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✨ About This Episode
“The best academic lecture/slam poetry/sermon/magical invocation/attunement and invitation to engage I’ve experienced in a long while.”
– Daniel Lindenberger
Next week, after nearly nine years of development, this show grows up to become Humans On The Loop, a transdisciplinary exploration of agency in the age of automation. For long-time listeners of Future Fossils, not much will really change — philosophical investigations in the key of psychedelic futurism, voyages into the edges of what is and can be known, and boldly curious riffs on the immeasurable value of storytelling and imagination have always characterized this show. Many of the episodes I’ve shared in this last year especially were, effectively, preparations for this latest chapter and play as large a part in my ongoing journey to synthesize and translate everything I’ve learned from years of independent scholarship and institutional work in esteemed tech, science, and culture orgs…
But we are no longer waiting for a weird future to arrive. We’re living in it, and shaping it with every act and utterance. So in this “final” episode of Future Fossils before we bring all of these investigations into the domain of practical applied inquiry, it felt right to ramp from FF to HOTL by sharing my talk and discussion for Stephen Reid’s recent online course on Technological Metamodernism. This was a talk that left me feeling very full of hope for what’s to come, in which I trace the constellations that connect some of my biggest inspirations, and outline the social transformations I see underway.
This is a rapid and dynamic condensation of the big patterns I’ve noticed in the course of over 500 hours of recorded public dialogue and a lively primer on why I’m focusing on the attention and imagination as the two big forces that will continue to shape our lives in the worlds that come after modernity.
It is also just the beginning.
Thank you for being part of this adventure.
✨ Support & Participate
• Become a patron on Substack (my preference) or Patreon
(15% off annual memberships until 12/21/24 with the code 15OFF12)
• Make a tax-deductible donation to Humans On The Loop
• Original paintings available as thank-you gifts for large donors
• Hire me as an hourly consultant or advisor on retainer
• Buy (most of) the books we discuss from Bookshop.org
• Join the Future Fossils Facebook group
• Join the Holistic Technology & Wise Innovation and Future Fossils Discord servers
• Buy the show’s music on Bandcamp — intro “Olympus Mons” from the Martian Arts EP and outro “Sonnet A” from the Double-Edged Sword EP
• Read “An Oral History of The End of ‘Reality’”, my story mentioned in this episode.
✨ Chapters
Chapter 1: Reflections & Announcements (0:00:00)
Chapter 2: Co-Evolution with AI and the Limits of Control (0:12:49)
Chapter 3: Poetry as the Beginning and End of Scientific Knowledge (0:18:06)
Chapter 4: The American Replacement of Nature and the Power of Narrative (0:24:05)
Chapter 5: The End of “Reality” & The Beginning of Metamodern Nuance (28:58)
Chapter 6: Q&A: Myths, Egregores, and Metamodern Technology vs. Wetiko & Moloch (0:34:52)
Chapter 7: Q&A: Chaos Magic & Other Strategies for Navigating Complexity (45:59)
Chapter 8: Q&A: Musings on Symbiogenesis & Selfhood (0:50:18)
Chapter 9: Q&A: How Do We Legitimize These Approaches? (0:55:42)
Chapter 10: Q&A: Why Am I Devoting Myself to Wise Innovation Inquiry? (0:61:01)
Chapter 11: Thanks & Closing (0:63:22)
✨ Mentioned Individuals
A mostly-complete list generated by Notebook LM and edited by Michael Garfield.
William Irwin Thompson - Historian, poet, and author of The American Replacement of Nature, which argues that American culture is future-oriented. (See Future Fossils 42 & 43.)
Evan “Skytree” Snyder - Electronic music producer, roboticist, and co-founder of Future Fossils who departed after ten episodes. (See Future Fossils 1-10, 53, 174, and 207.)
Stephen Reid - Founder of the Dandelion online learning program and The Psychedelic Society; host of a course on “Technological Metamodernism” in which Garfield presented this talk. (See Future Fossils 226.)
Ken Wilber - Author of numerous books on “AQAL” Integral Theory. (See Michael’s 2008 interview with him on Integral Art.)
Friedrich Hölderlin - German poet who famously said, "Poetry is the beginning and the end of all scientific knowledge.”
George Lakoff and Mark Johnson - Authors of Metaphors We Live By, which explores the role of embodied metaphor in shaping thought.
John Vervaeke - Philosopher who, along with others, uses the term “transjective” to describe the interconnected nature of subject and object.
Sean Esbjörn-Hargens - Integral theorist who taught Garfield at JFK University. (See Future Fossils 60, 113, and 150.)
Nathalie Depraz, Francisco Varela, and Pierre Vermersch - Embodied mind theorists and authors of On Becoming Aware, a book about phenomenology.
Kevin Kelly - Techno-optimist Silicon Valley futurist and author on “the expansion of ignorance” in relation to scientific discovery. (See Future Fossils 128, 165, and 203.)
Albert Einstein, Niels Bohr, and David Bohm - Paradigm-challenging physicists mentioned who, by science to its limits, developed mystical insights.
Timothy Morton - Philosopher who coined the term “hyperobjects” to refer to entities so vast and complex they defy traditional understanding. (See Future Fossils 223.)
Caleb Scharf - Astrobiologist, author of The Ascent of Information, in which he coins the term “The Dataome” to refer to the planet-scale body of information that constrains human behavior.
Iain McGilchrist - Psychiatrist and author of The Master and His Emissary, known for his work on the divided brain and the importance of right-brained thinking.
Eric Wargo - Anthropologist and science writer who suggests that dreams are precognitive and the brain binds time as a four-dimensional object. (See Future Fossils 117, 171, and 231.)
Regina Rini - Philosopher at York University who coined the term “epistemic backstop of consensus” to describe what photography gave society and what, later, deepfakes have eroded.
Friedrich Nietzsche and Fyodor Dostoevsky - Philosophers and authors who explored the implications of the loss of a universal moral order grounded in religion.
Duncan Barford - An author and figure associated with chaos magic.
Lynn Margulis - Evolutionary biologist known for her work on symbiogenesis and the importance of cooperation in evolution.
Primavera De Filippi - Co-author of Blockchain and the Law: The Rule of Code with Aaron Wright and technology theorist who theorized the "Collaboration Monster."
Joshua Schrei - Ritualist and host of The Emerald Podcast who produced episodes on Guardians and Protectors and on the role of The Seer. (See Future Fossils 219.)
Hunter S. Thompson - American journalist and author known for his gonzo journalism and the quote, "When the going gets weird, the weird turn pro.”
Tim Adalin - Host of the VoiceCraft podcast, on which Garfield discussed complex systems perspectives on pathologies in organizational development. (See Future Fossils 227.)
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