And Now, The Surprise

I would not step onto the stage to be pelted with rotten tomatoes for what has been said above. But I do step onto that stage, and I will keep stepping onto it, for what comes next.

In 1989, when I discovered the scale for measuring complexity - the model I call Levels - I began to look at the world through this model as one looks through a pair of glasses.

And I saw.

I saw how a human being grows up: developmental psychology in one line.

I saw where history flows, why it flows there, how to measure it, and what drives it: philosophy of history in one line.

I saw the optimal way to master any subject area and any profession: pedagogy in one line.

I saw macrosociology: how society is structured.

I saw microsociology: how we behave in everyday situations.

I saw how to avoid conflicts and enter cooperation with any interlocutor.

I saw how to prevent technogenic disasters.

I saw how to build an optimal state.

I saw how to build a better system of education.

I saw what a fully developed human being is.

I saw what “my full potential” means.

And since then, I have been occupied only with what I am occupied with.