inquiries. Since their incep­tion, they have both been proven almost entire­ly cor­rect, and capa­ble of being used to explain the mech­a­nisms behind almost all facets of the observ­able uni­verse. But there’s a prob­lem between these two can­di­dates for describ­ing all  nature. They can­not both be cor­rect. They are ulti­mate­ly incom­pat­i­ble with one anoth­er, and are only func­tion­al when used in their respec­tive area of appli­ca­tion. Gen­er­al rel­a­tiv­i­ty helps us under­stand the mechan­ics of large, high-mass objects, like galax­ies, inter­act­ing grav­i­ta­tion­al­ly. Quan­tum field the­o­ry explains the mechan­ics of small, low-mass ele­ments, like mol­e­cules, using the fun­da­men­tal forces of weak, strong, and elec­tro­mag­net­ic inter­ac­tions. * The fun­da­men­tal force of grav­i­ty sits apart from the oth­er three fun­da­men­tal forces of weak and strong nuclear forces, and elec­tro­mag­net­ism. String the­o­ry emerged in the 1970s as a promis­ing attempt to uni­fy these forces into a the­o­ry of every­thing, but has suf­fered its own set­backs. At the time of writ­ing, there is absolute­ly no sci­en­tif­ic con­sen­sus on a grand the­o­ry of every­thing that accounts for all four of these forces in a sin­gle cohe­sive mod­el. In fact, there is a dis­tinct pos­si­bil­i­ty that one com­pre­hen­sive the­o­ry may nev­er be possible.

In their 2010 book The Grand Design, physi­cists Stephen Hawk­ing and Leonard Mlodi­now pro­posed the idea of “mod­el-depen­dent real­ism” to rec­on­cile the pos­si­bil­i­ty of co-exist­ing the­o­ries. The con­cept states that the objec­tive truth of a giv­en mod­el is not its most impor­tant ele­ment. Any mod­el or the­o­ry of the world should be eval­u­at­ed on the basis of its use­ful­ness alone. Do the rules out­lined with­in the mod­el match up cor­rect­ly with obser­va­tions of the world? Does it allow us to make accu­rate pre­dic­tions? If this is true, then the mod­el can be con­sid­ered valid. It may not tell us the whole truth, but it pro­vides enough truth to broad­en our knowl­edge and increase our capac­i­ties. Ear­ly humans didn’t need to under­stand ther­mo­dy­nam­ics to know that fire burns. How­ev­er they con­cep­tu­al­ized it, they still learnt how to use fire to cook.

Mod­el-depen­dent real­ism nego­ti­ates with our lim­i­ta­tions. The con­cept accepts, as a pos­si­bil­i­ty, that a frame­work that ful­ly explains objec­tive real­i­ty is for­ev­er beyond our reach. It puts forth the idea that the best we can do is to find approx­i­ma­tions of real­i­ty that are nonethe­less capa­ble of gen­er­at­ing under­stand­ing of the mechan­ics of our world. **

Our entire per­cep­tion of the world we inhab­it is already an abstrac­tion, it is an inter­pre­ta­tion of mat­ter fil­tered through our indi­vid­ual sens­es. Our brains have evolved to process sen­so­ry data in a way that is most con­ducive to our sur­vival, but this does not con­sti­tute an objec­tive real­i­ty. How­ev­er, it would be sil­ly to denounce our mode of per­ceiv­ing as “not being real”. Per­cep­tion serves our needs quite well. We can func­tion as humans and do all sorts of activ­i­ties thanks to our par­tic­u­lar inter­pre­ta­tions of mat­ter. Mod­el-depen­dent real­ism applies a sim­i­lar type of rea­son­ing to sci­en­tif­ic mod­els of the world, allow­ing the co-exis­tence of many the­o­ries. In this way, we are able to make sense of seem­ing­ly incom­pat­i­ble obser­va­tions, like the con­tra­dic­tions observed by sci­en­tists between the laws of clas­si­cal physics and those of quan­tum mechanics.

