Alpha in the Delta

Survive and spread - these are the two challenges facing any living system. This also applies to socionics, as long as it is. Now we only survive - through training and periodic counseling. However, dozens of other psychological schools that have their own humanitarian technologies provide the same services. From the classic test Eysenk to a lie detector. Here we have no particular competitive advantages over them.

And yet I am sure that we will not only survive, but also move on. Ahead of us is waiting for a more complex and energy-intensive task - the distribution of updated socionics, which will be successfully solved only in one case - upon receipt of a state order within the framework of a large socially significant project.

A major scientific and technical project that can distract people from politics and consumerism (gamma values) and direct them into the future is, without a doubt, the exploration of outer space.

Communicative space in outer space is limited and structured. And these are exactly the conditions in which our socionics works well. The formation of stable teams in a large-scale and bold project is the task that will give socionics a strong impetus and open the second wind.

I interpret the old dream of people to fly into space as an “alpha idea”. Let me remind you that the first space boom occurred in the 20s of the last century. Back in 1903, Konstantin Tsiolkovsky made mathematical calculations that prove that space flight is possible. However, the work of Tsiolkovsky was published 20 years later. She got "in the jet" and immediately caused a lot of newspaper and magazine publications about powerful rockets and gigantic ships, with the help of which people would leave the Earth.

At the same time, students of Moscow University formed the first space flight support society, the Society for the Study of Interplanetary Communications. In this organization, workers, scientists and engineers (the principle of a functionally complete group) united. One of the well-known members of the society Friedrich Zander even created a special greenhouse for delivering fresh vegetables to space travelers, and also worked on a new type of engine that could make a dent in the atmosphere. Like many other members of society, Zander was a dreamer who believed that the cosmos is the fate of mankind. He traveled around Russia and preached that people who would live on the moon "could probably create a home in which conditions would be much better than conditions on Earth."

The greatest achievement of society was to bring the idea of ​​space flight to the masses. In May 1924, a lecture was given by engineer Mikhail Lapirov-Skoblo on the subject "Interplanetary Communications: How Modern Science and Technology Answer this Question." The tickets were sold out two days before it began, and only with the help of law enforcement agencies did they manage to calm down the agitated crowd of people trying to break into the lecture. This is what the passionary (ascendant, in terms of HS) socium means!

Space fever was fueled by Alexei Tolstoy’s novel Aelita (Sunset of Mars), published in 1923-24. It narrates the fate of the Russian engineer who goes to Mars and organizes the proletarian revolution among the bourgeois Martians. The main heroine of the novel Aelita, Queen of Mars, helps the hero, and then falls in love with him.

By the end of the 20s, space fever began to come to an end. The Soviet government refused to officially support the Society for the Study of Interplanetary Communications. By that time, it became clear that in order to fulfill the dreams of the spacecraft, even decades had to pass, and the interest began to decrease. The minds of the people filled the more relevant projects of the upcoming industrialization and collectivization. “Alpha in beta” is over, without having incarnated.

However, it was during this period that the seeds of the USSR leadership in the space race were sown. The first generation of space engineers, such as Sergey Korolev or Valentin Glushko, grew up in that era. Bookmark the program for life happens in alpha. Designer Vladimir Chelomey called the proposed manned flight to Mars in honor of Aelita - according to the film, which he saw when he was a ten-year-old boy. Then the United States took revenge for the launch of the satellite in 1957 and the historic flight of Gagarin in 1961, and were the first to send people to the moon. But this time everything has calmed down, as the post-industrial, information-computer era has come. And here is a new revival: the development of rocket engines, the extraction of mineral resources on the moon, the construction of new space centers. Who is the first to send a mission to Mars?








The situation of the current revival of space projects is nothing else than “alpha in the delta” - the time of the birth of a new socion. There is a concentration of passionate energy, more and more young people do not want to live on the principle of “consume and enrich”. However, they understand that downshifting as a simple withdrawal from a central society is also not an option. A generation of new geniuses is born, in whose brains an unprecedented program is laid - the construction of a cosmic society. And in their inquisitive minds there is a place to continue our ideas.

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