Generating knowledge and novel concepts requires privacy and control over the concept.
Instant access to knowledge has cheapened and diluted the process of creating new concepts.
The guys who put knowledge on the 'internet shelf' are not the guys who made the valueable knowledge in the first place.
The best way to create knowledge is to isolate concepts, structures and relationships into the human mind.
As soon as a concept stops being literally secret, it becomes infintely less worthwhile. Nobody works on hard intellectual problems any more because they've been massively cheapened by CTRL C, and CTRL V functionality.
The James Bond-ian culture of spies fighting over a hidden concept, is not just a flight of fancy at the movie theatres, it is one of the best culturally visible examples of how to develop and keep secret, aka. a new concept.
Spying, duplicating and publicating knowledge into instant-access platforms, is way more dangerous than anyone publicly admits.
Instant access to knowledge has cheapened and diluted the process of creating new concepts.
The guys who put knowledge on the 'internet shelf' are not the guys who made the valueable knowledge in the first place.
The best way to create knowledge is to isolate concepts, structures and relationships into the human mind.
As soon as a concept stops being literally secret, it becomes infintely less worthwhile. Nobody works on hard intellectual problems any more because they've been massively cheapened by CTRL C, and CTRL V functionality.
The James Bond-ian culture of spies fighting over a hidden concept, is not just a flight of fancy at the movie theatres, it is one of the best culturally visible examples of how to develop and keep secret, aka. a new concept.
Spying, duplicating and publicating knowledge into instant-access platforms, is way more dangerous than anyone publicly admits.