My favorite people in crypto are those who want to leverage the technology for cultural change, emphasizing public goods and participatory governance. The community leaders, therapists, and founders who get in touch with me via Care Culture are similar: they see the broader cultural relevance of the models of care they’re experimenting with, and want to have a bigger impact on how health, spirituality, and community are integrated. They share a sense that the integration of the
This campus is composed of coliving houses and a couple permanent community centers. Jason Benn, the project’s founder, holds themed unconferences to bring together people who might be a good fit to be roommates, then acts as real estate broker, finding group housing for them in the neighborhood. As more people think of themselves as living in the The Neighborhood and meet at group houses and local centers, they experience more neighborly chance encounters.
But do people operate out of the mechanics of scale rather than out of relationship in order for this to happen?