“Every­thing should be made as sim­ple as pos­si­ble, but no simpler.”
— Albert Einstein

An approach for try­ing to grasp any­thing that seems incom­pre­hen­si­ble might take inspi­ra­tion from mod­el-depen­dent real­ism. This notion could be just as use­ful for under­stand­ing glob­al soci­ety as it is for deal­ing with sci­en­tif­ic mys­ter­ies. When we speak of uni­fi­ca­tion, we do not mean the elim­i­na­tion of all dif­fer­ence. This is nei­ther pos­si­ble nor desir­able. In fact, it is through the many nuances of dif­fer­ence that strength is found. Dif­fer­ences cre­ate resilience through flex­i­bil­i­ty to adapt to chang­ing sce­nar­ios and con­di­tions. The human urge is often to sim­pli­fy and reduce our mod­els to their most ele­gant pos­si­ble forms in order to facil­i­tate under­stand­ing. This urge works won­ders some­times, but this ten­den­cy has its lim­its. As humans with lim­it­ed sen­so­ry per­cep­tion, our entire under­stand­ing of exis­tence is sub­jec­tive. Even still, we can har­ness sub­jec­tive truth by incor­po­rat­ing mul­ti­ple per­spec­tives to advance our under­stand­ing of the world. In order to see the big­ger pic­ture, we must learn to har­mo­nize dis­parate ele­ments. Diver­si­ty of world­view, evi­dence-based frame­works and belief sys­tems can all be inte­grat­ed to cre­ate a more com­pre­hen­sive mode of under­stand­ing across the many cul­tures and the­o­ries that make up society.

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In Between

The challenge for innovation

The term “inno­va­tion” has stalled out and been appro­pri­at­ed by ped­dlers of fleet­ing nov­el­ty or worse. We can do better.

“As an intan­gi­ble, indi­vid­u­al­is­tic, yet strict­ly white-col­lar trait, inno­va­tion reframes the cru­el for­tunes of an unequal glob­al econ­o­my as the log­i­cal prod­ucts of a cre­ative, vision­ary bril­liance. In this new guise, the inno­va­tor retains both a touch of the prophet and a hint of the con­fi­dence man.” — John Patrick Henry

Through­out indus­tri­al­iza­tion, inno­va­tion has become increas­ing­ly a mat­ter of tech­no­log­i­cal advance­ment. Eco­nom­ic nar­row-mind­ed­ness has cor­ralled inno­va­tion for com­mer­cial ends. Inno­va­tion was co-opt­ed as a tool for the infi­nite-growth machine. The last cen­tu­ry of eco­nom­ic growth has been fueled by indus­tri­al activ­i­ties that pol­lute the air we breathe and poi­son the water we drink. More pro­tec­tive poli­cies can stop this ter­ri­ble trend.

Tech­no­log­i­cal inno­va­tion does not have to run counter to the chal­lenge of cli­mate change, it can serve as an impor­tant plat­form for solu­tions instead. As long as inno­va­tion fol­lows an imper­a­tive of eco­nom­ic growth, how­ev­er, it will have a hand in envi­ron­men­tal degra­da­tion and the impov­er­ish­ment of peo­ple. This is the sce­nario we must most ardent­ly fight against while still uphold­ing a vision of inno­va­tion that can help get us out of the knot­ted mess we’re in.

The unend­ing cas­cade of tech­nolo­gies, prod­ucts, and ser­vices sold as inno­v­a­tive are so often lit­tle more than incre­men­tal changes to some­thing that already exists. This type of inno­va­tion rein­forces dom­i­nant par­a­digms and is inca­pable of fun­da­men­tal­ly alter­ing the most mean­ing­ful con­di­tions of soci­ety in a pos­i­tive way. If we lived in a post-scarci­ty egal­i­tar­i­an soci­ety, this would not be a prob­lem. But we do not as of yet have that luxury.

The fruits of the con­tem­po­rary age seem plen­ti­ful. The shiny toys in our pock­ets, on our desks, or in the cor­ners of our liv­ing rooms, are all gate­ways to all kinds of indul­gence. Feel­ing hun­gry and lazy? A few taps is all you need to pro­pel a piz­za right to your door. Bored? Binge your­self into a state of cata­to­nia on the lat­est sea­son of a TV show. Need to get across town in a hur­ry? Sum­mon a stranger from the Inter­net and climb into their car.

Inno­va­tion should be help­ing us to leap out­side con­ven­tion, not stream­lin­ing access to instant grat­i­fi­ca­tion. Human eco­nom­ic activ­i­ty is essen­tial­ly an attempt to make orga­ni­za­tion­al order out of the chaos of mate­r­i­al resources. This is per­formed almost uni­form­ly across the globe in line with the tenets of cap­i­tal­ism, which has cre­at­ed an order of sys­temic exploita­tion, vio­lence, and cor­rup­tion. Inno­va­tion, as a means for rad­i­cal change, there­fore car­ries a respon­si­bil­i­ty to help undo this dam­ag­ing setup.

