PmWiki.Ludotopian History

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April 05, 2017, at 06:46 AM by 60.34.223.215 - amazon links
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* [[http://www.anotherway.jp/seriousgamesjapan/ | Serious Games Japan]]
to:
* [[http://www.anotherway.jp/seriousgamesjapan/ | Serious Games Japan]]

(:amazonpl wwwtamaryokan-20 1403984123 :)(:amazonpl wwwtamaryokan-20 0143120611 :)(:amazonpl wwwtamaryokan-20 3319406116 :)
March 06, 2017, at 11:40 PM by 60.34.223.215 - better linking
Changed lines 22-23 from:
* Games for Change - http://www.gamesforchange.org/
* Serious Games Japan - http://www.anotherway.jp/seriousgamesjapan/
to:
* [[http://www.gamesforchange.org/ | Games for Change]]
* [[
http://www.anotherway.jp/seriousgamesjapan/ | Serious Games Japan]]
August 26, 2012, at 12:00 AM by 114.181.135.35 -
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-> "We act as though comfort and luxury were the chief requirements of life, when all that we need to make us happy is something to be enthusiastic about." - [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Kingsley | Charles Kingsley]]
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-> "We act as though comfort and luxury were the chief requirements of life, when all that we need to make us happy is something to be enthusiastic about." - [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Kingsley | Charles Kingsley]]

Ludotopian-style space development has perhaps already happened -- in the form of
the [[Space Race]], if considered as a [[Serious Game]].

In 1966, [[http://en
.wikipedia.org/wiki/Konrad_Lorenz | Konrad Lorenz]] wrote:[^''On Aggression'', Konrad Lorenz, 1966^]

-> "The most important function
of sport lies in furnishing a healthy safety valve for that most indispensable and, at the same time, most dangerous form of aggression [:...] collective militant enthusiasm.  The Olympic Games are virtually the only occasion when the anthem of one nation can be played without arousing any hostility against another.  This is so because the sportman's dedication to the international social norms of his sport, to the ideals of chivalry and fair play, are equal to any national enthusiasm.  The team spirit inherent in all international sport gives scope to a number of truly valuable patterns of social behavior which are essentially motivated by aggression and which, in all probability, have evolved under the selection pressure of tribal warfare at the very dawn of culture.  The noble warrior's typical virtues, such as his readiness to sacrifice himself in the service of a common cause, disciplined submission to the rank order of the group, mutual aid in the face of deadly danger, and above all, a superlatively strong bond of friendship between men, were obviously indispensable if a small tribe of the type we have to assume for early man was to survive in competition with others.  All these virtues are still desirable in modern man and still command our intuitive respectIt is undeniable that there is no situation in which all these virtues shine so brilliantly as they do in war, a fact which is dangerously liable to convince quite excellent but naive people that war, after all, cannot be the absolutely abhorrent thing it really is.

-> "Fortunately there are other ways in which the above-mentioned, admittedly valuable, virtues can be cultivated.  The harder and more
dangerous forms of sport, particularly those demanding the working together of larger groups, such as mountain climbing, diving, off-shore and ocean sailing, but also other dangerous undertakings, like polar expeditions and, above all, the exploration of space, all give scope for militant enthusiasm, allowing nations to fight each other in hard and dangerous competition without engendering national or political hatred.  On the contrary, I am convinced that of all the people on the two sides of the great [erstwhile Iron] curtain the space pilots are the least likely to hate each other. Like the late [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Erich_von_Holst | Erich von Holst]], I believe that the tremendous and otherwise not quite explicable public interest in space flight arises from the subconscious realization that it helps to preserve peace.  May it continue to do so!"

Lorenz goes on to say that international sporting competition promotes acquaintance among people who'd never otherwise meet
, and also helps forge a common cause (if only, perhaps, the cause of agreeing on fair rules.)

After
the Soviet Union disintegrated, building a space station with Russia became a way to keep Russian rocket
scientists and weapons engineers from drifting into the employ of [[arms proliferation | arms proliferators
]].  But it also brought the "space pilots" together, more closely, and for longer, than ever before.

Mere [[social networks]] can be fun
, but won't get the job done. [[Project Persephone]] must rely largely on volunteer contributions of effort. The Project will be more [[Sustainability | sustainable]] if contributions are more fun. The right kinds of [[competition]] -- "gamifying" the Project efforts -- can help make voluntary contribution more fun. Endless seriousnessness is not an option - it's only a recipe for stress and strife.

