Bootstrap Institute logo Doug Engelbart's
   Colloquium at Stanford
An In-Depth Look at "The Unfinished Revolution"
Session 3
The AC-UNU Millennium Project: A bootstrap perspective
Peter Yim1.*
- unedited transcript -

.as Doug mentioned I'm in a fairly unique position because I've spent the last there years or so with the Millennium Project and also I've spent over a year with Doug, in person, now. With Doug, it goes way back. I remember it was the end of the 1980's. I was working on my own company. I ran a manufacturing operation with a fairly strategic outlook. And I was going into computive integrated manufacturing. And soon enough, I found that we were dealing with a lot of transaction processes that needs automation, that could be integrated, but did not cover a lot of the aspects that human interaction engaging in. 

And there I had a chance to read about Doug. And I believe the first book that I came across was Irene Greif's CSCW's Book of Readings, and the first paper there was B. Bush as we were thinking. And the next four papers were Doug Engelbart's; and I believe the first one that came after that was Doug's sort of predecessor or a variant of his seminal October 1962 Air Force Report on augmenting the human intellect. I was awed; and I said one of these days I will want to meet with this person. And through a lot of coincidence I got to communicate with Doug-I mean, I can tell you later in a different setting. But in through last year, working closely with him, I come to realize more and more what he was trying to do. And I was suggesting that the Millennium Project might be a good case where we that could sort of see how one group has been doing things that are fairly similar. And, at the end of this presentation, maybe I will try to pull some parallels and provide some of my personal observations.
 

The 15 Challenges (99-SOF)

     1. How can sustainable development be achieved for all?
     2. How can water conflicts be prevented while making water available to everyone?
     3. How can population growth and resources be brought into balance?
     4. How can genuine democracy emerge from authoritarian regimes?
     5. How can global long-term perspectives be more frequently used in policy making?
     6. How can the globalization and convergence of information and communications technologies be shaped for the good of all?
     7. How can ethical markets increase economic development to reduce the gap between the rich and poor?
     8. What can be done to reduce the threat of new and reemerging diseases, and the increasing number of immune micro-organisms?
     9. How can the capacity to make correct decisions be improved, as institutions and the nature of work are changing?
   10. How can shared values and new security strategies reduce ethnic conflict and terrorism?
   11. How can the changing status of women improve the human condition?
   12. How can organized crime be stopped from becoming more powerful and sophisticated global enterprises?
   13. How can the growing energy demand be met safely?
   14. What are the most effective ways to accelerate scientific breakthroughs and technological applications to improve the human condition?
   15. How can ethical considerations become more routinely incorporated into global decisions?
 

Just sort of a point of order, a few people came up to me and asked what were the fifteen challenges, I mea, I just put a slide on it. You can't read it here anyway.

Fig 1

Other people asked me what were the website URL's. There are two, I mean, actually, they are aliases. I mean either its millennium-project.org or ac-unu.org/millennium. 
 

The AC-UNU Millennium Project
  • The Millennium Project's purpose, as started in their 1992 feasibility study, is to assist in organizing futures research; update and improve global thinking about the future; making that thinking available for consideration in public policy making, advanced training, public education and feedback to create cumulative wisdom about potential futures.
  • It is a wonderful example of how one group have been successful in harnessing the collective intelligence of hundreds of individuals to achieve its purpose

And the Millennium Project's purpose as stated in the 1992 visibility study is to assist organizing futures research; update and improve global thinking about the future; and making that thinking available for consideration in public policy making, advanced training, public education and feedback to create cumulative wisdom about potential futures. And, I believe it's a wonderful example of how this one group has been harnessing the collective intelligence of hundreds of individuals to achieve that purpose. How should we characterize it?
 

