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  1. Polly Wiessner: "Graeber and Wengrow struggle with the concept of egalitarianism, which they see as “sameness” in some specific ways that are agreed upon to be important (p. 126).However, egalitarian relations are not about sameness in small-scale societies, but rather about respect and appreciation of different skills offered by group ...

  2. Bio. Vladimir De Thézier is a progressive researcher, writer and blogger based in Montreal, Quebec. He served as Special Projects Manager for the Institute for Ethics and Emerging Technologies from January 2006 to December 2007.

  3. “Believability-weighted” means to weigh the opinions of people who are more believable more heavily than less believable people. This is distinctly different from weighing everyone’s votes equally, as in a democracy. Who are believable people?

  4. I co-founded a research community with John Smart exploring the idea of an Evolutionary Developmental (Evo Devo) Universe. I use the worldview concept as a framework for integrating insights from different disciplines. In my current research: In astrobiology, I aim to help organize and develop the field of technosignature research.

  5. Parallel Villages - P2P Foundation. = central concept of the book How to Build a Village. Description. Claude Lewenz: "Perhaps the key difference between what I propose in the book, and many of the ideas for 21st century habitat that we see is that between reacting to a negative, and moving forward toward a positive.

  6. Analysing the origins and present functions of this fiction, the author suggests that we can conceptualize differentials in economic power within the sharing economy in terms of the work that goes into the reproduction of this sharing fiction and the ability to capitalize on it in terms of price differentials." Categories: Sharing. EthicalEconomy.

  7. This chapter explores historical ideas of Chinese (huaxia) identity through an examination of ethnic concepts implied in historical writings on the Five Dynasties, completed in the late tenth and early eleventh centuries.