!!! References

to:
Ludotopian space development has perhaps already happened, in the form of the [[Space Race]]. In 1966, [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Konrad_Lorenz | Konrad Lorenz]] wrote:[^''On Aggression'', Konrad Lorenz, 1966^]

-> "The most important function of sport lies in furnishing a healthy safety valve for that most indispensable and, at
the same time, most dangerous form of aggression [:...] collective militant enthusiasm. The Olympic Games are virtually the only occasion when the anthem of one nation can be played without arousing any hostility against another.  This is so because the sportman's dedication to the international social norms of his sport, to the ideals of chivalry and fair play, are equal to any national enthusiasm.  The team spirit inherent in all international sport gives scope to a number of truly valuable patterns of social behavior which are essentially motivated by aggression and which, in all probability, have evolved under the selection pressure of tribal warfare at the very dawn of culture. The noble warrior's typical virtues, such as his readiness to sacrifice himself in the service of a common cause, disciplined submission to the rank order of the group, mutual aid in the face of deadly danger, and above all, a superlatively strong bond of friendship between men, were obviously indispensable if a small tribe [...] was to survive in competition with others.  All these virtues are still desirable in modern man and still command our intuitive respect [....But] there is no situation in which all these virtues shine so brilliantly as they do in war, a fact which is dangerously liable to convince quite excellent but naive people that war, after all, cannot be the absolutely abhorrent thing it really is.

-> "Fortunately there are other ways in which [these] virtues can be cultivated. The harder and more dangerous forms of sport, particularly those demanding the working together of larger groups, such as mountain climbing, diving, off-shore and ocean sailing
, but also other dangerous undertakings, like polar expeditions and, above all, the exploration of space, all give scope for militant enthusiasm, allowing nations to fight each other in hard and dangerous competition without engendering national or political hatred. On the contrary, I am convinced that of all the people on the two sides of the [Iron] curtain the space pilots are the least likely to hate each other. Like the late [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Erich_von_Holst | Erich von Holst]], I believe that the tremendous and otherwise not quite explicable public interest in space flight arises from the subconscious realization that it helps to preserve peace. May it continue to do so!"

Lorenz also wrote that such competitions promote trust among people who'd never otherwise meet, and that they help forge a common cause (if only the "cause" of agreeing on rules.) In space, this was prophetic: After the Soviet Union disintegrated, building [[ISS]] with Russian cooperation was defended as a way to help keep Russian rocket scientists from drifting into the employ of [[arms proliferation | arms proliferators]]. But it also brought the "space pilots" together
, more closely and for much longer than ever before.

[[Social networks]] can be fun, but they don't get
the job done. [[Project Persephone]] must rely largely on volunteer contributions of effort. The Project will be more [[Sustainability | sustainable]] if volunteering is more fun. The right kinds of [[competition]] -- "gamifying" Project efforts -- can help make contributing more enjoyable. Endless seriousnessness is not an option - endured too long, it's only a recipe for stress and strife.

!!! Notes

Changed lines 3-4 from:
-> "We act as though comfort and luxury were the chief requirements of life, when all that we need to make us happy is something to be enthusiastic about." - Charles Kingsley
to:
-> "We act as though comfort and luxury were the chief requirements of life, when all that we need to make us happy is something to be enthusiastic about." - [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Kingsley | Charles Kingsley]]
Changed lines 11-12 from:
-> "Fortunately there are other ways in which the above-mentioned, admittedly valuable, virtues can be cultivated.  The harder and more dangerous forms of sport, particularly those demanding the working together of larger groups, such as mountain climbing, diving, off-shore and ocean sailing, but also other dangerous undertakings, like polar expeditions and, above all, the exploration of space, all give scope for militant enthusiasm, allowing nations to fight each other in hard and dangerous competition without engendering national or political hatred.  On the contrary, I am convinced that of all the people on the two sides of the great [erstwhile Iron] curtain the space pilots are the least likely to hate each other. Like the late [[Erich von Holst]], I believe that the tremendous and otherwise not quite explicable public interest in space flight arises from the subconscious realization that it helps to preserve peace.  May it continue to do so!"
to:
-> "Fortunately there are other ways in which the above-mentioned, admittedly valuable, virtues can be cultivated.  The harder and more dangerous forms of sport, particularly those demanding the working together of larger groups, such as mountain climbing, diving, off-shore and ocean sailing, but also other dangerous undertakings, like polar expeditions and, above all, the exploration of space, all give scope for militant enthusiasm, allowing nations to fight each other in hard and dangerous competition without engendering national or political hatred.  On the contrary, I am convinced that of all the people on the two sides of the great [erstwhile Iron] curtain the space pilots are the least likely to hate each other. Like the late [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Erich_von_Holst | Erich von Holst]], I believe that the tremendous and otherwise not quite explicable public interest in space flight arises from the subconscious realization that it helps to preserve peace.  May it continue to do so!"
August 27, 2011, at 04:04 AM by 219.165.170.203 -
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Added lines 18-19:
Mere [[social networks]] can be fun, but won't get the job done. [[Project Persephone]] must rely largely on volunteer contributions of effort. The Project will be more [[Sustainability | sustainable]] if contributions are more fun. The right kinds of [[competition]] -- "gamifying" the Project efforts -- can help make voluntary contribution more fun. Endless seriousnessness is not an option - it's only a recipe for stress and strife.
August 27, 2011, at 03:57 AM by 219.165.170.203 -
Changed lines 7-8 from:
In 1966, Konrad Lorenz wrote:
to:
In 1966, [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Konrad_Lorenz | Konrad Lorenz]] wrote:[^''On Aggression'', Konrad Lorenz, 1966^]
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-> From ''On Aggression'', Konrad Lorenz, 1966
to:

