Thinking Backward: A Knowledge Network for the Next Century

The standards of educational information exchange are still firmly rooted in a Newtonian paradigm that emphasizes strict rules of information exchange. With the explosion of information since World War II, and especially its accessibility through the mechanism of the internet, this paradigm has bec...

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Main Author: Tom Haymes
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Arizona State University 2021-01-01
Series:Current Issues in Education
Subjects:
Online Access:https://cie.asu.edu/ojs/index.php/cieatasu/article/view/1913
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spelling doaj-7f495c64842d4af9aa81972005a4bfa32021-09-02T17:33:26ZengArizona State UniversityCurrent Issues in Education1099-839X2021-01-01221 (Sp Iss)Thinking Backward: A Knowledge Network for the Next CenturyTom Haymes0Ideaspaces The standards of educational information exchange are still firmly rooted in a Newtonian paradigm that emphasizes strict rules of information exchange. With the explosion of information since World War II, and especially its accessibility through the mechanism of the internet, this paradigm has become a barrier to effective exchanges of information at all levels. Vannevar Bush recognized this problem as early as 1945 and provided a roadmap to addressing it in his famous As We May Think. Douglas Engelbart and Theodore Holmes Nelson applied Bush’s vision to technology but we have never fully realized its potential in part due to our Newtonian information paradigm. This article argues that what Bush, Engelbart, and Nelson proposed is essentially an Einsteinian (relativistic) notion of information flows with tools specifically designed to facilitate the augmentation of human knowledge. It further posits what such a system of knowledge exchange might look like and how we might begin to build it. https://cie.asu.edu/ojs/index.php/cieatasu/article/view/1913Knowledge NetworksInformation ExchangeTechnology SystemsParadigm ShiftSystems of InformationVannevar Bush
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Tom Haymes
spellingShingle Tom Haymes
Thinking Backward: A Knowledge Network for the Next Century
Current Issues in Education
Knowledge Networks
Information Exchange
Technology Systems
Paradigm Shift
Systems of Information
Vannevar Bush
author_facet Tom Haymes
author_sort Tom Haymes
title Thinking Backward: A Knowledge Network for the Next Century
title_short Thinking Backward: A Knowledge Network for the Next Century
title_full Thinking Backward: A Knowledge Network for the Next Century
title_fullStr Thinking Backward: A Knowledge Network for the Next Century
title_full_unstemmed Thinking Backward: A Knowledge Network for the Next Century
title_sort thinking backward: a knowledge network for the next century
publisher Arizona State University
series Current Issues in Education
issn 1099-839X
publishDate 2021-01-01
description The standards of educational information exchange are still firmly rooted in a Newtonian paradigm that emphasizes strict rules of information exchange. With the explosion of information since World War II, and especially its accessibility through the mechanism of the internet, this paradigm has become a barrier to effective exchanges of information at all levels. Vannevar Bush recognized this problem as early as 1945 and provided a roadmap to addressing it in his famous As We May Think. Douglas Engelbart and Theodore Holmes Nelson applied Bush’s vision to technology but we have never fully realized its potential in part due to our Newtonian information paradigm. This article argues that what Bush, Engelbart, and Nelson proposed is essentially an Einsteinian (relativistic) notion of information flows with tools specifically designed to facilitate the augmentation of human knowledge. It further posits what such a system of knowledge exchange might look like and how we might begin to build it.
topic Knowledge Networks
Information Exchange
Technology Systems
Paradigm Shift
Systems of Information
Vannevar Bush
url https://cie.asu.edu/ojs/index.php/cieatasu/article/view/1913
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