Welcome to the Wisdom and the Future Research Center, where researchers are exploring the question
How can we wisely create our future?
We welcome your participation as spectators, enthusiasts, learners, researchers, or advocates.
If you have comments, questions, suggestions, or issues and wish to contact the secretary, please click here to send me an email or leave a comment or question on the discussion page.
Research is conducted according to the Wikiversity research guidelines.
The following sections suggest the evolving research agenda.
Wisdom can be briefly described as pursuit of well-being.
The Wikiversity course wisdom explores several more formal definitions of wisdom, lists exemplars of Wisdom, and provides guidance for wise decision making.
The Wikiversity course Living Wisely offers a course of study, reflections, and actions intended to guide you toward living life more wisely.
The Wikiversity applied wisdom curriculum provides a variety of courses students can choose from.
The essay and video seeking real good describe a wise path forward.
As we learn to focus on what is most important in life we are creating a wiser future. The Wikiversity course What Matters helps students explore what is most important in life.
Describing the future as we would like to see it unfold is an important step toward creating that future. The Wikiversity course Envisioning Our Future helps students imagine and describe the desirable and attainable future they foresee.
Researchers are creating this gallery of envisioned futures.
Science fiction can provide rapid prototyping tools that help us imagine, share, and evaluate possible futures.
As the future unfolds It is wise to increase protection of human rights worldwide. The Wikiversity course Assessing Human Rights proposes an approach to advancing human rights, world wide.
As technological progress expands the range of what we can do, it becomes more important to carefully decide what we ought to do. We are currently struggling with a transition from tribal cultures to a global culture. Moral reasoning is likely to progress beyond theism and other vestiges of tribal culture and toward a global perspective.
Elements of moral reasoning include:
An important moral question is who matters? Possible answers include: me, my friends and family, my community, my nation, all the world’s people, sentient beings, all beings, all living species, people yet to be born, all beings for all time.
These ideas are developed more fully in the course on Moral Reasoning.
An ongoing research project is exploring how we can improve our social operating systems, seeking better solutions that can unleash the wisdom of the people while avoiding the folly that is so salient today. The project recognizes that If we could work together constructively, we could all flourish.
What, if anything, are the essential roles of government? We can work to evolve governments.
How can we best account for value and exchange goods and services fairly?
We need to overcome existing economic faults and eliminate crony capitalism.
We need to evolve our money systems.
How do we wisely care for ourselves and others as we approach the end of our lifespan?
Potential references:
While the full list of emerging technologies is quite long, a shorter list of technological advances promise to transform how we live. These include:
To wisely create our future we have to solve the grand challenges we face today.
An ongoing research project is working to identify the various causes of suboptimal life experiences.
Research projects on other threats include:
Wisdom is action! We can work to make wisdom the next pinnacle of achievement.
Each of us can:
Active researchers are:
Educational level: this is a research resource. |