Characterizing the Millennium Project
  • The Millennium Project is the first example of the globalization of futures research. It is an inter-institutional, multi-disciplinary, and international participatory think tank of 550 futurists, scholars, and policy makers in 50 countries, organized in a distributed network of 11+ nodes.
  • Like the Bootstrap community, it provides a new forum, a new environment for discourse on issues which did not seem to fall within anybody's day job (although it actually is, at least for policy makers, corporate leadership, and anyone of us as responsible, intellectual human beings)

I believe the Millennium Project is the first example of the globalization of futures research. Futures research is actually fairly new even in the United States. And to extend it across the world, I mean, from places like Africa, to Eastern Europe, to Latin America, to Asia this is fairly unique. It is an inter-institutional, multi-disciplinary, and international participatory think tank of about 550 futurists, scholars, and policy makers in 50 countries and, as Jerry was saying, organized in a distributed network of more than 11 nodes. I mean he said eleven, but I added one more; he didn't count the United States.

And like the Bootstrap Community, it provides a new forum, a new environment for discourse on issues which did not seem to fall within anybody's day job. When you really think about it, I mean, you would think the policy maker's day job or corporate leadership, but the way our paradigm, the way we are structured, our corporations, our law making. The entire system, I mean is actually nobody's day job. I'll come back to this point actually later if we have time. So, if we look at them, towards what they are doing, then let's ask the first question: What are they trying to improve? 
 

What is their "Improvement Vector"

     Improving:
     "Global futures thinking"

Or in Doug's terminology, what is their improvement vector? You could say that they are trying to improve "Global futures thinking." And do they have this sort of A work, B work, and C work? I mean, I'm going back to almost everything Jerry was saying in the video just now.
 

What is their A, B & C Work?
  • A: execute their research agenda - e.g. identify global issues, opportunities, challenges, plausible scenarios to the year 2025, . etc., as planned on a yearly basis
  • B: organizing themselves effectively to cope with their work; collect and apply futures study methodologies
  • C: study on how they could better organize; improving on the futures study methodologies

In the A work they execute their research agenda, for example, like identifying global issues, opportunities, challenges, plausible scenarios to the year 2025, et cetera, this is planned on a yearly basis. What is the B work? They try to organize themselves effectively to cope with their work; and thy collect and apply futures study methodologies. And that's how they try to improve executing that research agenda. Do they do any C work? I would guess they do because they study how they could better organize; and they try to improve, as Jerry was saying, I mean, getting the mixed iteration on the futures methodology on improving the futures study methodologies.
 

Is it a NIC?
  • They network via meetings, the telephone, snail mail, courier, a listserv and a website
  • Yes, a NIC of their global outlook panelists, researcher and policy makers
  • and even a NIC of NICs, in cases where "nodes" have formed themselves into NICs

Are they a NIC? Well, they network. I mean they do it via meetings, telephone, snail mail, courier; they have a listserv and a website. Yes, I would think they are a NIC in terms of they are a group of networked, global outlook panelists, researchers, and policy makers. And even at times, they are a NIC of NIC's because, I mean, Jerry was mentioning that certain nodes have their own network environment doing--have their own research agenda besides just trying to execute the Millennium Project research plans. What's the knowledge process and knowledge product?
 

Their Knowledge Process & Products
  • Leveraging through feedback of findings to panelists and policy makers
  • The annual State of the Future Report
  • Futures Matrix
  • their Futures Methodology book

Well, one thing is they have the feedback loop. They try to leverage through feedback of findings to panelists and policy makers. Their products include like an annual State of the Future Report. They have what they call the Futures Matrix. And they have Futures Methodology Book. 

Fig. 2

This is sort of a picture of the website where they show their futures matrix. I mean, it's kind of difficult to see. On the left, we have things like development, questions, issues, opportunities, challenges, actions, and scenarios. And on the top, across, we've got: demographics of human resources, environmental changes and biodiversity, technological capacity, governance and conflicts, international economics and wealth, and integration of whole futures. This is one way they are presenting a fairly dynamic view of the information, o knowledge, they are gathering. And if every one of those sort of blue dots is clickable. And if you click into it-I mean, for example if you do technological capacity against challenges, you see all the challenges and answers in terms of technology answer that they have. So are they bootstrapping?
 

