If the last two years taught us anything, it’s that humanity is now at
its most critical inflection point. We stand at the precipice of a major
turning in western civilisation – the culmination of a millennium of
human development, seminal events, knowledge, and culture.
It is
undeniable, yet not at all clear, the direction we are headed, or what
the future holds, and who will be around to see it come to fruition. We
are not seers or prophets and cannot peer into the future, but we can
read the signposts of the past and present.
We have a wealth of
shared experience and a vast living memory – a collective consciousness
updated and added to every day. If we search humanity’s archive, we find
answers to many of these questions. Those answers have always been
available, gleaned from understanding ourselves, our journey as a
family, and the human race.
French novelist Alphonse Karr
famously coined the saying, “plus ça change, plus c’est la même chose,”
or, the more things change, the more they are the same.
Yes, we have been here before.
Let’s
step back to the late 19th and early 20th centuries – a time of
upheavals and period of great turbulence on many human fronts –
politically, spiritually, and technologically. The western world was in
the midst of an existential crisis as secularisation brought with it two
disruptive forces to the traditional order of knowledge and influence:
the rise of the intellectual and mass media.
It is perhaps no
coincidence that the world finds itself in a very similar impasse
approximately a century later, with many of the same conditions present
today, only on a much more pervasive level....<<<Read More>>>...