Difference between revisions of "Meta University"
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=== Smart Contract as the platform for managing collaboration === | === Smart Contract as the platform for managing collaboration === | ||
All students in Meta University must use [[Smart Contract]]s to organize their shared tasks. | |||
==== Subtopic 1 ==== | ==== Subtopic 1 ==== | ||
Revision as of 11:10, 31 January 2022
Meta University, is an abstract specification of actual universities, or learning organizations at large.
To organize knowledge content in Meta University, all ideas will be organized in terms of space, time, and energy. The goal is to offer a stable framework that will be applicable to situations across all spatial and temporal contexts. To guarantee this universality, some logical assumptions must be made, and we assume that all spacetime complex follows the logical boundaries of Partially Ordered Set. We will provide a universal data structure[1], a.k.a. lattice[2][3], to approximate the boundary of our logical reasoning scopes.
Prior work
A Google Document that is editable: If you have editorial access to this document, click here.
MetaUniversity
The Notion of Unviersality
Universality is a operationalized definition according to logicians.
Container for all Knowledge
Using Wikidata as an example.
Conceptual Space and Repeatability
Functional Roles in Society
Data as the Medium
Reliable Data as the Medium
Smart Contract as the platform for managing collaboration
All students in Meta University must use Smart Contracts to organize their shared tasks.
Subtopic 1
Subtopic 2
Subtopic 1
Everyone’s learning will be accountable
An Exchange Platform
References
Related Pages
- ↑ Scott, Dana (January 1, 1970). "Outline of a Mathematical Theory of Computation". local page: Oxford University Computing Laboratory Programming Research Group.
- ↑ Cousot, Patrick; Cousot, Radhia (1977). Abstract interpretation: a unified lattice model for static analysis of programs by construction or approximation of fixpoints (PDF). 4th POPL. local page: ACM Press. p. 238-252.
- ↑ Cousot, Patrick (Sep 2021). Principles of Abstract Interpretation. local page: ACM Press.