
Introduction
Planets and cosmos elements have different orbits and dynamics; they continue their direction even if we don’t see them for years and centuries. Actually, they aren’t seen only from our point of view in time and space. They are not hidden, it’s not about them, but about our perception. When we look at a night sky, I doubt that we often see or understand what we see.
Stars and constellations, as we see them from the Earth, have they any meaning or form from other point in the universe? A point of view from another place in cosmos creates different combinations and different images. We give them forms and name for our use and utility; for our sense, not for them. If we don’t’ see or name planets, stars and other cosmos elements, they will continue to exist anyway.
At the same time, there are cosmos elements, which we cannot see from our point of view or with our perception. Again, when we look at a night sky, do we see dark matter and its direction? Is it dark matter or something else, which we cannot describe or perceive?
I take the same step that astrology does: I take an analogy between cosmic elements and information.
Why do I so? Because to my mind, information is something intangible, like cosmos; because it’s everywhere even if we don’t see or perceive it. Information depends on a point of view of those who look at it and their position at time and space. We live not that long and perceive not that much to see cycles and directions in chaotic events and circumstances. We often misunderstand that to see is not the same that to observe.
This is a reason I refer to the cycles and orbits of information in digital spaces and in real life. It’s relative but it’s not about complete relativism. It’s relative and hidden until there is a goal, a situation, a point of view in time and space. Problems come when a one particular situation or a goal becomes associated with information in other circumstances, without a context. It often leads to the closed and fixed classifications and dogmas when those who use them cannot really explain why they do so. I think that an innovation comes with this ‘’why’’ and doesn’t satisfy the usual answer ‘’it’s like it is’’. An innovation adapts and applies relative information to the concrete and actual situation in time and space.
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Chapter 1
Tags and cycles: one close, another opens possibilities
Chapter 2
Re-cycle and re-use of information
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