The process of inno­va­tion is itself eth­i­cal­ly neu­tral. Intent has a great deal to do with achiev­ing innovation’s prop­er appli­ca­tion. When applied to areas like war, sur­veil­lance, and inter­ro­ga­tion, inno­va­tion can be ter­ri­fy­ing in its destruc­tive capac­i­ty. Human his­to­ry is scarred with moments in which vast amounts of human inge­nu­ity were placed in the ser­vice of wreak­ing hav­oc on life and planet.

Today, the word inno­va­tion is used in cam­paign slo­gans to sell new prod­ucts. Tomor­row, inno­va­tion could be con­sid­ered the means by which the estab­lished order is over­turned and replaced by a sys­tem sup­port­ing cre­ativ­i­ty, inclu­siv­i­ty, and evolv­ing tech­nolo­gies that help human­i­ty tran­scend every limitation.

“The time is always right to do right.” — Dr. Mar­tin Luther King Jr.

Inno­va­tion, as a spe­cial­ized field with­in the busi­ness sec­tor, will take on much greater rela­tion to a diverse range of activ­i­ties with­in cre­ative-based ecosys­tems in the com­ing decades. The source of this rever­ber­a­tion stems from the under­ly­ing need to address repair and sus­tain­able growth in all areas of life. The pri­ma­ry tools to enable this tran­si­tion will be more invis­i­ble than the blunt, phys­i­cal tools of our past. Instead, inge­nu­ity, inclu­siv­i­ty, and cre­ativ­i­ty will come into greater promi­nence as tools for pos­i­tive trans­for­ma­tion. The pri­ma­ry ingre­di­ents influ­enc­ing how inno­va­tion is prac­ticed as a dis­ci­pline until 2025 will con­tin­ue to be infor­ma­tion and emo­tions. The bet­ter these vis­i­ble and invis­i­ble qual­i­ties can be syn­chro­nized to com­ple­ment one anoth­er, the bet­ter we will learn how to bal­ance our intel­lects and feel­ings in the pur­suit of har­mo­nious ini­tia­tives. As an inno­va­tion stu­dio, our fac­ul­ty for imag­in­ing scenes from a pos­i­tive future entail plac­ing a pre­mi­um on uplift­ing nar­ra­tives. We don’t see apoc­a­lypse in our future. We have enough his­to­ry of vio­lence in movies and video games to give us a sense of the apoc­a­lypse. Instead, with the extinc­tions of oth­er species on this plan­et begin­ning to enter the mil­lions, we know enough to stop going down this course of action that tears at the fab­ric of life. With aware­ness to all in need of repair, we want to fig­ure out how to chan­nel our ener­gies into active­ly cre­at­ing a world in excel­lent health, con­di­tion, and consciousness.

Samt Arra’s, Tool to unveil core project char­ac­ter­is­tics, PCH Inno­va­tions, 2019
Categories
In Between

Script for “New Reverence”, a PCH movie (2018)

Cur­rent Condition

We live in strange times. Our world con­tin­ues to be in a state of tran­si­tion, yet the scale and effect of change is rapid­ly accel­er­at­ing. What once seemed rou­tine now stands out as pecu­liar. Per­spec­tives are shift­ing. Aware­ness is blos­som­ing into awakening.

We’re see­ing mul­ti­ple glob­al shifts in atti­tude, ide­ol­o­gy, and pow­er struc­tures. Tra­di­tion­al insti­tu­tions have reached the lim­its of their abil­i­ties. As out­dat­ed mod­els stag­nate, they lose people’s trust and ulti­mate­ly col­lapse. Dis­rup­tion unfolds on every lev­el. Eco­log­i­cal­ly. Soci­etal­ly. Per­son­al­ly. We feel it in our core. Crises abound.

Inequal­i­ty con­tin­ues to rise every­where. The 8 rich­est peo­ple now own as much col­lec­tive wealth as the poor­est half of the glob­al pop­u­la­tion. End­less con­flicts fuel ongo­ing human­i­tar­i­an crises. Sui­cide rates in the US went up 25% in the last 20 years. Total envi­ron­men­tal cat­a­stro­phe is now an all too real pos­si­bil­i­ty, yet we’re still fail­ing to prop­er­ly com­mit to the changes we des­per­ate­ly need.

