“How is technology changing the hierarchical nature of our world? History reveals an overall trend toward ever more coordination over ever-larger distances, which is easy to understand: new transportation technology makes coordination more valuable (by enabling mutual benefit from moving materials and life forms over larger distances) and new communication technology makes coordination easier. When cells learned to signal to neighbors, small multicellular organisms became possible, adding a new hierarchical level. When evolution invented circulatory systems and nervous systems for transportation and communication, large animals became possible. Further improving communication by inventing language allowed humans to coordinate well enough to form further hierarchical levels such as villages, and additional breakthroughs in communication, transportation and other technology enabled the empires of antiquity. Globalization is merely the latest example of this multi-billion-year trend of hierarchical growth.”

—  Max Tegmark

Life 3.0: Being Human in the Age of Artificial Intelligence (2017)

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Swedish-American cosmologist 1967

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“coordination of all efforts towards the overall goal;”

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“When technology extends one of our senses, a new translation of culture occurs as swiftly as the new technology is interiorized.”

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Source: 1960s, The Gutenberg Galaxy (1962), p. 47

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