Zhulkov M.V. Noospheric development of the modern world: fundamental and applied concepts

The concept of noospheric development is considered as a synthetic model of the development of the modern world, which includes material, informational, structural-energetic, philosophical-religious, cultural-civilizational concepts explaining the structures and dynamics of the modern world. The article is devoted to the consideration of the main directions of noospheric development, the main driving forces and energies that determine its dynamics. The concept is based on the methodology of V.I. Vernadsky's theory of the transition of the biosphere to the noosphere, system-synergetic and energy-informational approaches in the author's interpretation, the position on the correspondence and interdependence of consciousness and social reality, forming a single developing complex. The main directions of noospheric development include global noospheric consciousness, collective intelligence, social and noospheric autotrophy, and the formation of a noospheric person. The main energies of the modern stage of nosopheric development are the energies of cognition and thought and their corresponding social activities. The interrelation of the global network mind and individual consciousness is considered, traditional moral values appear as a condition for the connection of these two main forms of consciousness. A number of applied concepts result from the fundamental concepts of noospheric development. Among those applied concepts the following could be mentioned: the concept of the world civilization network, geopolitical triangles, the Russian national idea, the security of national and individual consciousness, the search for new forms of society that combine the advantages of socialism and capitalism and eliminate their disadvantages, the introduction of subjective factors into modern modelling, and a number of others.

For citation: Zhulkov M.V. Noospheric development of the modern world: fundamental and applied concepts, Bulletin of the Ivanovo State University. Series: Humanities, iss. 2, pp. 167—180.

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