Our tech­ni­cal capac­i­ties are improv­ing faster than ever. Unfor­tu­nate­ly, the same can’t be said for the health of our plan­et and soci­eties. We have been led to believe that the devel­op­ment of tech­nol­o­gy is the great­est mark­er of human progress, but this nar­ra­tive doesn’t hold up to scruti­ny, and must be rejected.

Tech­nol­o­gy in itself does not offer sal­va­tion, it has to be moti­vat­ed by a high­er pur­pose. The prac­tice of inno­va­tion has been dilut­ed into a form of waste­ful incre­men­tal­ism, in which minor alter­ations are used to jus­ti­fy inces­sant con­sump­tion. What a ter­ri­ble waste of such immea­sur­able potential!

Much tech­no­log­i­cal devel­op­ment has vast­ly improved life for those of us lucky enough to have access to it. Yet it’s still built on the backs of oth­ers. Renew­able ener­gy is paving a path toward a future with­out fos­sil fuels, poten­tial­ly avoid­ing the cat­a­clysm of man-made cli­mate change. We can renew our­selves as well.

We have the phys­i­cal tools we need to build a world in which we can all have our basic needs met. We have the meth­ods to cre­ate bet­ter stan­dards of liv­ing. We even have huge num­bers of peo­ple who want to work toward this par­a­digm. So what’s stop­ping us?

The tools of inno­va­tion have become cen­tral­ized and monop­o­lized. The trap­pings of ego, end­less growth, and a demand for short term prof­its has left us bur­dened with a con­stant del­uge of prod­ucts and ser­vices that do far more unseen harm than good. Our bod­ies, minds and plan­et are crack­ing under the strain.

Rerout­ing

The process and inten­tion of inno­va­tion must be rede­fined and divert­ed from ego­cen­tric pur­suits to efforts con­scious of entire eco-sys­tems. This means rerout­ing from a sys­tem based on con­stant growth and per­son­al accu­mu­la­tion toward one that seeks bal­ance, holis­tic well­be­ing and regen­er­a­tive fortitude.

We need a mass shift in our col­lec­tive val­ues, and to enact rad­i­cal new poli­cies that ben­e­fit the major­i­ty. We must carve out a strong, opti­mistic vision for how to live healthy, mean­ing­ful, con­tribu­tive lives, and deter­mine the way to real­ize this pur­pose­ful future.

Indi­vid­u­als, col­lec­tives, gov­ern­ments, and com­pa­nies must enter into a new social con­tract using strict leg­is­la­tion to cur­tail the abuse of cor­po­rate influ­ence, until a dras­tic shift in con­scious­ness makes this unnecessary.

Full trans­paren­cy of val­ue chains must be made a rigid require­ment for cor­po­rate oper­a­tion. Adver­tis­ing should be phased out of pub­lic space, allow­ing us to reclaim our atten­tion with­in our own neigh­bor­hoods, and decon­di­tion us from brand obsession.

We must refuse to sac­ri­fice the well-being of oth­ers for the sake of con­ve­nience. Work and life must be forced back into bal­ance, giv­ing work­ers more time to spend with friends, fam­i­ly, and to pur­sue per­son­al pas­sions. Exper­i­ments with uni­ver­sal basic income must be accel­er­at­ed to spread the con­tin­u­ing gains of glob­al pro­duc­tiv­i­ty, and to help us escape the ham­ster wheel of the dai­ly grind.

Sci­ence and tech­nol­o­gy must pri­mar­i­ly be used to advance the social good. New col­lec­tive own­er­ship log­ics should replace pri­vate own­er­ship as we tran­si­tion out of cap­i­tal­ism. Acces­si­bil­i­ty, inclu­siv­i­ty, and respon­si­bil­i­ty need to become the new ral­ly­ing cries of innovation.

Draw­ing inspi­ra­tion from ancient con­cep­tions of our sym­bi­ot­ic rela­tion­ship to nature, resources and our­selves, we must devel­op new met­rics by which we judge our suc­cess­es or fail­ures. We must embrace the cur­rent moment of chaos as an oppor­tu­ni­ty to reset, and push for­ward togeth­er toward a new glob­al logic.

