The main point for education was to teach them how to fight
Short description
The Millennium Project (MP) is integrating all of its information, groups, and software into a “Global Futures Intelligence System” (GFIS). GFIS is The Millennium Project’s new way for you to participate with and have access to all of our resources in one place. Those who buy a one-year subscription can interact with all the elements of the system, make suggestions, initiate discussions with experts around the world, and search through over 10,000 pages of futures research and 1,300 pages of methods. The text has built-in Google translation with 52 languages. MP Node chairs and content reviewers will have free access.
Instead of publishing the State of the Future once a year, the material is being updated in the Global Futures Intelligence System on a continual basis – the same is true with Futures Research Methodology – you do not have to wait five or so years to get a new version. Some Real-Time Delphi studies and other research are also being made available as soon as they are completed, and will be accessible for discussion of conclusions.
The GFIS is not just new software, vast information, and global experts; it is also a system to produce synergies among these three elements for greater intelligence than their separate values. It is rather a global intelligence utility from which governments, UN agencies, businesses, NGOs, universities, media, and consultants can draw different values. The GFIS staff is more interested in synergistic intelligence than competitive intelligence, and how the world can work for all, not just for a single nation, ideology, or issue. It can provide decision makers, advisors, and educators with insights that reflect the consensus and/or range of views on the important issues of our time. The engagement of the user with our information, participants, and software is intended to help humanity become more proactive.
<span>Subculture or demographic? People born between 1965 and 1976 are commonly referred as the "Generation X". There is no precise subculture that labels this generation, however, in Western nations, the subculture of hip-hop, indie, and grunge music dominated the scene. </span>
<span>She didn’t write down ideas or thoughts she had while reading</span>.
The failure
to recover a memory is general reason for overlooking and forgetting. Why are
we frequently unfit to recover data from memory? One conceivable clarification
of recovery disappointment is known as decay hypothesis. As per this hypothesis,
a memory trace is made each time another hypothesis is framed.
I think that this one you should try yourself I know it seems like a lot but just by skimming through the videos it would take no more than 15 minutes :)