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Practical Wisdom - MEMO (WIP)

Updated: Dec 26, 2023

Definition

Shamanic Engineering is an interdisciplinary field that integrates ancient shamanic wisdom with modern engineering, technology, and societal systems. Serving as a bridge between the spiritual and the material, it aims to ground higher consciousness into various realms—including technology, software, media, and societal infrastructures—in a balanced and integrated manner. The discipline focuses on practical applications of spiritual and energetic principles to solve real-world challenges, foster holistic development, and facilitate both human and environmental well-being.

Key Components

Theoretical Foundation:

  1. Shamanic Principles: Understanding of the spiritual, psychological, and ecological principles that underlie shamanic practices.

  2. Engineering Fundamentals: A strong grasp of core engineering principles, along with an understanding of software design, media studies, and social sciences.

  3. Energetic Models: Incorporating frameworks that account for both physical and energetic aspects, such as chi or prana, in all areas of application.

Research & Development:

  1. Spiritual Diagnostics: Employing ancient divination methods along with modern analytics to diagnose problems and inefficiencies across technological and societal systems.

  2. Energy Flow Analysis: Study of energy pathways in spiritual and technological dimensions, including data flows in software and societal systems.

  3. Material-Spiritual Interface: Investigating materials, algorithms, or societal norms that are most conducive to energetic or spiritual influence.

Practical Applications:

  1. Spiritual-Technological Tools: Developing tools and platforms that are inspired by shamanic wisdom, ranging from healing instruments to software algorithms and media content.

  2. Holistic System Design: Modifying or creating systems, whether they be physical technologies, software, media channels, or societal infrastructures, to align with spiritual and energetic principles.

  3. Human and Environmental Well-being: Building holistic models for communities, organizations, or ecosystems that integrate spiritual wisdom into their operational frameworks.

Ethical and Social Considerations:

  1. Sustainability: Commitment to ensuring that all developed technologies and systems are sustainable and in harmony with natural rhythms.

  2. Inclusivity: Making the wisdom and benefits of Shamanic Engineering accessible to all, irrespective of cultural or socio-economic backgrounds.

  3. Spiritual Ethics: Establishment of guiding principles to ensure spiritual practices are respected and not commodified or exploited.

Education and Outreach:

  1. Academic Curriculum: Development of courses, workshops, and seminars that cover the multifaceted principles and applications of Shamanic Engineering.

  2. Public Awareness: Leveraging media and public platforms to spread awareness about the wide-ranging benefits and practices of the discipline, from software design to media ethics to social systems.


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