Inno­va­tion should not dis­rupt for the sake of nov­el­ty or com­mer­cial oppor­tu­ni­ty, but look only to replace that which cre­ates no ben­e­fit, brings harm, or demands too high a cost. Thor­ough risk assess­ments need to be per­formed before tak­ing action, to ensure we under­stand the poten­tial impact of our cre­ations. Inno­va­tion should seek to address the deep­est root of the sys­temic issues and bias­es we face, in order to rebuild from the ground up. In this sense, inno­va­tion speaks to a new way of think­ing, feel­ing, and act­ing, rather than sim­ply giv­ing us more pow­er­ful tools to inflate the issues we’ve devel­oped over the course of human history.

Momen­tum

We at PCH Inno­va­tions seek social, cul­tur­al, and envi­ron­men­tal har­mo­ny with tech­nol­o­gy by cre­at­ing human­is­tic, empath­ic and high­ly adap­tive sys­tems. We see our­selves as stew­ards of our plan­et, rather than its mas­ters. We orga­nize through the spir­it of coop­er­a­tion, not com­pe­ti­tion, safe in the knowl­edge that our suc­cess does not depend on another’s failure.

In the new glob­al log­ic, exploita­tion will final­ly be seen as a blight, not a fea­ture of social evo­lu­tion. Spir­i­tu­al reflec­tion will begin to erode the mass obses­sion and iden­ti­fi­ca­tion with sta­tus and pow­er. Those who cling to out­dat­ed, dam­ag­ing ways of being will be chal­lenged at every turn, and their world­view exposed as dan­ger­ous, harm­ful, and inhumane.

This over­ar­ch­ing change will not hap­pen overnight, nor will it hap­pen by acci­dent. It needs opti­mists to stand up and be count­ed; any­one who dreams of a bet­ter, fair­er, health­i­er world, and who wants to play a role in build­ing it. Com­mu­ni­ties need to be re-estab­lished, and bonds of sol­i­dar­i­ty must be strength­ened through empa­thy, com­pas­sion, trust, hon­esty and integrity.

Inno­v­a­tive solu­tions will emerge through col­lec­tives of active dream­ers prac­tic­ing local­ly – unit­ed in vision, strength­ened by diverse per­spec­tives, and sup­port­ed by pro­gres­sive policies.

Intel­lec­tu­al prop­er­ty will become tru­ly open-source, facil­i­tat­ing free access to meth­ods, tools, and design and engi­neer­ing blue­prints. This is how we move for­ward. The pow­er of the col­lec­tive gen­er­ates momen­tum; the task is too great for any one indi­vid­ual, no mat­ter how resource­ful they may be.

Rad­i­cal cre­atives and hereti­cal thinkers have always held the key to ush­er­ing in the next era of glob­al soci­ety. Now is no dif­fer­ent. PCH Inno­va­tions strives to aim high­er, take respon­si­bil­i­ty, and man­i­fest the poten­tial of inno­va­tion to repair the fab­ric of life.

Categories
In Between

Integrate lessons from our past

Cap­i­tal­ism is at the root of many of the most press­ing issues of the day. Our cli­mate cri­sis and wide­spread injus­tice com­pel us to make sig­nif­i­cant change.

We find our­selves enter­ing a fourth indus­tri­al rev­o­lu­tion. We also find our­selves in the midst of per­pet­u­al soci­etal con­flict. We are moved to explore the rela­tion­ship between these inter­con­nect­ed phenomena.

The last two decades have served as a sweep­ing refu­ta­tion of polit­i­cal the­o­rist Fran­cis Fukuyama’s procla­ma­tion of the “end of his­to­ry”, the con­cept that all of glob­al soci­ety will come to orga­nize in one ulti­mate mod­el of free-mar­ket cap­i­tal­ist democ­ra­cy. Year after year, this claim looks ever more pre­pos­ter­ous. Mean­while, the cho­rus of voic­es call­ing for dra­mat­ic change grows ever louder.

As we move into the 2020s, the form of high­ly-dereg­u­lat­ed cap­i­tal­ism we’ve known for around half a cen­tu­ry appears to be on its last legs. It still grips the world, but its legit­i­ma­cy is begin­ning to crum­ble. As inequal­i­ty reach­es shock­ing lev­els and the 0.1% cap­ture an increas­ing­ly greater por­tion of the world’s wealth, the num­ber of peo­ple left behind is becom­ing too great to pacify.

