NETWORK NATION  
  Pattern of the whole
Remember me?
Email
Password
Join us | Get your password | Vision | Topics | Home

SIGN IN TO EDIT

Pattern of the Whole

Pattern of the Whole is an "integral tag cloud" and catalog/taxonomy that begins to show how integral wholeness contains and organizes infinite specific detail. Open the mandala by clicking a sector.

Through Pattern of the Whole "everything is connected to everything else" .

Sample search: Conscious Evolution | Clear

Show help for tags

Top

Normal screen Wide screen
Search 1210 tags
SECTORS
Arts
Business & Economics
Education
Environment & Energy
Governance
Health
Infrastructure
Justice
Media & Communications
Pattern of the Whole
Relationships
Science
Spirituality & Religion

Seven levels of classification within the common framework of the whole.
Click on a sector to open specific categories within that sector.
Click on a sub-sector to open the next level.
Non-hierarchical: categories can be cross-correlated between sectors using tags.

1. Root
Arts
Business & Economics
Education
Environment & Energy
Governance
Health
Infrastructure
Justice
Media & Communications
Pattern of the Whole
Relationships
Science
Spirituality & Religion
2. Governance
Alexis de Tocqueville
American exceptionalism
Bipartisanship
Broken politics
Corruption
Democracy
Democrats
Electronic democracy
Empty rhetoric
Foreign policy
Global governance
Group process
Immigration
Independents
Integral politics
Leadership
Liberal democracy
National defense
New politics
Organizations and groups
Organize a movement
Oversimplification
Patriotism
Peace
Political parties
Reform
Republicans
Right to vote
Self-governance
Single-issue politics
Social issues
Social services
Transpartisanship
USA Midterm elections
USA November elections
War and defense
Whole systems
Winner takes all
Bias
Campaign finance reform
Community
Community building
Empty rhetoric
Equality of opportunity
Equitable resource distribution
Ethics
Globalization
Human rights
Inefficient bureaucracy
Judicial activism
Judicial reform
Money in politics
Uninformed on the issue
Unsubstantiated conclusions
Veterans
Wasteful government programs
3. Broken politics
Anger
Blame
Corporate control of politicians
Demographic fragmentation
Excessive influence of big money
Gerrymandering
Gridlock
Inability to work together
Interdependence of issues
Limited human capacity
Over-simplification of complex issues
Rules of the Senate need amending
Complexity
Polarization
Self-righteousness