I'm told the Roma have two terms for Futurists.   One is Drabani which means
Master of Poisons.    The other is Gitche Serve' which means "One who
Guesses" and is the person fleecing the Gadje (you and me) on the street for
a buck.     

 

The person who plans the future must be a Master of Foundations.   A person
capable of understanding the systems of the environment as well as the
imaginative architecture that will rest upon that Foundation.   I think of
Whiteheads "complete abstractions" as the technique for knowing how to
manifest the Foundations and divide the two environments for the benefit of
both.   That's what we Aniyvwiyah call Ulanigvgv or competent power.

 

Good to hear from you Lawry, 

 

REH



 

 

From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of de Bivort
Lawrence
Sent: Sunday, November 11, 2012 3:37 PM
To: RE-DESIGNING WORK, INCOME DISTRIBUTION, EDUCATION
Cc: 'Isaac Yager'; 'Sarah Levine'; 'Summer Greenwald-Gonella'; 'Amanda
Grafton'; 'Christina Parsons'; 'Phil Kaplan'; 'Darcy Dunn';
[email protected]; 'Jennifer Rolnick'; 'Ari Isenberg'; 'Ethan Goldberg';
'Stephanie Dream Listener Weems'
Subject: Re: [Futurework] The Future of Music -- the colors of Futurism

 

Hello, Ray,

 

"Futurists" come in all colors.  Some, yes, are dreamers, and fall into the
category, if you will, of science fiction writers -- imaginative visions
designed to intrigue and spur thinking.

 

Your basic question, really, comes down to whether a "futurist" has a
reliable (or at least examinable) methodology. Probably the least
interesting, most pedestrian methodology is simple trend extension: discern
a trend dating from the past to the present, and extend it into the future.
This method was at the basis of the old-time futurists. Of course, its
weakness was that trends do not persist for ever (think sigmoid curve) and
so as a predictive method it had sever limitations.  Another method, favored
by some well-known ex-CIA-type analysts, was to read the public press for
trends and consensi on what the future would hold. The weaknesses here are
self-evident.

 

So then we come to your query as to whether (some) futurists have
fundamental models of how things are and can be, based, I would suggest,
most solidly in a systemic approach to the structures and dynamics of the
real world.  There are some wonderful models available for this.  Other
kinds of models were those developed by Meadows, et al, EPA/DOE's SEAS, and
Leontiev's Input-Output modeling effort.

 

Behind all these approaches lies a seldom mentioned but, in my view,
dominating relaity: that the prediction (and especially those predictions
that people take seriously) lay the groundwork for people deciding to do
things differently -- and thus create results that seem to then deny the
validity of the prediction.  

 

And this brings me to my favorite theme and the one that has most dominated
my thinking and professional work: the deliberate intervention in the
affairs of the world (whether at the individual level, or companies, or
communities, or that of, say, international systems).  The goal with this
approach is not so much the prediction of what will happen, but the
co-creation of desirable futures, predicted or not.  My aphorism on the
matter: it is easier to create the future than to predict it.

 

To be successful with this co-creative approach and goal, one does need a
largish portfolio of tools -- linguistic, modeling, strategic, tactical,
political tools. It takes time and effort to build this portfolio, time and
effort to maintain it, and time and effort to introduce others to it.  It
takes great dedication, patience, and artistry to employ these tools in the
pursuit of worthy, complex goals. Learning is continuous.

 

Cheers,

Lawry

 

 

On Nov 11, 2012, at 2:16 PM, Ray Harrell wrote:





Are "Futurists" simple dreamers or are they experts in the Foundations of
things that builds the strength for dreams and separates them from chaos?

 

REH

 

From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Ray Harrell
Sent: Sunday, November 11, 2012 9:57 AM
To: RE-DESIGNING WORK, INCOME DISTRIBUTION, EDUCATION; Amanda Grafton; Ari
Isenberg; Christina Parsons; Darcy Dunn; Ethan Goldberg; Isaac Yager;
Jennifer Rolnick; Phil Kaplan; [email protected]; Sarah Levine;
Stephanie Dream Listener Weems; Summer Greenwald-Gonella
Subject: [Futurework] The Future of Music

 

This looks very interesting. 

 

REH

 

 

http://futureofmusic.org/events/future-music-summit-2012
<http://futureofmusic.org/events/future-music-summit-2012> 

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