Our polit­i­cal and eco­nom­ic sys­tem is dri­ven by ego, tech­nol­o­gy, and exploita­tion of peo­ple and plan­et. In the con­text of inten­si­fy­ing cli­mate change and glob­al­ized mono­cul­tures, this sys­tem ensures an unfair fight for sur­vival. To cre­ate a respon­si­ble, sus­tain­able, and equi­table sys­tem, it is cru­cial to dis­tance our­selves from the unchecked ele­va­tion of ego. Sim­i­lar­ly, our tech­nolo­gies have become too tight­ly fixed to our rou­tines, rit­u­als, and bod­ies. Ubiq­ui­tous con­nec­tiv­i­ty has invad­ed our spir­its and com­mod­i­fied our gaze. Human­i­ty has become addict­ed to unhealthy habits.

We should spend more time in the present moment. We should relax, take deep breaths, and return to nature. If we learn to dis­tance our­selves from the tech­nolo­gies we’ve come to cling to, we can also learn to rein­vent our eco­nom­ic log­ics to close the con­tin­u­al­ly grow­ing dis­par­i­ties between people.

We can do so much bet­ter by one anoth­er. Through­out the ages, peo­ple have been advo­cat­ing for a fair and just soci­ety. We say yes to that endeav­or. Our eyes, hearts, and minds are open. We’re ready to lis­ten. We want to see. We feel a sense of con­nec­tion between cre­ative dis­ci­plines, a col­lec­tive sense of respon­si­bil­i­ty to address the chal­lenges we all face, and a great sense of curios­i­ty around the pos­si­bil­i­ty of a civ­i­liza­tion build around last­ing peace and prosperity.

Categories
In Between

Utopian dreams reveal future mindsets

Exam­ples from the past can only take us so far. To cre­ate some­thing new, it may help to look to worlds con­jured from imagination

A short­com­ing of some utopi­an fic­tion is an occa­sion­al ten­den­cy to present a world that is far too per­fect. Such work can still prove valu­able as a way to reflect upon our own faults, but the ide­al human soci­eties these sto­ries fea­ture fail to reck­on with the inevitable nature of con­flict. Utopi­an fic­tion is at its best when pre­sent­ing a soci­ety with all the human flaws and con­flicts (like avarice and cor­rup­tion) that are ripe for trans­for­ma­tion­al resolutions.

Efforts to make improve­ments to our soci­eties in the real world, should not be moti­vat­ed by the fruit­less desire to change human nature itself, but by the desire to change the orga­ni­za­tion­al prin­ci­ples and pat­terns that large­ly dic­tate how we man­i­fest our human nature through social inter­ac­tion. There will always be argu­ments, dis­agree­ment, sad­ness, and hard­ship, but we should aim to orga­nize soci­ety to mit­i­gate the worst and encour­age the best of it as much as we can.

Ursu­la K. Le Guin’s 1974 nov­el, The Dis­pos­sessed, presents a fic­tion­al­ized utopia with the kind of nuance that allows us to imag­ine how such a polit­i­cal exper­i­ment may actu­al­ly feel in real­i­ty. Le Guin was heav­i­ly inspired by the polit­i­cal writ­ing of anar­chists Peter Kropotkin and Paul Good­man, and she sought to explore their the­o­ries through her sto­ry­telling. The 200-year-old soci­ety she describes began after rev­o­lu­tion­ar­ies on a plan­et named Urras fought to estab­lish their own soci­ety on a neigh­bor­ing plan­et called Annares. In this new soci­ety pop­u­lat­ed by the descen­dants of rebels, all prop­er­ty is shared. Goods are con­tained in pub­lic ware­hous­es and any­body who needs them may take them. Their lan­guage of Prav­ic was pur­pose­ly con­struct­ed to work in tan­dem with their polit­i­cal phi­los­o­phy, and this lan­guage reflects their cul­ture by con­tain­ing lim­it­ed options to express the pos­ses­sive case. Work is tech­ni­cal­ly vol­un­tary and dis­trib­uted accord­ing to the pref­er­ences of the work­ers. How­ev­er, eco­nom­ic neces­si­ties and social pres­sures tend to make out­casts of those who do not pitch in when able to con­tribute. In this con­text, life on the near-bar­ren plan­et can be hard and aus­tere, and utopi­an ideals of shared resources become more and more complicated.

