<u>Philosophy In Pubs</u>, or PIPs <https://philosophyinpubs.co.uk> is a network of groups of ordinary citizens who meet regularly to engage in the practice of philosophic dialogue. The groups are influenced by "community of inquiry" principles (https://coi.athabascau.ca/coi-model), and aim to be critical, caring, creative and collaborative. The groups - particularly the original one, in Liverpool, England - attract many working-class, autodidact people who are interested in grass-roots philosophy outside of academia.
This proposal will work with members of the Liverpool branch of PIPs, and philosophy students at the University of Liverpool (PIPs has strong links with the University philosophy department, and has previous experience of working with it to deliver sessions) to build knowledge of the philosophy behind Cardano, and to create a virtual Philosophy Hub bringing PIPs and Catalyst members together.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<u>The stages of building our "Minimum Viable Hub" are:</u>
<u>1) Philosophy learning sessions for 15 people</u>
We will devise a series of 10 sessions exploring the philosophical implications of blockchain technology, cryptocurrencies, Cardano, and Catalyst. We will facilitate these sessions to the Liverpool PIPs group of 10 people, plus 5 University students. The sessions will inform participants about the philosophical background to blockchain in general and Cardano in particular; and will invite them to discuss the philosophical implications of things such as DID and self-sovereign identity; decentralisation, distributed governance and voting; contribution, reward, and the ethics of participation; antifragility; and more. The PIPs group are accomplished and experienced at co-devising sessions, so as their knowledge of blockchain issues grows, the aim will be for individual members to take responsibility for co-delivering sessions, and/or adding their own input to the session plans.
<u>2) PIPs Engaging with Catalyst </u>
Additionally, as the project progresses, we will gradually invite participants to engage with the Catalyst community, via things such as attending After Town Halls; contributing to QA-DAO’s Ekphrasis GitBook (<https://quality-assurance-dao.gitbook.io/ekphrasis>), where philosophical and academic material related to Cardano is collated; engaging in philosophical discussion in Catalyst social media channels such as Discord; and eventually, planning and leading at least one After Town Hall session on a philosophy theme. This might be at “original” Town Hall, and/or at another Town Hall in another part of the world.
<u>3) After-Townhalls and cross-community collaboration</u>
The approach to leading an After Town Hall will be for the group to choose a provocation or discussion-point to use as the theme of a breakout room. (Note that PIPs members are already comfortable with meeting and leading philosophical discussion via Zoom, as they have been meeting this way throughout the pandemic.) PIPs will facilitate the breakout session with the Catalyst community; and will follow up by posting discussion points from the breakout room in Catalyst social media platforms (for example, a "What do you think about…?" post, in an existing Catalyst Discord server, or creating a "Philosophy of Blockchain" Telegram group, etc). The PIPs members who attended the Town Hall will then bring back some of the discourse from this into their next group session. This process will produce a dialogue and a cross-pollination of ideas between PIPs and Catalyst, create a space for the discussion of philosophy within Catalyst, and onboard PIPs members into Catalyst via something they already feel confident with (the discussion of philosophy).
<u>4) A list of resources for wider outreach</u>
During the project, participants and facilitators will maintain, on the Ekphrasis Gitbook, a list of resources that we have found useful (a reading list, relevant links, talking points and questions we have discussed, Miro boards, etc). This will be shared via the wider PIPS network of around 20 groups all over the UK; and via the U3A (University of the Third Age) network, an organisation in the UK for older people's continuing education, which PIPs has strong links with <https://www.u3a.org.uk/> )
<u>5) Maintaining Ekphrasis GitBook</u>
After the sessions finish, the project aims for one member of Liverpool PIPs (or several members sharing the task) to take on the running of Ekphrasis GitBook <https://quality-assurance-dao.gitbook.io/ekphrasis> for a period of 3 months - collating philosophical content relevant to Cardano, and leading and stimulating philosophical discussion and enquiry within Catalyst via Discord, further After TownHall breakout rooms, etc.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<u>Project Outputs</u>
- A series of 10 sessions, from June onwards, with Liverpool PIPs (delivered in person, via Zoom, or a combination) discussing the philosophical background to Cardano and blockchain technology
- At least one After Town Hall breakout room led by Liverpool PIPs, where the group engage with the wider Catalyst community. This breakout room will be recorded, timestamped, and summarised, and widely publicised throughout the Catalyst network; and questions from it will be seeded in Discord for further debate by the community.
- Sharing resources and documentation of the project, via the Ekphrasis GitBook, with the wider PIPs network, the U3A network, and Liverpool Uni Philosophy Department
- All this forms the basis of an ongoing Catalyst Community Philosophy Hub
- Member(s) of PIPs take over management of QA-DAO's Ekphrasis GitBook <https://quality-assurance-dao.gitbook.io/ekphrasis> for a period of 3 months after the end of the project, to form the Philosophy Hub's platform.
<u>Project Outcomes</u>
- Participants report increased knowledge about blockchain and Cardano, and increased confidence in discussing the philosophy behind them.
- Participants report finding the sessions stimulating and interesting.
- Participants build an ongong connection with Catalyst beyond the end of the project, and are onboarded to attending Town Halls, holding ADA, voting, and possibly proposing in a future funding round.
