Who’s Who in Collective Intelligence: Craig Hamilton

Alpha E-H, Collective Intelligence
Craig Hamilton
Craig Hamilton

Craig Hamilton and Claire Zammit are writers, educators, and strategic consultants. They work with organizations applying their principles of evolutionary culture, creating life-enhancing, growth-oriented workplaces, and achieving the adaptability and resilience that comes from paying careful attention to the collaborative environment.  Craig Hamilton's original home page (different from link embedded in photograph above: www.collective-intelligence.us.

Thinking together without ego:  Collective intelligence as an evolutionary catalyst

The Book
The Book

Who’s Who in Collective Intelligence: Francis Heylighen

Alpha E-H, Collective Intelligence, Cultural Intelligence
Francis Heylighen
Francis Heylighen

Francis Heylighen is a research professor at the Free University of Brussels (VUB), where he directs the Evolution, Complexity and Cognition group. His research is focused on the self-organization and evolution of complex, intelligent systems consisting of many interacting agents. He is editor of the Principia Cybernetica Project for the development of an evolutionary-systemic philosophy, and chair of the Global Brain group. He has published over a hundred scientific papers on these and related topics. Home page: http://pcp.vub.ac.be/HEYL.html

The Emergence of a Global Brain

The Book
The Book

Who’s Who in Collective Intelligence: Peggy Holman

Alpha E-H, Collective Intelligence
Peggy Holman
Peggy Holman

Peggy Holman convenes conversations that matter using generative processes that call forth the best of who people are and can be to unleash the energy and wisdom to move dreams to action, resulting in more resilient, agile, collaborative and alive people and systems. The second edition of her book, The Change Handbook (Berrett-Koehler, 2007), has been warmly received as an aid to people in reinventing their organizations and communities. Peggy has an MBA from Seattle University. See www.opencirclecompany.com.

Collective intelligence and the emergence of wholeness

The Book
The Book

Who’s Who in Collective Intelligence: Keith Hopper

Alpha E-H, Collective Intelligence
Keither Hopper
Keither Hopper

Keith Hopper (www.keithhopper.com) is a web product designer and innovator. He currently leads Public Action™, an online software environment engaging individuals with Public Broadcasters in building unique online communities. The environment runs on public TV and radio stations, along with program websites across the US including www.theworld.org and www.cartalk.com. Keith Hopper is also the Co-founder of the Boston Social Technology Society and creator of the Collective Problem Solving Wiki. He has a degree in Human Factors Engineering from Tufts University and is the recipient of several awards in design strategy and engineering.

Empowering individuals towards collective online production

The Book
The Book

Who’s Who in Collective Intelligence: Norman L. Johnson

Alpha I-L, Collective Intelligence

Norman L. Johnson
Norman L. Johnson

Dr. Norman Johnson recently became Chief Scientist at Referentia Systems, after 25 years at Los Alamos National Laboratory as a scientist and manager. Because the message is more important than the messenger, see http://CollectiveScience.com.

To learn more about Norman Johnson, visithttp://CollectiveScience.com/SymIntel.html

Science of CI: Resources for change

The Book
The Book

Who’s Who in Collective Intelligence: Mister Jalopy

Alpha I-L, Collective Intelligence, Commercial Intelligence

Mister Jalopy
Mister Jalopy

Mister Jalopy is a fearlessly experimental welder, woodworker, bicycle mechanic, writer, photographer, embroiderer, artist, electronics troubleshooter, teacher, furniture rebuilder, garage saler, activist, wheeler dealer, street racer, blogger, editor, auto mechanic, speaker, fabricator, builder, large appliance repairman, columnist, designer and entrepreneur.

Empowering consumers to be able to repair, rebuild, reuse and reinvent the products they invest in is at the core of Mr. J’s philosophy. As part of the Maker’s Bill of Rights article in Make: Magazine, Jalopy declared, “if you can’t open it, you don’t own it” Asserting that an individual should be able to open, repair and modify the products that they buy, the Maker’s Bill of Rights gave a clear voice to the Maker Movement’s frustration with increasingly disposable products that lock out consumers.

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