Framework
Define ecology (science, matterenergy, environment, interaction, evolution, adaptation; useful for analyzing inner and outer worlds, human ecology science of pertinent, Mumford)
Sketch an ecological framework (numbers, information, gene, epigene, experience, culture, non-culture, environment, air, water, land, minerals, soil, biota, topography, climate, artifact, resource/hazard)
Explain the singular import of culture (change rapidly; communicate rapidly)
Note the drawback of culture (lacks immediate feedback from nature; can learn mistakes)
Describe how culture is communicated, embodied, and evolved (semiotics, language, word, image, expression, posture, gesture, narrative, meta-narrative, advertising, media, news, propaganda, ideology, linguistic relativity, psychology of justification, cognitive activism, paradigm shift, world-view, world model, consensus trance, cognitive bias, conscious personal evolution)