- There is an ongoing virtual hub where people interested in the philosophcal ideas behind Cardano, Catalyst, and blockchain generally, can find information and meet like-minded people.
- Levels of philosophical discussion, debate and knowledge within Catalyst increase.
This proposal addresses the challenge by "meeting people where they are", and engaging them with Cardano through what they are already interested in - in this case, philosophy. It engages primarily working-class people, who would not otherwise be likely to get the opportunity to engage with the issues around Cardano.
It will engage at a local level in Liverpool, with facilitators who know the Liverpool PIPS community well, and will use Liverpool PIPs as a starting point for a "minimum viable Hub". It will establish cross-community engagement between PIPs and Catalyst through the fact that PIPs members are already confident at engaging online with philosophical ideas, and will simply need to build their knowledge of blockchain-related issues. Engaging people with Cardano through something they are already passionate about, so that they are not passive “newbies” but are able to bring something of value, is likely to lead to better onboarding for the participants; and having a group of new people onboarded who are inspired by philosophical enquiry and keen to engage, will stimulate the growth of philosophical enquiry and discussion within Catalyst. The “MVH” outcome of an embryonic Hub with roots in both the Catalyst community and in the grassroots community of PIPs, makes use of the existing resources and infrastructure of both communities, and will be stronger and more diverse than trying to build a hub based in just one of them.
<u>Note 1: Scaling Down</u> The original (Fund7) version of this proposal (https://cardano.ideascale.com/c/idea/383504) suggested creating and designing a learning resource or playbook to engage community philosophy groups across the UK. But in the light of the new approach for this challenge setting, and the need to “scale down”, we have decided it is best to focus this proposal on simply initiating the Philosophy Hub, and creating a space for it to grow organically. Our initial research showed there is demand for a learning resource/playbook; creating one could perhaps be a focus for a future funding proposal led by PIPs themselves, which would have the additional positive effect of onboarding them as proposers.
<u>Note 2: Minimum Viable Hub and Cost-To-Launch Ratio</u> In line with this Challenge Setting's ideal that proposals should only aim for a "Minimum Viable Hub", this project's budget is roughly one-fifth of the costs we envisage to launch and fully establish a philosophy-focused Hub that can fully engage long-term with developments in the philosophy of blockchain. The "Minimum Viable Hub" prioritises community philosophy, but with potential to develop in the future towards academia as well, thanks to PIPs' organisational links with University philosophy departments in various universities.
<u>Our projected costs to full launch are:</u>
This Minimum Viable Hub ($18.6k); co-writing, producing and promoting a self-guide learning resource/playbook on Cardano and philosophy ($10k); translating the resource into 2 languages to engage community philosophy networks in other countries ($4k); ongoing engagement and onboarding activities with c. 10 community philosophy groups worldwide ($18k); developing the Ekphrasis GitBook in the longer term: using it to research, document and disseminate new research in the philosophy of blockchain, and establishing it as a trusted resource in both the academic and community philosophy worlds ($18k); remunerating facilitators to research, devise, lead and document regular engagement sessions in Catalyst about the philosophy behind Cardano, including new and ongoing research underpinning the key Catalyst governance changes that will be forthcoming in 2022 and 2023 ($22k)
<u>Total c. $90.6k</u>; so this proposal, at <u>$18.6k</u>, is approximately one-fifth of the total cost to establish a solid, thriving Cardano Philosophy Hub that fully engages Catalyst, academia, and community philosophy networks worldwide.
- Risk that not all PIPs members want to engage with the subject-matter of the sessions. We mitigate this by working with PIPs to plan the session topics, and ensuring that there is a focus on philosophy; and we are confident that we have addressed this well. We are additionally mitigating by facilitating sessions in a shared way, so that PIPs participants shape the direction that the project goes in, and co-lead some sessions, which is something PIPs members are very accustomed to doing. We are also structuring the sessions so that people do not have to attend every session, and can come to the ones that interest them most.
- Risk that the sessions compete with PIPs' own regular meetings, so that members don't have energy for both. Again, we are mitigating this with input from PIPs. PIPs have run external courses with other organisations before, and have experience of how to manage these to ensure sessions don't override their core regular activities (e.g. they sometimes focus their regular sessions on "spin-off" topics from the external course, which helps with their session planning).
- Risk of lack of engagement from Catalyst members on philosophical themes. This seems fairly unlikely; we at QA-DAO have had an excellent response to After Town Hall sessions we have run on philosophical themes, such as this one on Prof Aggelos Kiayias & Philip Lazo’s recent paper “SoK: Blockchain Governance” <https://quality-assurance-dao.gitbook.io/ekphrasis/february-2022/blockchain-governance-principles> , and anecdotally we have encountered many Catalyst members who have expressed interest in seeing increased philosophical discussion within Catalyst. However, if there is an issue with engagement levels, we will mitigate this by presenting this to the PIPs group as a problem to solve - how to engage people with philosophy - which they are experts in doing. The answer may be to frame an After Town Hall session in a less obviously philosophical way; or to engage people on social media with simple questions that are not obviously philosophical but which lead to deeper debate.
- Risk of sessions being disrupted by COVID or other world events. This risk is minimal - further lockdowns or disruptions in the UK seem very unlikely at present. But if they do happen, PIPs have been meeting on Zoom throughout the pandemic, and it doesn't present a barrier for them if we need to deliver entirely online.