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Scooped by Martin (Marty) Smith onto Thank You Economy Revolution |
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A decade ago Wikipedia burst into a world not ready to comprehend it. Thousands of people cooperating effectively, without price signals to offer "incentives" or managerial hierarchy to direct efforts was an impossibility. And yet, it moves. And as it moved it combined with a deep shift across many disciplines, from biology and neuroscience to organizational sociology, experimental economics, and social psychology to paint a very different view of who we are, as human beings, and what we are capable of when we build and inhabit systems that rely on our better selves rather than on the cramped, pessimistic view of traditional economic modeling. A decade ago our explanations of Wikipedia depended on the uniqueness of the Net. Today, we are ready to learn the deeper lessons: that we are more cooperative than we came to believe in the last half century, and that our challenges lie in learning how to build a new field of cooperative human systems design not only online, but for our lives more generally as the kind of social human beings we really are. Via jean lievens
Martin (Marty) Smith's insight:
Benkler's talk starts at time code: 26:26
Martin (Marty) Smith's comment,
December 21, 2012 11:28 AM
Great talk by a brilliant man. Benkler starts at 26:26. The "death of scientific selfishness" is something I've been writing about for several years so will post something on this excellent talk soon.
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