Introducing Fractal Pluralism: Space and Scale
Applying these principles, I have
developed a model of the machinations of social change and a vision of Global
Justice that I call Fractal Pluralism. Fractal Pluralism brings a
fractal understanding to a pluralist conception of social change. Fractal
Pluralism is a model, a way of
spatially visualizing the intricate interconnection of the full spectrum of activities
being undertaken by people to bring about a life sustaining culture on this
planet. It is a form of scalar play, collapsing the dichotomy between local and
global to show the complex layering and the multi-scalarity of human
organizing. As a model in action, it is geared towards finding tactical
alliances on all scales. This does not mean that everyone is on the team. The
opposition is real and distraction, destruction and disengagement are ever
present. This model is a tool for visionary activists to conceptualize their
position in the pluralist process towards Global Justice. It is a re-imagining
of networks, intended to move us towards the goal of discerning which
relationships are useful for us to articulate, including markets, governments,
non-governmental organizations, spiritual communities and whomever else one
wants to include, honor and celebrate as doing the work to bring about Global
Justice.
First,
one must choose a point of focus. This could be an individual, a social
formation, an object, anything one can identify. Focusing on a particular
point, it becomes the intersection of the X and Y-axis. The Y-axis is scale.
Everything that the focal point participates in that is larger than itself, a
more complex organization which includes itself, extends up the Y-axis.
Everything smaller in scale than the point of focus, the levels of organization
which comprise it, descend down the Y-axis, below the X-axis. The X-axis shows
time moving horizontally. Everything to the left of the Y-axis marking all that
has come before. Everything to the right of the Y-axis marking being that which
shall emerge as the future. This model is crafted so that we can pin-point an
exact time-scale coordinate and map out the ways in which it is participating
in generating its part of this fractal pattern as it self-propagates iterations throughout the whole.
Basic
Fractal Pluralism Cross Formation:
Here,
we begin this model by describing the vertical Y-axis of space, taking just a
snap-shot of what is going on at a given point in time. If we begin with an
individual, everything to the left of the Y-axis represents their nature, their
nurture, their history of encounters with information, their
socio-economic-geographic-historic specificity- all that particularity, what
Donna Haraway calls the specificity of specificity. Through all these influencing forces,
they will limit their focus; they will choose interests; they will translate
those interests into action. Some of this action will be collective, bringing
it to a larger scale of the social world. Individuals will cluster, creating
social formations- social formations being a word intentionally open enough to
encompass the diversity of things that come from people uniting around interests
in some sort of activity. Social formations will include the people they consider to be their network,
those who they are consciously coordinating their activity with. Scaled up and
seen through a broader perspective, they also have their Actor Network.
Although they may be diverse in their goals, multiple in the topics they
address and that emerge, when pressed, most individuals within social
formations can identify a particular issue they most want to impact. This is the
level of the Issue Plateau, where the efforts of the particular social formation are
co-existing with those of diverse groups locally, regionally and world-wide who
are also working to bring about change, to bring about something new, in the
topography of that interest area.
Being
Pluralistic in our view of the broad landscape populated by diverse social
formations at the level of the interest plateau, we can see how these are often
the groups that are in rabid disagreement with each other over the kind of
change they want to see. This is also where the opposition exists, holding
strong, often controlling the infrastructures of the terrain- exerting with
tenacity the destructive, consuming violence of the blind industrial-growth
status quo. And this is where the Pluralist perspective enables us to be
strategic, redirecting our efforts towards the systems we are working to
transform. Instead of wasting our passion by directing our energy towards a
potential ally about a response that makes sense to them and that they have
come to given their specificity, we can put our energy towards doing our own
thing and exerting energy only towards those forces that are truly a threat to
global justice.
The Scales
of Fractal Pluralism:
If
we can achieve this way of seeing, this strategic, experiential being-ness of
compassionate understanding and acceptance, then at the next scale up, at the
planetary level, we can feel ourselves united with diverse individuals, social
formations and networks from all over the world- all working, dancing,
striving, struggling, playing, trying to bring about Global Justice and a
life-sustaining culture on this planet. From there you can play it backwards:
From all these efforts and desire to bring about Global Justice, people focus
on different issue areas by participating in diverse social formations, which
address different aspects of an issue, through governments, markets, media,
organizations and individuals. They are all co-existing in relationships outside the consideration by
the groups involved, whose activity influences and shapes each other, who
almost create the need for each other. Social formations actively articulate
their relationships with whom they consider to be their network. Individual
social formations are composed of individual people who choose to participate
because it is an active expression of their interests and passions based on
what makes sense to them given their specificity, their nature, their nurture,
and their history of encounters with information.
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