August 19, 2011, at 04:37 AM by 114.181.130.36 -
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'''Ludotopian''' - "The belief that through games the world can become a better place."[^Terranova: "Ludotopian", Ren Reynolds, Feb 27, 2009, http://terranova.blogs.com/terra_nova/2009/02/ludotopian.html^]
to:
'''Ludotopian''' - "The belief that through games the world can become a better place."[^[[http://terranova.blogs.com/terra_nova/2009/02/ludotopian.html | "Ludotopian"]], by [[http://www.ren-reynolds.com/ | Ren Reynolds]], at the [[http://terranova.blogs.com | Terranova blog]], Feb 27, 2009^]
August 03, 2011, at 08:34 AM by 114.181.130.36 -
July 30, 2011, at 03:50 AM by 114.181.130.36 -
Changed lines 1-4 from:
'''Ludotopian''' - "The belief that through games the world can become a better place." http://terranova.blogs.com/terra_nova/2009/02/ludotopian.html

-> "We act as though comfort and luxury were the chief requirements of life, when all that we need to make us happy is something to be enthusiastic about." - Einstein
to:
'''Ludotopian''' - "The belief that through games the world can become a better place."[^Terranova: "Ludotopian", Ren Reynolds, Feb 27, 2009, http://terranova.blogs.com/terra_nova/2009/02/ludotopian.html^]

-> "We act as though comfort and luxury were the chief requirements of life, when all that we need to make us happy is something to be enthusiastic about." - Charles Kingsley
Changed lines 18-20 from:
scientists and weapons engineers from drifting into the employ of weapons proliferators.  But it also brought the "space pilots" together, more closely, and for longer, than ever before.

to:
scientists and weapons engineers from drifting into the employ of [[arms proliferation | arms proliferators]].  But it also brought the "space pilots" together, more closely, and for longer, than ever before.

!!! References

[^#^]


July 12, 2011, at 02:53 AM by 114.180.37.113 -
Changed lines 5-6 from:
Ludotopian-style space development has perhaps already happened -- in the form of the [[Space Race]].
to:
Ludotopian-style space development has perhaps already happened -- in the form of the [[Space Race]], if considered as a [[Serious Game]].
August 15, 2010, at 10:52 AM by 218.44.38.86 -
Added lines 3-4:
-> "We act as though comfort and luxury were the chief requirements of life, when all that we need to make us happy is something to be enthusiastic about." - Einstein
August 28, 2009, at 07:03 AM by 114.183.163.74 -
Changed lines 11-12 from:
''On Aggression'', Konrad Lorenz, 1966
to:
-> From ''On Aggression'', Konrad Lorenz, 1966
August 28, 2009, at 07:03 AM by 114.183.163.74 -
Changed lines 1-2 from:
Ludotopian - "The belief that through games the world can become a better place." http://terranova.blogs.com/terra_nova/2009/02/ludotopian.html
to:
'''Ludotopian''' - "The belief that through games the world can become a better place." http://terranova.blogs.com/terra_nova/2009/02/ludotopian.html
Changed lines 11-16 from:
<i>On Aggression</i>, Konrad Lorenz, 1966

Lorenz goes on to say that international sporting competition promotes acquaintance among people who'd never otherwise meet, and also helps forge a common cause (if only, perhaps, to agree on fair rules.)

