Vestnik of Northern (Arctic) Federal University.
Series "Humanitarian and Social Sciences"
ISSN 2227-6564 e-ISSN 2687-1505 DOI:10.37482/2687-1505
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Section: Philosophy, Sociology, Politology Download (pdf, 3.1MB )UDC[004.81:159.955](045)AuthorsKrasnoshchek Platon LvovichPostgraduate Student, Institute of Social, Humanitarian and Political Sciences, Northern (Arctic) Federal University named after M.V. Lomonosov 2 prosp. Lomonosova, Arkhangelsk, 163002, Russian Federation; e-mail: volkov92work@gmail.com AbstractThis article briefly describes the implementation of the basic principles of Lewis Mumford’s megamachines in collective intelligence systems and communication networks existing today. The main focus is given to describing collective intelligence systems lacking any rigid structure in space as a consolidation of human resources in order to solve problems. In such systems the priority is shifting from physical challenges to intellectual ones, and under this shift, as well as changes in the environment, these systems become cognitive megamachines. The environment in which they are being formed and functioning has, due to the development of communication technology over the past two centuries, changed from material to digital. In particular, the invention of the telegraph, then the telephone, radio and later the Internet allowed us to communicate information quickly and effectively without it getting lost or outdated during transmission. This provided an opportunity for individuals to form structures having, compared to a single subject, much greater individual power to achieve any purpose regardless of the space-time coordinates. Thus, communication networks became communication channels for structures which actually are large neural networks. Compared to the previously available methods of communication, such as sounds or material signals, the speed and efficiency of information transmission have increased manyfold. For collective megamachines, the focus in the “process–knowledge” pair is replaced by the opposite, “knowledge–process”, for, while Mumford’s structures were primarily designed to achieve material goals, cognitive systems are originally aimed at finding solutions with their subsequent implementation.Keywordscognitive megamachines, collective megamachines, network intelligence, Lewis MumfordReferences
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