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Noosphere - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Noosphere
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Noosphere (/no.sfr/; sometimes nosphere), according to the thought of Vladimir Vernadsky[1] and of Teilhard de Chardin, denotes the "sphere of human thought".[2] The word derives from the Greek (nous "mind") and (sphaira "sphere"), in lexical analogy to "atmosphere" and "biosphere".[3] It was introduced by Pierre Teilhard de Chardin in 1922[4] in his Cosmogenesis.[5] Another possibility is the first use of the term by douard Le Roy (1870-1954), who together with Teilhard was listening to lectures of Vladimir Vernadsky at the Sorbonne. In 1936 Vernadsky accepted the idea of the noosphere in a letter to Boris Leonidovich Lichkov (though he states that the concept derives from Le Roy).[6]

Contents
1 History of concept 2 Possible mechanisms 3 Instances in popular culture 4 See also 5 Notes 6 References 7 External links

History of concept
In the theory of Vernadsky, the noosphere is the third in a succession of phases of development of the Earth, after the geosphere (inanimate matter) and the biosphere (biological life). Just as the emergence of life fundamentally transformed the geosphere, the emergence of human cognition fundamentally transforms the biosphere. In contrast to the conceptions of the Gaia theorists, or the promoters of cyberspace, Vernadsky's noosphere emerges at the point where humankind, through the mastery of nuclear processes, begins to create resources through the transmutation of elements. It is also currently being researched as part of the Princeton Global Consciousness Project.[7] For Teilhard, the noosphere emerges through and is constituted by the interaction of human minds. The noosphere has grown in step with the organization of the human mass in relation to itself as it populates the Earth. As mankind organizes itself in more complex social networks, the higher the noosphere will grow in awareness. This concept extends Teilhard's Law of Complexity/Consciousness, the law describing the nature of evolution in the universe. Teilhard argued the noosphere is growing towards an even greater integration and unification, culminating in the Omega Point, which he saw as the goal of history. The goal of history, then, is an apex of thought/consciousness. One of the original aspects of the noosphere concept deals with evolution. Henri Bergson, with his L'volution cratrice (1907), was one of the first to propose evolution is "creative" and cannot necessarily be explained solely by Darwinian natural selection.[citation needed ] L'volution cratrice is upheld, according to Bergson, by a constant vital force which animates life and fundamentally connects mind and body, an idea opposing the
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Noosphere - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

dualism of Ren Descartes. In 1923, C. Lloyd Morgan took this work further, elaborating on an "emergent evolution" which could explain increasing complexity (including the evolution of mind). Morgan found many of the most interesting changes in living things have been largely discontinuous with past evolution, and therefore did not necessarily take place through a gradual process of natural selection. Rather, evolution experiences jumps in complexity (such as the emergence of a self-reflective universe, or noosphere). Finally, the complexification of human cultures, particularly language, facilitated a quickening of evolution in which cultural evolution occurs more rapidly than biological evolution. Recent understanding of human ecosystems and of human impact on the biosphere have led to a link between the notion of sustainability with the "coevolution" [Norgaard, 1994] and harmonization of cultural and biological evolution.

Possible mechanisms
Living systems are dissipative structures that create internal order by expending energy in exchange for a local reduction in entropy. This is true at every level of biological organization and increasingly so the more abstract such order becomes within living systems. For instance, genes create an abstract information framework within which multicellular organisms may modify the topology of the epigenetic information state space in order to adapt and subsequently evolve. This may include changing the genes themselves that are involved in the abstract information framework or altering the manner in which these genes coordinate their activity. Nevertheless, as complexity (and therefore order) increases in a biological system, the amount of abstraction within that system also increases. This creates, in effect, an increase in information density. At the level of the brain, this abstraction becomes evident as the information structure known as the mind. Certain theories posit that such an ordering alters the information state of the surrounding environment such that, for ever decreasing levels of entropy, there is a net local entropy deficit or "information moment" impressed upon the surrounding environment by the extant local information structures. In this way, the mind, an abstract phenomenon seated in the physical substrate of the brain, may be capable of inducing a local entropic force that, when summed among many minds simultaneously, produces an even more amplified phenomenon known as the noosphere.

