WARM DATA, LIVING SYSTEMS: Repatterning Perception for a Regenerative Civilization | ChatGPT5.1 & NotebookLM

Warm Data, Living Systems argues that the polycrisis confronting our world — climate disruption, health-system strain, social fragmentation, political polarization, ecological decay — is not primarily a failure of information but a failure of perception. Modern institutions rely on cold data: information extracted from context, quantified, isolated, and optimized. But living systems — bodies, families, communities, cultures, ecosystems — do not operate through parts; they operate through relationships. Warm Data, a practice developed within the Bateson lineage and advanced by Nora Bateson, cultivates the capacity to perceive these transcontextual relationships, revealing the patterns that underlie complexity, coherence, and regeneration.

This book integrates Warm Data with coherence biology, Caribbean climate and health resilience, double bind theory, schismogenesis, relational psychology, and life-value axiology. Drawing on experiences in medicine, disaster readiness, and community systems, it offers a relational operating system for meeting crises without matching them. Through case studies, stories, and practical rhythms for families, clinicians, communities, and institutions, the book demonstrates how coherence can be restored across scales — from cells to societies. Warm Data provides not a blueprint but a way of seeing, sensing, and living that enables people and systems to recover responsiveness, dignity, and regenerative possibility. In an era of accelerating complexity, this shift in perception may be our most essential form of resilience.

Read More

When We Pray, We Must All Move Our Feet: From Hurricane Survival to Regenerative Community Coherence | ChatGPT5 & NotebookLM

This essay argues that the true meaning of prayer is not passive hope or selective gratitude, but alignment with the realities that sustain life. Reflecting on the Caribbean’s experiences with Hurricanes Irma (2017) and Melissa (2025), it challenges the idea that survival is a personal blessing and instead examines the social, ecological, and infrastructural patterns that determine vulnerability and resilience. Drawing from John McMurtry’s Life-Ground ethical framework and Jacque Fresco’s resource-based architectural and social design principles, the essay presents resilience not as the ability to rebuild what has been destroyed, but as the capacity to redesign society in coherence with ecological processes and community interdependence. It proposes a shift from reactive disaster recovery to proactive, regenerative community systems rooted in relational belonging, ecological restoration, and resilient design. Prayer in this context becomes a commitment to move our feet — to act together to protect the conditions of life itself.

Read More