The
Omnologist Manifesto
by
Howard Bloom
We
are blessed with a richness of specializations, but cursed with a paucity
of panoptic disciplines-categories of knowledge that concentrate on
seeing the pattern that emerges when one views all the sciences at once.
Hence we need a field dedicated to the panoramic, an academic base for
the promiscuously curious, a discipline whose mandate is best summed
up in a paraphrase of the poet Andrew Marvel: Let us roll all our strength
and all Our knowledge up into one ball, And tear our visions with rough
strife Through the iron gates of life.
Omnology is a science, but one dedicated to the biggest picture conceivable
by the minds of its practitioners. Omnology will use every conceptual
tool available-and some not yet invented but inventible-to leapfrog
over disciplinary barriers, stitching together the patchwork quilt of
science and all the rest that humans can yet know. If one omnologist
is able to perceive the relationship between pop songs, ancient Egyptian
graffiti, Shirley MacLaine's mysticism, neurobiology, and the origins
of the cosmos, so be it. If another uses mathematics to probe traffic
patterns, the behavior of insect colonies, and the manner in which galaxies
cluster in swarms, wonderful. And if another uses introspection to uncover
hidden passions and relate them to research in chemistry, anthropology,
psychology, history, and the arts, she, too, has a treasured place on
the wild frontiers of scientific truth-the terra incognita in the heartland
of omnology.
Let me close with the words of yet another poet, William Blake, on the
ultimate goal of omnology:
To see a World in a Grain of Sand
And a Heaven in a Wild Flower,
Hold Infinity in the palm of your hand
And Eternity in an hour.
Copyright 2001 Howard Bloom
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