🦀✨The Nexialist #023380 year cycles | unthinkable futures | the technium | social change map | homo crustaceous | balenciaga covered eyes
welcome to your weekly inbox cleanse, the nexialist hey, you! i hope this message finds you 1 year ago » 🤡✨The Nexialist #0181 : time of monsters | clown in mainstream | rose of the winds | she’s gone, dance on | sxo 2 years ago » 🧜♂️✨The Nexialist #0129 : merpeople | sereia | latin blood | blue mind theory | water slide | dirty words: community 3 years ago » 🍩✨The Nexialist #0078 : Deep Space | Everything, Everywhere, All at Once | Transitional Space | Meta Morphism | Sophistry | El Dorado | Data as The New Soil, not Oil 4 years ago » 🥚✨The Nexialist #0028 : Lil Nas X's Digital Fluency | Social Constructs | Men in the Media | Relearning Fertilization | Spiral Sperm | Super Industry of the Imaginary | Creative Effectiveness | Mafiosa ☄️80 year cyclesfuturist peter leyden shares with how “we are living through the collapse of the old world, and the quiet construction of a new one.” for context, peter leyden and his co-writer peter schwartz, wrote a famous wired issue in the 90s called ‘the long-boom’ looking into the past and future technologies and their impact, from 1980s to 2020s. now, peter is looking to the next decades, and points to ai, clean energy and bioengineering as the techs that will push us in the next cycle. he talks about that in his newsletter and book ‘the great progression: 2025 to 2025.’ it’s quite fascinating and neat how leyden shows these bursts of innovation cycles that last ~25 years repeating every ~80 years: post-wwii (1945-1978), the gilded age (1865-1890), united states founding era - ending of the age of enlightenment (1787-1812). i haven’t read his book and i understand 15 minutes is not enough time to add nuance, but some things he shares did not sit well with me. i also do understand it’s a more techno-optimist perspective, but i can’t help but to contest some things. the first thing is how the us/western-centric focus, still replicating colonial beliefs. the ways to measure progress are mostly in financial and economic terms, forgetting (maybe in his books/articles he shares that) that this progress came at the immeasurable cost of massacre of indigenous people, forced slavery and nature’s destruction and extraction. to build any new system, this needs to be acknowledged and not minimized/swept under the rug.
the third thing is how techno-saviour this argument is, even repeating oversimplifying and misleading statements, arguing clean energy is a miracle because “we don’t have to dig” anything. let’s remember lithium batteries and solar panels depend on natural resources to be built, and ai is quite energy intensive.
brainsparks: innovation cycles (tn#54), three elements of innovation (tn#75), critic of technology (tn#121), green colonialism (tn#145), the dirty road to clean energy (tn#97), cosmophobia (tn#135), the fordian slip (tn#191) 🤯unthinkable futuresthank you, Michell Zappa, for sharing this. apparently this was one of the favorite talks at the future days 2025, a few months ago in lisbon —and i can see why, it’s a must-watch. simon höher, from dark matter labs argues that the most radical futures are genuinely unthinkable. he explores many different cases and stories that move beyond western ideas, bringing questions, learnings and inspiration of new systems/possibilities. he also brings the term age of consequences, as this polycrisis moment we’re in resulted from past decisions. he invites us to think beyond binaries, as helpful as they can be, and to notice glitches in the system and understand how to design with them. in his words: what got us here won’t get us out of here. so we need to move beyond frameworks, linearity and silver-bullet thinking, even beyond imagination, to built new realities and communities. simon’s talk is full of brainsparks and left me exhilerated. below are the titles of 5 lenses to help with this exercise, and during his talk he brings real-world examples:
brainsparks: parasite culture (tn#191), thick imagination (tn#223), time for indigenous futurism (tn#65), polyfuturism (tn#158), protopia futures (tn#27), mono-capital to polycapital (tn#214), queering the future (tn#24), decolonizing foresight (tn#21) 🤖the techniumthis was shared in the Artificial Insights community and i’m passing it on. kelly kelly co-founded wired magazine in 93 and since then has been a relevant and active voice in futures studies and emerging technology talks. now, i don’t agree with everything he says, nonetheless his experience, opinions, and analogies add much needed nuance to the polarizing tech conversations we have today.
brainsparks: unsolicited advice (tn#70), amish tech (tn#21), scenius aka community genius (tn#31), vectors of intelligence (tn#194) 🗺️social change mapi saw a video by alyssa on instagram sharing this social change map by Deepa Iyer and it’s quite powerful. in this moment when we see systems collapsing, activism does not only mean ‘going to protests.’ so this tool shows other (not all) possibilities that are as important as that when participating in social change movements.
brainsparks: foresight as activism (tn#143), zebras x unicorns (tn#65) 🦀homo crustaceousthis link came in my e-mail and i just had to click. this read is fun, strange at moments, insightful, and even scary in others. it’s a genius excerpt from michael garfield’s forthcoming book, How to Live in the Future. garfield stretches the meme that everything becomes crab, including us. well, at least metaphorically. the post is filled with beautiful imagery and memes, so it was right up my alley (or beach). from mapping our obsession with crabs in folklore and sci-fi, to the etymology and evolution, to our current philosophical crab-like behaviors, you’re in for a treat (a yummy crab-cake?)
brainsparks: how sci-fi has changed (tn#186), umwelt (tn#86), animal dreamworlds (tn#138) 👁️balenciaga covered eyesto close today’s nexialist, i’m brining you one of the new songs by swedish pop artist, agnes. i don’t understand why people are not obsessed with this, the production is stunning, her voice is great, the fashion is incredible… brainsparks: spiritual disco (tn#43), schiaparelli (tn#27) see you next week, crabbialists 🦀✨❓Wait, what is a Nexialist?🔎If you want to see what I’ve already posted, visit the archive and use the search engine. Even I do that a lot.💌I want to know what you think/who you are! Your feedback is highly appreciated; you can e-mail me or fill in this short survey. Thank you! 🙏🏻🔌Let’s Collab?I truly believe innovation comes from bringing improbable areas together, and that’s why I called this project The Nexialist. Some sectors are known to be self-referencing and hermetic. Sometimes, teams are on autopilot mode, focused on the daily grind, which hinders innovation. As a Nexialist, I like to burst these bubbles, bringing references from different areas, and maintaining teams inspired and connected to the Zeitgeist. I offer inspiration sessions called Brainsparks, creative desk research (Zeitgeist Boost), Plug’n’Play deals for workshops and sprints, and other bespoke formats. If you want to know more about this, send me an e-mail with your challenge(s) and we can figure something out together. Check out my website and some work I’ve done below: You're currently a free subscriber to The Nexialist. For the full experience, upgrade your subscription. |
🦀✨The Nexialist #0233
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