Novelty theory has a few basic tenets:
-
That the
universe is a living system with a
teleological
attractor
at the end of time that drives the
increase and conservation of complexity
in material forms.
-
That novelty
and complexity increase over time,
despite repeated set-backs.
-
That the
human brain represents the pinnacle of
complex organization in the known
universe to date.
-
That
fluctuations in novelty over time are
self-similar at different scales. Thus
the rise and
fall of the Roman
Empire might be
resonant
with the life of a family within a
single generation, or with an
individual's day at work.
-
That as the
complexity and sophistication of human
thought and culture increase, universal
novelty approaches a
Koch curve
of infinite
exponential growth.
-
That in the
time immediately prior to, and during
this
omega point
of infinite novelty, anything and
everything conceivable to the human
imagination will occur simultaneously.
-
That the
date of this historical endpoint is
December 21,
2012,
the end of the long count of the
Mayan calendar.
(Although many interpretations of the
"end" of the Mayan calendar exist,
partly due to abbreviations made by the
Maya when referring to the date, McKenna
used the solstice date in 2012, a common
interpretation of the calendar among
New Age
writers, although this date corresponds
to such an abbreviation rather than the
full date. See
Mayan calendar
for more information on this
controversy.)
This End of History was to be the
final manifestation of The
Eschaton,
which McKenna characterized as a sort of
strange attractor
towards which the evolution of the universe
developed.
His predictions for this transcendent event
were wide ranging and varied, depending on
his audience, and different times he
conjectured the following: the mass of
humanity would, by means of some technology,
become mentally conjoined in a great
collective; the moment in which
time travel
became a reality; the birth of
self-conscious
artificial
intelligence; a global
UFO
visitation; and occasionally he even
expressed doubt whether anything at all
would happen. However, McKenna claimed that
there was no contradiction between these
scenarios, as they might all happen
simultaneously.