Sunday, January 6, 2013

Open Source Systems

The metaphor for every conceptual system is the computer based information system Kernel, Operating System and Application Program.  Name the system from Religion, Politics, Money, Science, Language, Family, etc.  The metaphor applies in an Object Oriented Paradigm.

Everything can be expressed by this one shoe fits all statement?

Yes!  Only a nerd would look at the world this way?  It is no different than saying the bible is the metaphor.

The bible is just another expression of the basic metaphor.  Some say it is the inspired word of God.  It is simply an historical hierarchical proprietary operating system called religion ideology expressing the conceptual metaphor that has since been developed and refined by science to its best expression to date:  The structure of information and knowledge existing on our computer systems.  Our best structured thinking implemented on a machine tool.

There are many proprietary information system metaphors operating today on this computer system machine tool.  All the system expressions of the Metaphor which are not proprietary,  are public commons called Open Source.

This TED talk presents Open Source in a very simple manner that is one simple way to look at it.

Development an establishment of the Kernel, Operating System and Application Metaphor using Open Source methods creates the universal conceptual solutions of tomorrow to the problems that face the world today.  Applying this Metaphor to our social systems employs the Computational Trinity of Logic, Language and Structure.

The solution to the problem domain of Money is that it must become an open source system.  It was intended to be an open source system by our Constitution but became a proprietary system by the establishment of the Federal Reserve.  Money and monetary systems are properly a Public Commons, Open Source Domain belonging to the people and the government of the people.  The sovereign right of monetary system control must be reclaimed by the people and taken away from the banks.  Banks are merely a category of users of monetary system applications having some limited and controlled proprietary rights as a user community.

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