Transcript
Page 1: Teilhard and the Web

Teilhard and the WebMetaphors for New Space

James Hayes-Bohanan, Ph.D.Bridgewater State College

Department of Earth Sciences and GeographyCenter for the Advancement of Research and Teaching (CART)

Page 2: Teilhard and the Web

Pierre Teilhard de Chardin• Born Auvergne, France 1881 • Studied geology and paleontology;

taught physics and chemistry• Ordained as Jesuit priest 1912• Sorbonne doctorate 1922• Paleontology research in China

1923 to 1946• Legion of Honor 1946• Died in New York 1955

Page 3: Teilhard and the Web

Unity of Creation“… each of us is perforce

linked by all the material organic and psychic strands of his being to all that surrounds him [sic].”

Page 4: Teilhard and the Web

Continuity with Past and Present

“If we look far enough back in the depths of time, the disordered anthill of living beings suddenly, for an informed observer, arranges itself in longs files that make their way by various paths toward greater consciousness.”

Page 5: Teilhard and the Web

Human Role in Evolution

“… there is an absolute direction of growth, to which both our duty and our happiness demand that we should conform. It is [the human] function to complete cosmic evolution.”

Page 6: Teilhard and the Web

Evolution is toward greater complexity

• Geological Evolution: Energy• Biological Evolution: Life• Human Evolution: Consciousness

Page 7: Teilhard and the Web

Noosphere“… above the animal biosphere a

human sphere, a sphere of reflection, of conscious intervention, of conscious souls”

“human consciousness turned in upon itself”

Page 8: Teilhard and the Web

ScienceFor Teilhard, science was in the service of

directed evolution toward higher orders of consciousness.

“… research students are numbered in the hundreds of thousands -- soon to be millions -- and they are no longer distributed superficially and at random over the globe, but they are functionally linked together in a vast organic system that will remain in the future indispensable to the life of the community.” 1961

Page 9: Teilhard and the Web

World Wide Web• Gophers• Gopherspace• Archie, Jughead, and

Veronica• Hypertext• Hyperspace• Images• Commerce-free

Page 10: Teilhard and the Web

1999: The Year of eCommerce

0.1% of U.S. Commerce

Page 11: Teilhard and the Web

Has the Internet Changed Our Daily Lives?

Where did Jeremy’s message go on its way to his mother?

Page 12: Teilhard and the Web

Noosphere?

Page 13: Teilhard and the Web

Y2K ConnectionThe y2k computer failure problem is like a massive

intertwined ring of dominoes - one little nudge anywhere in the rings and you stand to witness an amazing chain reaction.

In this case the nudge is the year 2000 and the intertwined rings of dominoes are those aspects of our society - worldwide - that interact with computers.

Rev. Dacia Reid

Page 14: Teilhard and the Web

An Ever-Denser Network

Page 15: Teilhard and the Web

… at all scales• “Net” gives way to “fabric”• More information in smaller spaces• Oxygen• Smart Dust• Biological Models

Page 16: Teilhard and the Web

Questions• Is the Web really different from earlier

technologies - from Gutenberg to the telegraph (the Victorian Internet)?

• Does the Web represent some sort of collective consiousness?

• If not, is this nonetheless a good metaphor?• Could better metaphors be found?

Page 17: Teilhard and the Web

More Questions• Will the Web do more to unite -- as

Teilhard might have hoped -- or to divide?

• Given the bugs seen in today’s technologies, are such developments as Oxygen and Smart Dust really possible?

Page 18: Teilhard and the Web

More on Teilhard and the Web

HTTP://TOPCAT.BRIDGEW.EDU/~JHAYESBOH/TEILHARD.HTM


Top Related