claim
active
claim:it-is-possible-for-us-to-build-a-world-in-which-people-are-emotionally-free-fully-themselves-and-alive-as-demonstrated-by-contemporary-projectsIt is possible for us to build a world in which people are emotionally free, fully themselves, and alive, as demonstrated by contemporary projects.
Optimism based on Mexicali, Eishin, and Whidbey Island.
Neighborhood — ranked by edge-count
Findings (4)
finding
- A direct report of experienced freedom attributed to the school environment.
- Testimonial evidence that living structure in housing can alter daily activities and self-perception.
- Poetic testimony of the nurturance felt in a living structure house.
- Eishin students made a film showing themselves jumping joyfully into the campus lake, fully clothed.supportsArtifact expressing a hymn to freedom and the realization of a dream.
Related by similarity (8)
cosine ≥ 0.65 · no typed edgeEntities in the same semantic neighborhood but without a typed relation to this one — candidates for new edges or unrecognized duplicates.
- Extension of the belonging thesis to cultural sustainability.
- The making of a living world cannot be separated from each person's search for the true self.claim0.813The enigmatic conclusion that the most personal, inward search yields the most public, functional harmony.
- Alexander's opening assertion about the character of true modern life.
- Ethical research priority raised by the thesis applied to deployed AI systems
- Critique of contemporary building processes.
- If processes are in use which have these attributes, then we may have the real possibility of a living world.hypothesis0.785Conditional statement linking the adoption of morphogenetic processes to the emergence of a living world.