The pro­tag­o­nist, a physi­cist named Shevek, becomes frus­trat­ed with creep­ing bureau­cra­cy and per­ceived lim­i­ta­tions of free­dom, and he choos­es to break con­ven­tion by vis­it­ing the cap­i­tal­ist nation of A‑Io on the plan­et his peo­ple left 200 years pri­or. He becomes fur­ther dis­il­lu­sioned dur­ing his time there, dis­gust­ed by the pre­ventable pover­ty and baf­fled by the mar­ket mode of exchange. Faced with his own society’s oppo­site, Shevek’s expe­ri­ence on A‑Io clar­i­fies for him the impor­tance of the polit­i­cal project on Annares. He flees from the uni­ver­si­ty in which he had been effec­tive­ly sequestered and finds him­self embroiled in an upris­ing. In his speech to rev­o­lu­tion­ar­ies in the work­ing class dis­tricts of A‑Io, he explains:

“We have noth­ing but our free­dom. We have noth­ing to give you but your own free­dom. We have no law but the sin­gle prin­ci­ple of mutu­al aid between indi­vid­u­als. We have no gov­ern­ment but the sin­gle prin­ci­ple of free asso­ci­a­tion. We have no states, no nations, no pres­i­dents, no pre­miers, no chiefs, no gen­er­als, no boss­es, no bankers, no land­lords, no wages, no char­i­ty, no police, no sol­diers, no wars. Nor do we have much else. We are shar­ers, not own­ers. We are not pros­per­ous. None of us is rich. None of us is pow­er­ful. If it is Anar­res you want, if it is the future you seek, then I tell you that you must come to it with emp­ty hands. You must come to it alone, and naked, as the child comes into the world, into his future, with­out any past, with­out any prop­er­ty, whol­ly depen­dent on oth­er peo­ple for his life.”

Shevek is speak­ing about the need for renounce­ment of mate­r­i­al con­cerns. One must break com­plete­ly from the con­ven­tions of the past in order to be free.

“You can­not buy the Rev­o­lu­tion. You can­not make the Rev­o­lu­tion. You can only be the Rev­o­lu­tion. It is in your spir­it, or it is nowhere.”

Le Guin does not present utopia as a final state of per­fec­tion. She imag­ines utopia as a process, not a place. She sees it in strug­gle, in fight­ing for change, and in embody­ing the dai­ly search for the lib­er­a­tion and flour­ish­ing of all peo­ple. Read­ing sto­ries like hers encour­ages us to bet­ter define exact­ly what we mean when we call for change. What is it we real­ly want? Is it more pros­per­i­ty? More free­dom? What does free­dom even look or feel like? What might we have to sur­ren­der to achieve these things and are we will­ing to do so? In our search for the next orga­niz­ing prin­ci­ples that will define the upcom­ing iter­a­tion of the human jour­ney, we must avoid past pit­falls. Utopi­an spec­u­la­tive fic­tion is like a test­ing ground to expand upon oth­er­wise untest­ed the­o­ries, and serve as an explorato­ry tool to help us grasp alter­na­tive states of living.

An emerg­ing sub-genre of sci­ence fic­tion, solarpunk, explores a future built on renew­able ener­gy, sus­tain­able liv­ing, and green spaces. The mind­set of a solarpunk cit­i­zen is cen­tered around har­mo­ny. In these fic­tion­al works, humans are no longer sequestered from the wild,  veg­e­ta­tion has entered the cities and their homes. The cities are still tall and sprawl­ing, but are now engulfed in plants and wildlife of all kinds. It is still a high-tech soci­ety, but all arti­fi­cial­i­ty is soft­ened by the ubiq­ui­tous pres­ence of diverse organ­ic life. Human­i­ty func­tions as a self-orga­niz­ing organ­ism with­in these spaces. Peo­ple work togeth­er to main­tain the con­di­tions of their exis­tence and do not seek to expand with­out lim­its. As a genre, solarpunk helps show us that we need not choose between a false dichoto­my of nature and tech­nol­o­gy, we can dis­cov­er  sophis­ti­cat­ed ways to weave them together.

As read­ers of these gen­res, we’re ready to see the impli­ca­tions of these utopi­an ideas live off the page, and add col­or to our every­day realities.