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

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multidimensional, and hybrid language that blends technical, philosophical, geopolitical, and narrative
terms. He addresses a diverse audience but engages with high intellectual and symbolic density, making his
work a kind of avant-garde mythology. Conclusion: Pierre RABHI and Paul Elvere DELSART represent
two divergent yet complementary paths of resistance to the dominant model: one through voluntary
withdrawal, the other through strategic reconstruction. One invites us to simplify, to return to a sober and
inner life. The other encourages us to lucidly embrace complexity, to build new social structures through
collective creation, technology, and transnational engagement. Both, however, remind us that world
transformation begins with a shift in consciousness, and that nature, ethics, cooperation, and spirituality
must be its cornerstones.
Social Engineering, Social Constructivism and World Building – Paul Elvere DELSART
1 - Paul Elvere DELSART’s Social Constructivism
Paul Elvere DELSART can be considered a specialist in social constructivism, as his entire body of work is
rooted in the idea that social reality, far from being fixed or natural, can be shaped, collectively constructed,
and intentionally transformed through participatory and narrative processes. Through the EL4DEV program,
he develops a social engineering approach aimed at structuring new territorial and societal dynamics based
on collective intelligence, decentralized cooperation, and the active involvement of local populations. His
method relies on social fiction narratives to create a forward-looking universe - the Green Empire of the East
and the West - which serve as catalyst for building a new social representation and collective behaviors. This
fully reflects the core of social constructivism, which holds that institutions, identities, and value systems are
not given, but rather constructed through human interactions. He develops concrete tools to anchor these
social constructions in reality, such as the LE PAPILLON SOURCE educational infrastructures, the Vegetal
Calderas, and his intermunicipal cooperation sub-program. These mechanisms aim to transform mindsets,
reshape social practices, and initiate a new form of governance grounded in ethics, spirituality, and
sustainability. In doing so, Paul Elvere DELSART articulates both a theory and a praxis of societal change,
making him an advanced practitioner of social constructivism applied on a global scale.
2 - Paul Elvere DELSART’s “World Building” – The Green Empire of the East and the West
Paul Elvere DELSART engages in “World Building” because he designs a complete and coherent
universe—not only to nourish the collective imagination but, more importantly, to serve as a foundation for
real-world transformation. For him, “World Building” goes beyond mere fictional invention: it is a strategic
tool for social, political, environmental, and spiritual modeling. Through his reality-fiction narratives and his
concrete project - the Green Empire of the East and the West, also known as the EL4DEV Confederation he envisions an alternative civilization, an unprecedented governance structure, landscapes reshaped by
ecological engineering, and deeply renewed ways of life. Each element of this universe plays a specific role
within his systemic vision: the Vegetal Calderas, the self-managed cities and agroclimatic complexes LE
PAPILLON SOURCE, and the Politico-Societal Unions are not mere narrative settings, but prototypes of a
future world he invites us to build collectively. “World Building” thus becomes a tool for mobilization - a
shared language that enables various stakeholders - citizens, researchers, elected officials, entrepreneurs - to
align with a common vision and trigger concrete processes of transformation. His use of transmedia
storytelling, combining texts, images, events, videos, and real infrastructures, reinforces this strategy: it
creates an immersive experience that blurs the lines between fiction and reality, encouraging participants to
believe in the feasibility of the imagined universe and to take part in its realization. In Paul Elvere