A M-P / Bootstrap Collaboration
  • So, are they "Bootstrapping"?
  • Room for collaboration with the Bootstrap Community

  • - co-evolution of tools system as well as human system (M-P can use a boost in technology, one area where part of the Bootstrappers are highly enthusiastic about)
    - M-P is content rich, and has already focused challenges into major domains for us. We, the Bootstrap community, can isolate specific areas (say some of the challenges) to delve into as test cases for Bootstrapping.
    - tremendous opportunity for contribution to metaNIC
    - more pragmatically, jointly, we could tap into funding support that, possibly, neither of us alone, could access.

I guess we'll have to ask Doug. But, I mean they are actually doing things that I would say would be highly synergistic. And that's why sometime in the middle of the year I had the honor to put Doug in touch with Jerry. And sometime in November last year we came to an agreement that we would try to collaborate. And that's why Jerry is showing up on video. He is actually going to be here next week. He couldn't be here this week because he's in Japan. And then, we are going to have some fairly serious meeting about ongoing collaboration. Where are the sorts of possibilities for collaboration? Like co-evolution of tools systems as well as human systems? I mean, they could definitely use a boost in technology, which is one area that some of our bootstrappers are highly interested as think about.

They are content rich and have already focused challenges into major domains for us. The Bootstrap Community can actually isolate specific areas to delve into as test cases for Bootstrapping. They would offer tremendous opportunity for contribution to metaNIC's because a lot of their methodologies would be helpful across the board for NIC's. And more pragmatically, jointly we could tap into funding support that, possibly, neither of us alone, could access. So, through this time maybe, I mean, now that I still have a couple of minutes, maybe I'll express some personal observations on the paradigms shift that Doug is calling us to go about. 
 

PPY's Personal Observations on the Paradigm Shift
Doug is Calling for
  • Boostrapping is holistic and not reductionist
  • it calls for openness, and for a total different attitude towards sharing, that almost need a transformation in our culture for it to thrive
  • it needs to be internalized
  • At this point, it (still) is, in Donald Stoke's term in his "Pasteur's Quadrant: Basic Science and Technological Innovation," use-inspired basic research.
  • It calls for action, not just talk.

First of all, I mean, I think stands out more than anything else does, bootstrapping is holistic and not sort of reductionist approach. It calls for some openness, and for a total different attitude towards sharing, that almost needs a transformation in our culture for it to thrive. It needs to be internalized. Doug sort of complains sometimes when companies come in and ask, "What can you do for us?"

In addition, he says, "You have to be doing this for yourself." I mean, I sort of draw a parallel with this on the quality movement. The Japanese were extremely successful; we see how they take quality. I was watching CNN when they talked about the last few decades, I mean, when Japan was going strong with its shipbuilding industry. The factory managers would watch the ships launch with sort of their katana, or whatever you call the knife, in hand. I mean, if the ship doesn't launch, they kill themselves. That's fairly serious about quality. We don't do it that seriously. Or, alternatively, when you internalize-I mean sometimes my kid would say he is busy, or he is sleepy or tired, or something. And, I would say, "I can't learn this for you." Or, "I can't take a nap for you." I mean that's something that they will have to do it themselves; same thing with bootstrapping-it needs to be internalized.

And, at this point, bootstrapping is still sort of, in Donald Stoke's term, in his Pasteur's Quadrant-this is a book, which critiques on the way that B. Bush has sort of isolated the research agenda into two poles of a basic research and an applied research. Doug's idea is a sort of use-inspired basic research; and again, it doesn't fall into anybody's lap.

And, lastly, it calls for action, and not just talk. So with this I will end the session. And I was told that it's time for a break, too. Thank you.

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