"Love does not consist in gazing at each other, but in looking outward together in the same direction."

to:
''On Aggression'', Konrad Lorenz, 1966

Lorenz goes on to say that international sporting competition promotes acquaintance among people who'd never otherwise meet, and also helps forge a common cause (if only, perhaps, the cause of agreeing on fair rules.)
August 28, 2009, at 06:59 AM by 114.183.163.74 -
Changed lines 3-4 from:
Ludotopian-style space development has perhaps already happened -- we called it the Space Race.
to:
Ludotopian-style space development has perhaps already happened -- in the form of the [[Space Race]].
August 28, 2009, at 06:59 AM by 114.183.163.74 -
Changed lines 23-24 from:
Games for Change - http://www.gamesforchange.org/
Serious Games Japan - http://www.anotherway.jp/seriousgamesjapan/
to:
* Games for Change - http://www.gamesforchange.org/
* Serious Games Japan - http://www.anotherway.jp/seriousgamesjapan/
August 28, 2009, at 06:58 AM by 114.183.163.74 -
Changed lines 6-9 from:
"The most important function of sport lies in furnishing a healthy safety valve for that most indispensable and, at the same time, most dangerous form of aggression [:...] collective militant enthusiasm.  The Olympic Games are virtually the only occasion when the anthem of one nation can be played without arousing any hostility against another.  This is so because the sportman's dedication to the international social norms of his sport, to the ideals of chivalry and fair play, are equal to any national enthusiasm.  The team spirit inherent in all international sport gives scope to a number of truly valuable patterns of social behavior which are essentially motivated by aggression and which, in all probability, have evolved under the selection pressure of tribal warfare at the very dawn of culture.  The noble warrior's typical virtues, such as his readiness to sacrifice himself in the service of a common cause, disciplined submission to the rank order of the group, mutual aid in the face of deadly danger, and above all, a superlatively strong bond of friendship between men, were obviously indispensable if a small tribe of the type we have to assume for early man was to survive in competition with others.  All these virtues are still desirable in modern man and still command our intuitive respect.  It is undeniable that there is no situation in which all these virtues shine so brilliantly as they do in war, a fact which is dangerously liable to convince quite excellent but naive people that war, after all, cannot be the absolutely abhorrent thing it really is.

"Fortunately there are other ways in which the above-mentioned, admittedly valuable, virtues can be cultivated.  The harder and more dangerous forms of sport, particularly those demanding the working together of larger groups, such as mountain climbing, diving, off-shore and ocean sailing, but also other dangerous undertakings, like polar expeditions and, above all, the exploration of space, all give scope for militant enthusiasm, allowing nations to fight each other in hard and dangerous competition without engendering national or political hatred.  On the contrary, I am convinced that of all the people on the two sides of the great [erstwhile Iron] curtain the space pilots are the least likely to hate each other. Like the late [[Erich von Holst]], I believe that the tremendous and otherwise not quite explicable public interest in space flight arises from the subconscious realization that it helps to preserve peace.  May it continue to do so!"
to:

-> "The most important function of sport lies in furnishing a healthy safety valve for that most indispensable and, at the same time, most dangerous form of aggression [:...] collective militant enthusiasm.  The Olympic Games are virtually the only occasion when the anthem of one nation can be played without arousing any hostility against another.  This is so because the sportman's dedication to the international social norms of his sport, to the ideals of chivalry and fair play, are equal to any national enthusiasm.  The team spirit inherent in all international sport gives scope to a number of truly valuable patterns of social behavior which are essentially motivated by aggression and which, in all probability, have evolved under the selection pressure of tribal warfare at the very dawn of culture.  The noble warrior's typical virtues, such as his readiness to sacrifice himself in the service of a common cause, disciplined submission to the rank order of the group, mutual aid in the face of deadly danger, and above all, a superlatively strong bond of friendship between men, were obviously indispensable if a small tribe of the type we have to assume for early man was to survive in competition with others.  All these virtues are still desirable in modern man and still command our intuitive respect.  It is undeniable that there is no situation in which all these virtues shine so brilliantly as they do in war, a fact which is dangerously liable to convince quite excellent but naive people that war, after all, cannot be the absolutely abhorrent thing it really is.

