Bottom’s-up
Michael A. Rizzotti
When i first read Albert-Lászlo Barabási’s
Linked: How Everything Is Connected to Everything
Else and What It Means for Business, Science, and Everyday Life, i had a hard time understanding the premise of the book.
When i read
Linked a second time i realized why.
In his book the author continuously refers to links, nods and hubs. What he is
referring to, is the physical aspect of these links, whereas i was thinking about the metaphysical binding between these
links. Barabási was talking hardware i was thinking
software.
Shortly after
reading Linked i
read Emergence: The Connected Lives of
Ants, Brains, Cities, and Software by Steven Johnson. In his book Johnson
describes self-organizing systems. He reveals how complex organisms assemble
and develop without any master planner. A good example of these
emergence or
bottom-up systems is the ant colony.
Self organizing systems
It is
wrongly believed that the queen ant is the ruler of its colony. The queen’s sole
function is the laying of eggs to populate the colony. An ant colony has no
ruler to speak of. It relies instead on a complex form of decentralized
intelligence. The ants communicate between each other by recognizing patterns
of pheromone trails left behind by other fellow ants. Hence, pheromones play
the central role in the organization of the colony. Somehow, each ant self-assigns
its own role in the colony without sign of anarchy. Each position of every
single ant is accounted for by the pheromone trail each of them leaves behind. This
emergence system works harmoniously without the help of a ruler.
Net-mind
Johnson
describes how the brain is also a self organizing system. The important thing
to remember here is the significance of the unifying and binding principle. What
makes the brain work is the bursts of electric fields
that connect cells to each other. These electric fields link the physical
neurons into a unifying vitality. Binding the physical
principle of the brain with all other organs in the body to work harmoniously
together to promote life.
Each one of
us connected to the Internet acts like a brain neuron. Each neuron is linked
with other neurons through a web of electrical impulses on the Internet. All
the net-lings on the planet become a mass of neurons that could act as a planetary
brain. The unfathomable activity of this brain is tentatively called the
Net-mind. It is omnipresent (omni
meaning universal) and perhaps even omnificent (with unlimited creative
powers). Even though a single self-neuron does not fathom or understand what
the Net-mind does or thinks, this bottom-up form of planetary interconnected
activity is alive must to be reckoned with.
This
bottom-up system is very different from the top-down hierarchies we have been
accustomed to for eons. Top-down systems are based on secrecy, control,
chauvinism, surveillance and trickle down oppression. Pyramid systems have
supplanted any other form of governance since the dawn of our civilization. The
main reason is that when an individual or a small group accumulates a greater
amount of power than the norm they automatically revert to a top-down hierarchy
to maintain, control and expand their authority.
The recent
emergence of the Net-mind is
unprecedented in our planetary history. It remains to be seen how this
bottom-up activity will affect the top-down powers of the world. It is apparent
that Internet propagated news are currently setting the agenda in our current geo-political
world. Corporate news and government press conferences not only lag behind but
must respond to Net induced lead stories. This is only
the beginning of a notable shift in the power systems as we enter the new
millennium.
the netage