CONCEPT
Ecological Literacy
Capra's name for the <em>understanding of organizational principles</em> — networks, diversity, cycles, cooperation, flexibility — that ecosystems have evolved to sustain life, proposed as design specifications for any system that aspires to sustainability.
Ecological literacy, the concept Capra developed through the Center for Ecoliteracy he founded in Berkeley in 1995, is the practical ability to perceive and apply the organizational principles that living ecosystems use to maintain themselves. Capra distilled these into five: networks rather than hierarchies, diversity rather than monoculture, cycles rather than linear progress, cooperation rather than pure competition, and flexibility rather than optimization. The argument — developed in The Hidden Connections (2002) and The Systems View of Life (2014) — is that these are not biology-specific principles but structural patterns that any complex adaptive system must satisfy to remain viable over time. Applied to the AI transition, ecological literacy becomes the design specification for building the intelligence ecosystem in ways that sustain rather than deplete the cognitive, cultural, and institutional resources on which human flourishing depends.
In The You On AI Field Guide
The five principles are not options from a menu but interlocking requirements. Networks provide resilience through redundancy; strip away network structure
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