Instances in popular culture


American integral theorist Ken Wilber deals with this third evolution of the noosphere. In his work, Sex, Ecology, Spirituality (1995), he builds many of his arguments on the emergence of the noosphere and the continued emergence of further evolutionary structures. The term Nocene epoch refers to "how we manage and adapt to the immense amount of knowledge weve created."[8] Julian May elaborated the noosphere concept of 'unification' in popular science fiction in the Galactic Milieu Series. The noosphere accounts for Teilhard being often called the patron saint of the Internet.[9] Brian Stableford references human culture as a possible delirium or fever dream of the nosphere in his novella Mortimer Gray's History of Death, first published in 1995. Greg Bear used the concept of the nosphere as the interaction space of his 'nocytes' when he expanded his short story Blood Music to a full-length novel in 1985. Ambient dance group The Orb, in the track "O.O.B.E." from the album U.F.Orb', use a sample from
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Noosphere - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

the reading of New Pathways in Psychology by Colin Wilson, who discusses the concept of the nosphere. The Gone-Away World, a novel by Nick Harkaway, depicts an Earth devastated in a war fought with "Go-Away Bombs"weapons which erase the information content of matter, causing it to disappear from reality. The fallout of these bombs, called "Stuff", subsequently draws information from the noosphere, "reifying" human ideas and thoughts into physical form and creating a fantasy landscape of monsters and horrors. In the essay "Homesteading the Noosphere", programmer and advocate Eric S. Raymond uses the concept in discussing the social workings of open-source software development. In the anime series Neon Genesis Evangelion, the Human Instrumentality Project has the goal of achieving the state of a noosphere. The game S.T.A.L.K.E.R Shadow of Chernobyl involves the use of the nuclear power plant for scientific experiments involving adjusting the noosphere to remove aggression from humans. As a failed attempt at doing this, the "Zone" was created. Progressive Death Metal band Obscura have a song called "Noosphere" on their album Cosmogenesis. In the 2008 video game LittleBigPlanet, the titular planet is described in terms similar to a noosphere as the physical manifestation of idle human thoughts. Users can further expand on this idea by creating levels and uploading them to the servers for other players to experience. In F. Paul Wilson's 2009 Repairman Jack novel Ground Zero, the recurring character of The Lady is revealed to be a manifestation of the noosphere whose function is that of a "beacon" which informs a higher intelligence ("the Ally") that sentient life exists in the area where she appears. The 2009 Warhammer 40,000 novel Mechanicum by Graham McNeill features a noosphere as an experimental communication infrastructure that empowers the user by harnessing the power of the collective mind. The book Metro 2033 by Dmitry Glukhovsky mentions the destruction of the noosphere during the last war, along with the destruction of paradise and hell. Dan Simmons's Ilium/Olympos novels use the noosphere as a way to explain the origins of powerful entities such as Ariel and Prospero, the former arising from a network of datalogging mote machines, and the latter deriving from a post-Internet logosphere. Cory Doctorow's short story "I, Rowboat" refers to noosphere as a cyberspace inhabited by digitised minds of humans who have chosen to leave their bodies. In the 2010 noosphere idea's exchange platform Nebula Noospherian (http://uk.linkedin.com/groups/Nebula-Noospherian-4431246), Miles Chinn (http://www.firstpost.com/topic/event/london-fashion-week-miles-chinn-chief-vision-officermov-videoo4OrRdZLs4o-51520-5.html) created and trademarked the term noospherian as no term previously existed with reference to global noospheric cognitions. The conscious, professional exploration of the noosphere provides a major theme in the Archonate series of novels by Canadian science-fiction author Matt Hughes.
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See also
Collective consciousness Global brain Knowledge ecosystem Noocracy

