PROSPENOMICS

Prospenomics, also known as Prospenomia, is the study of prosperity and its generators, aiming to pave a path towards Post-Scarcity. Through an economic and social approach that transcends the conventional paradigms of known economic theory, which often associates relatively low abundance with hard and inefficient work and fails to distribute well-being among individuals, paying little attention to the depletion of resources on the planet. The field of Prospenomics arises from the urgent need to rethink current economic and social models. To achieve this, we must study all known forms of prosperity, from intelligent decisions made in ancient times to the fictions of Gene Roddenberry's Star Trek, envisioning a future where prosperity is abundant, where no longer uses monetary fractions for the exchange of goods and services, and people work to satisfy their talents and ambitions for personal upliftment; or also the ideas of Buckminster Fuller, in which prosperity was not limited solely to the accumulation of material wealth or economic growth but rather ensuring well-being and sustainability for all forms of life on the planet. BASIC ARGUMENT OF PROSPENOMICS/PROSENOMY by Luiz Pagano, Setembro de 2007

terça-feira, 15 de novembro de 2022

AFD Article of Future Days

 
Luiz Pagano as collaborator of the most important Brazilian journal of scientific research, Superinteressante, developed unusual ways of proposing theories, the AFD

Luiz Pagano as illustrator of the most important Brazilian journal of scientific research, Superinteressante, developed unusual ways of proposing theories, the AFD.


One of the great difficulties in expressing political-economic theories these days is to be understood without causing an emotional impact, especially for those who radically disagree with the argument or defend opposing arguments. In this sense, especially in this blog, I use an unusual resource, the AFD (Article de Dias Futuros), in which I write an imaginary magazine article, in future times, describing the anticipated reality, as if it were today, as seen here .

The idea came from an experience I had as an illustrator for the magazine Superinteressante (the most important scientific dissemination magazine of the 1980s~2010s).

In that magazine there was a section called 'Superfantastico', for which I illustrated, in which the question "what if" was answered. So questions like "what if there was teleportation?" or "what would happen if our western culture had Egyptian civilization and not Greco-Roman civilization as its base?" were answered by theorists in these areas.

In an alternate future of a point in the past, where we base our cultures and ways of life on the Egyptians rather than the Greeks, we might have Times Square with hieroglyphics instead of Roman numerals. Illustration of Luiz Pagano

At that time, I developed a great affinity with the proposal of answering the most diverse questions, in diverse subjects in a scientific way (and illustrating them)

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