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Patternism, Clade Patternism![]() Abergist
Vore structure patterns
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Clade
Patternism is a broadly based meta-school
of art and design, with
branches in fields as diverse as the fine arts, architecture,
landscaping, urban
and civic planning, memeplex design and maintenance, and industrial
design. It
is the study of a clade’s innate, deeply programmed biases
and resulting
societal patterns, and the way these produce and are produced by the
physical
environment. The name is taken from the term, “pattern
language”, used in some
early 1st century AT texts. However, these
exploratory studies did not bear significant fruit nor become
widely adopted until well into the Information
Age. This was when interdisciplinary “consilience” studies
tying together findings in diverse fields such as neurobiology,
paleontology, sociology, ethology, history, various theories of art and
architecture, and various “practical” disciplines placed Patternism on
a firmer foundation. A few
scholars
have noted
connections with schools of thought devised much earlier, from the pre-Spaceflight
Age: the Feng Shui of Eastern Asia, the
Pythagoreanism of Classical
southern Europe, and similar systems of thought from elsewhere among Old
Earth’s founding cultural traditions.
Others disagree, and consider these
to be primitive and superstition-ridden parallels rather than true
precursors
of Patternism.
Early
Patternist thinking was oriented solely
toward human
baseline
needs and biases, and the “ideal set of human
environments”. Patternism became
widespread in the period leading up to the Nanoswarms,
but its
development was interrupted by the “dark ages” that
followed. It saw its first
great flowering in the early decades of the First
Federation. Later,
when the First Federation was in its decline, Patternism was regarded
with some
suspicion, as a pernicious influence that was more disruptive than
integrative
in its effect on a multi-clade metapolity. The framers of the Second
Federation
Ontology restored something of Patternism’s respectability by
concentrating on
what has been called Sec Fed Patternism. Since then Patternism in one
form or
another has been a constant element within the Terragen sphere,
sometimes as a
specific movement and at other times as a general influence. The most
persistent source of explicitly Patternist ways of thinking has been Ao
Lai,
where it first came to prominence at the time of the Snow Superiors
Renaissance. It has remained a dominant element in the Gamma Leporis
system,
and the source of several waves of innovation since that time. A
variant of
Patternism, emphasising rapid directed coevolution between communities
of
sophonts and their physical environment as an aid to mass transcension
events,
was first explored by the Abergists
and has since been discovered or
reinvented on several occasions.
In the modern world responses to Patternism
vary considerably within
the Sephirotic
sphere of influence. The MPA
often adopts
Patternist principles into its projects, since studies by the Ozymandias
Institute show lower maintenance costs, and longer
survival times for
structures built according to Patternist principles. Solarists
often
discourage the most clade specific versions of Patternism as a divisive
influence, as do many Negentropists.
Caretakerists,
generally
silent on these matters, have lauded the most clade-based Patternists
for
“increased specificity”. Some NoCoZo
elements find the increased
durability of Patternist goods and settlements to be an impediment to
the
planned obsolescence cycle, and discourage it, though they do use
aspects of
Patternism in targeting niche markets. For their separate reasons both
the
Zoeific Biopolity and Metasoft employ specialised versions of the
Patternist
memeplex. Keterists
generally discourage full Patternism as a distraction,
citing lower transcension rates in Patternist-influenced communities.
However
they do encourage Abergist-style coevolutionary Patternism. Sophics
commonly employ specialised Patternist designs as an aid to spiritual
development.
Outside the Sephirotic sphere, it is believed
that the Diamond
Network, particularly the Oracle
Machine cult and other anti-human or ahuman factions
occasionally use Patternist
principles, sometimes as a warning or repellent device and sometimes,
according
to at least one source quoted in What
The Thunder Said as a kind of
bait.
Transapient
sources declare that there are
equivalents to Patternism
for beings of the first toposophic. Darwins
are said to be skilled
practitioners. However according to the best information available
transapients
of S2 or other levels find the equivalent of Patternism irrelevant,
except at
the level of one’s lower toposophic subminds or avatars.