-> "Fortunately there are other ways in which the above-mentioned, admittedly valuable, virtues can be cultivated.  The harder and more dangerous forms of sport, particularly those demanding the working together of larger groups, such as mountain climbing, diving, off-shore and ocean sailing, but also other dangerous undertakings, like polar expeditions and, above all, the exploration of space, all give scope for militant enthusiasm, allowing nations to fight each other in hard and dangerous competition without engendering national or political hatred.  On the contrary, I am convinced that of all the people on the two sides of the great [erstwhile Iron] curtain the space pilots are the least likely to hate each other. Like the late [[Erich von Holst]], I believe that the tremendous and otherwise not quite explicable public interest in space flight arises from the subconscious realization that it helps to preserve peace.  May it continue to do so!"
August 28, 2009, at 06:57 AM by 114.183.163.74 -
Changed lines 1-23 from:
Ludotopian - "The belief that through games the world can become a better place." [[http://terranova.blogs.com/terra_nova/2009/02/ludotopian.html]]
to:
Ludotopian - "The belief that through games the world can become a better place." http://terranova.blogs.com/terra_nova/2009/02/ludotopian.html

Ludotopian-style space development has perhaps already happened -- we called it the Space Race.

In 1966, Konrad Lorenz wrote:
"The most important function of sport lies in furnishing a healthy safety valve for that most indispensable and, at the same time, most dangerous form of aggression [:...] collective militant enthusiasm.  The Olympic Games are virtually the only occasion when the anthem of one nation can be played without arousing any hostility against another.  This is so because the sportman's dedication to the international social norms of his sport, to the ideals of chivalry and fair play, are equal to any national enthusiasm.  The team spirit inherent in all international sport gives scope to a number of truly valuable patterns of social behavior which are essentially motivated by aggression and which, in all probability, have evolved under the selection pressure of tribal warfare at the very dawn of culture.  The noble warrior's typical virtues, such as his readiness to sacrifice himself in the service of a common cause, disciplined submission to the rank order of the group, mutual aid in the face of deadly danger, and above all, a superlatively strong bond of friendship between men, were obviously indispensable if a small tribe of the type we have to assume for early man was to survive in competition with others.  All these virtues are still desirable in modern man and still command our intuitive respect.  It is undeniable that there is no situation in which all these virtues shine so brilliantly as they do in war, a fact which is dangerously liable to convince quite excellent but naive people that war, after all, cannot be the absolutely abhorrent thing it really is.

"Fortunately there are other ways in which the above-mentioned, admittedly valuable, virtues can be cultivated.  The harder and more dangerous forms of sport, particularly those demanding the working together of larger groups, such as mountain climbing, diving, off-shore and ocean sailing, but also other dangerous undertakings, like polar expeditions and, above all, the exploration of space, all give scope for militant enthusiasm, allowing nations to fight each other in hard and dangerous competition without engendering national or political hatred.  On the contrary, I am convinced that of all the people on the two sides of the great [erstwhile Iron] curtain the space pilots are the least likely to hate each other. Like the late [[Erich von Holst]], I believe that the tremendous and otherwise not quite explicable public interest in space flight arises from the subconscious realization that it helps to preserve peace.  May it continue to do so!"

<i>On Aggression</i>, Konrad Lorenz, 1966

Lorenz goes on to say that international sporting competition promotes acquaintance among people who'd never otherwise meet, and also helps forge a common cause (if only, perhaps, to agree on fair rules.)

"Love does not consist in gazing at each other, but in looking outward together in the same direction."

After the Soviet Union disintegrated, building a space station with Russia became a way to keep Russian rocket
scientists and weapons engineers from drifting into the employ of weapons proliferators.  But it also brought the "space pilots" together, more closely, and for longer, than ever before.


!!! Resources

Games for Change - http://www.gamesforchange.org/
Serious Games Japan - http://www.anotherway.jp/seriousgamesjapan/
August 28, 2009, at 06:40 AM by 114.183.163.74 -
Changed line 1 from:
Ludotopian - "The belief that through games the world can become a better place." [http://terranova.blogs.com/terra_nova/2009/02/ludotopian.html]
to:
Ludotopian - "The belief that through games the world can become a better place." [[http://terranova.blogs.com/terra_nova/2009/02/ludotopian.html]]
August 28, 2009, at 02:44 AM by 114.183.163.74 -
Added line 1:
Ludotopian - "The belief that through games the world can become a better place." [http://terranova.blogs.com/terra_nova/2009/02/ludotopian.html]
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