Notes
1. ^ Georgy S. Levit: Biogeochemistry, Biosphere, Noosphere: The Growth of the Theoretical System of Vladimir Ivanovich Vernadsky (1863-1945) ISBN 3-86135-351-2 2. ^ Georgy S. Levit: "The Biosphere and the Noosphere Theories of V. I. Vernadsky and P. Teilhard de Chardin: A Methodological Essay. International Archives on the History of Science/Archives Internationales D'Histoire des Sciences", 50 (144), 2000: p. 160-176 http://www2.uni-jena.de/biologie/ehh/personal/glevit/Teilhard.pdf 3. ^ "[...]he defined noosphere as the 'thinking envelope of the biosphere' and the 'conscious unity of souls'" David H. Lane, 1996, "The phenomenon of Teilhard: prophet for a new age" p.4 http://books.google.com/books? id=QrwityQkdxkC 4. ^ In 1922, Teilhard wrote in an essay with the title 'Hominization': "And this amounts to imagining, in one way or another, above the animal biosphere a human sphere, a sphere of reflection, of conscious invention, of conscious souls (the noosphere, if you will)" (1966, p. 63) It was a neologism employing the Greek word noos for "mind." (Teilhard de Chardin, "Hominization" (1923), "The Vision of the Past" pages 71,230,261 http://books.google.com/books?id=GnwPAQAAIAAJ ) 5. ^ Tambov State Technical University: The Prominent Russian Scientist V.I.Vernadsky http://www.tstu.ru/win/kultur/nauka/vernad/uchver.htm, in English 6. ^ "Evolution on Rails": Mechanisms and Levels of Orthogenesis by Georgy S. Levit and Lennart Olsson (http://agevolutionsbiologie.de/app/download/3171558102/levit_olsson_ortho.pdf) 7. ^ "Global Consciousness Project - consciousness, group consciousness, mind" (http://noosphere.princeton.edu/). Noosphere.princeton.edu. Retrieved 2012-07-24. 8. ^ "Get Smarter - Jamais Cascio" (http://www.theatlantic.com/doc/200907/intelligence). The Atlantic. 2012-07-03. Retrieved 2012-07-24. 9. ^ However, the Vatican regards Isidore of Seville as the patron saint of internauts, because of his pioneering work on indexing; see Classement Alphabtique.

References
Paul R. Samson and David Pitt (eds.)(1999), The Biosphere and Noosphere Reader: Global Environment, Society and Change. ISBN 0-415-16644-6 The Quest for a Unified Theory of Information, World Futures, Volumes "49 (3-4)" (http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/gwof20/49/3-4) & "50 (1-4)" (http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/gwof20/50/1-4) 1997, Special Issue Raymond, Eric (2000), "Homesteading the Noosphere", available online. (http://www.catb.org/~esr/writings/cathedral-bazaar/homesteading/) Norgaard, R. B. (1994). Development betrayed: the end of progress and a coevolutionary revisioning of the future. London; New York, Routledge. ISBN 0-415-06862-2

External links
"Evidence for the Akashic Field from Modern Consciousness Research"
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(http://www.stanislavgrof.com/pdf/Akashic%20Field%20Evidence.PDF) by consciousness researcher Dr. Stanislav Grof, M.D. http://www.lawoftime.org/GRI/GRI.html# The Place of the Noosphere in Cosmic Evolution (pdf) http://noosphere.princeton.edu/ Global Consciousness project at Princeton Fortaleciendo la Inteligencia Sincrnica (http://www.noosfera.cl) Unidad de Ciencia Noosfricas de la Universidad del Mar en Chile (http://www.noosfera.udelmar.cl) http://transhumanism.org/index.php/WTA/declaration/ http://www.odeo.com/channel/105280 "Just Say Yes to the Noosphere", a Podcast from Stanford Law School Omega Point Institute (http://omegapoint.org) Noosphere, Global Thought, Future Studies Semandeks (http://semandeks.com) A web application that tries to imitate Noosphere Synaptic Web (http://synapticweb.org) States that the Web is the substrate for the "sphere of human thought" Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Noosphere&oldid=564067455" Categories: Cyberspace Holism Information Age Integral thought Superorganisms This page was last modified on 13 July 2013 at 05:47. Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License; additional terms may apply. By using this site, you agree to the Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. Wikipedia is a registered trademark of the Wikimedia Foundation, Inc., a non-profit organization.

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