The Vision of Paul Elvère DELSART, aka Henry HARPER.pdf

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Paul Elvere DELSART employs complex systems engineering and the concept of network-centric
warfare because he seeks to design a societal transformation system capable of adapting to the diversity of
the real world, operating autonomously, and generating viral, interconnected dynamics of change. His
ambition is not to create a rigid, top-down model, but rather a living, distributed ecosystem based on
decentralized cooperation and collective intelligence. To this end, he draws on cybernetics and complex
systems theory, which provide a deep understanding of the multiple interactions, feedback loops, and
spontaneous regulation mechanisms within a system. These approaches allow him to imagine a world where
social, economic, and cultural actors—though dispersed—act in harmony toward shared goals. The concept
of network-centric warfare, borrowed from military terminology but reimagined from a peaceful and
societal perspective, becomes for him a strategic method. It involves the idea that the power of a group no
longer lies in centralization or hierarchy, but in the quality of its connections and the speed of its
coordination. Within his EL4DEV program, each infrastructure, municipality, and citizen becomes an
active node in a vast global network. This network is not passive: it learns, adapts, and evolves.
Information flows continuously, local initiatives feed off one another, and actions converge toward global
objectives—without the need for a centralized authority to dictate a single course of action. By
choosing complex systems engineering, Paul Elvere DELSART breaks away from the linear and
compartmentalized logic that defines traditional development models. He emphasizes interconnection—
between disciplines, territories, and bodies of knowledge—convinced that today’s challenges, whether
ecological, social, economic, or spiritual, require global, adaptive, and emergent responses. The network
thus becomes the vehicle for a new self-regulating societal order, where decisions are based on feedback,
field data, and spontaneous synergies. Through this approach, he creates an evolving, modular system,
capable of growing organically without collapsing under the weight of complexity. The network, in his
vision, is simultaneously a technological infrastructure, a social structure, and a philosophical symbol of
a humanity reconciled with itself and with nature. By embracing network-centrism and complex systems
thinking, Paul Elvere DELSART lays the foundations for a world where strength arises not from
uniformity but from connected diversity—from a pluralism that is self-aware and united in a common
purpose: the collective regeneration of civilization.
Paul Elvere DELSART compared to other visionary thinkers and social engineers – Jacques
FRESCO, Buckminster FULLER y Pierre RABHI
1 – Comparative analysis between Paul Elvere DELSART and Jacques FRESCO (1916–2017)
Paul Elvere DELSART and Jacques FRESCO share a common ambition: to profoundly transform global
society. Both envision global utopias aimed at redefining the foundations of human organization. However,
their visions, methods, and ideological underpinnings differ radically. Paul Elvere DELSART advocates for
a new society based on international cooperation, spirituality, ecology, social engineering, and a gentle
approach to geoengineering. Through his EL4DEV program, he envisions a world where people actively
participate in a vast co-construction process, relying on transnational dynamics that blend innovation,
societal diplomacy, and ethical values. His approach incorporates both physical and symbolic initiatives
such as the LE PAPILLON SOURCE-labeled educational and ecological cities, as well as Vegetal
Calderas—vertical plant-based structures that emit beneficial waves, designed to revitalize ecosystems and
transform landscapes in a poetic and regenerative way. A central element of his method lies in the
evolutionary management of societal change through a global information system: the EL4DEV Big Smart
Data. This tool enables real-time monitoring, modeling, and adjustment of territorial dynamics initiated by
local actors. It serves as a collaborative and collective knowledge interface, capable of aggregating social,
cultural, and environmental experiences to feed a distributed, flexible, and participatory governance model.
In contrast, Jacques FRESCO advocates for a society freed from all money, politics, or spirituality, entirely
governed by science and rationality. His Venus Project is based on the systematic planning of human needs