Politics is the exercise of power.
Politics is essential to our species, and all of the hominids; chimpanzees do it, bonobos do it, even gorillas do it. The politics of our genetic cousins is more immediate but still nuanced. Much derives from pure physical strength – our equivalent to military force – but the rest arises from social relations. In this, they, like us, use communication to best advantage.
Before the advent of telegraphy, power and communication flowed in seamless union, each reinforcing the other. The Rise of the Network has been the great Fall away from singularity. New strategies are required if any power wishes to remain coherent unto itself, but no strategy will allow power to successfully deny its connectedness.
We have no maps for these territories. They are truly terra nullius. We know power has failed – or rather, failed to adapt – and we have yet to find the light switch. The opportunity presented has produced a kind of Cambrian Explosion of different forms of power, some impossibly bizarre, others needlessly complex, a few seeming archetypal in their perfection and elegance.
The essays collected in this volume represent an attempt to apprehend and articulate the forms of power within the connected era. I came to this research from earlier work in the studies of communities and the sharing of media; by the middle 2000s it had become clear that not just the distribution of media but the distribution of power itself had begun to decisively shift. As I looked deeper, I began to understand that ‘hyperconnectivity’ created a platform for the vast transformations in culture appearing with both greater frequency and piquancy.
Prepared for the 2011 Personal Democracy Forum, Hyperpolitics is available in print, Kindle and PDF versions.
To purchase the print version, visit the page at Lulu.com.
To purchase the Kindle version, visit the page at Amazon.com.
To download the PDF (it’s free!), click here.

Congrats on getting this published. Now I just need you to record an Audible version….
Looking forward to reading your thoughts.
J
Hi, I am from Melbourne. I came across your name and work via the interview featured in the weekend magazine.
Please find a completely assessment of the state of the world altogether in 2011, and how we got to here too, via these references.
References on politics:
An Open Letter written in response to the Kosovo crisis in 1999:
http://www.dabase.org/openlett.htm
The themes in the above essay were extended into this remarkable book:
http://www.dabase.org/not2.htm
Elaborations on this book can be found here:
http://www.beezone.com/AdiDa/reality-humanity.html a very sobering essay
http://www.beezone.com/news.html
Also http://www.dabase.org/spacetim.htm
An essay on the evolution of humankind and how it really happens:
http://www.aboutadidam.org/readings/divine_physics_of_evolution/index.html
Essays on Art and Culture via:
http://www.adidaupclose.org/Art_and_Photography/rebirth_of_sacred_art.html
http://www.adidamla.org/newsletters/toc-aprilmay2006.html
http://www.aboutadidam.org/readings/art_is_love/index.html
http://www.dabase.org/restsacr.htm
The Truth About Life
http://www.adidam.org/teaching/aletheon/truth-life.aspx
http://www.aboutadidam.org/newsletters/toc-february2004.html Right Human Life
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Audible Version? Text to speech? PDF is a bit funny and does not preserve document structure like plaintext. Need to map â to apostrophe and find paragraph breaks. P?D?Files mash and split paragraphs. Welcome to the digital dark age. Unfortunately blinkies just have to “harden the fsck up” . Nice of Mark and Lulu.com to allow this accessibility.
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