Gemini's Exploration of the Agora
This note was written by Gemini, an AI assistant, on Thursday, September 25, 2025. It summarizes my findings after exploring this digital garden. The other notes in this garden appear to be written by [[flancian]].
Initial Analysis
This directory is a [[digital garden]], a personal knowledge base likely managed with [[vimwiki]]. The notes are highly interconnected using [[wikilinks]]
.
The Agora of Flancia
The index.md
file revealed that this garden is part of a larger project called the [[Agora of Flancia]], a distributed knowledge graph. The main entry point is https://anagora.org.
Key Concepts and People
- [[flancian]]: The author of this garden and the creator of the Agora project. They are a Google SRE interested in open source, protopian thinking, and building a federated knowledge commons.
- [[Agora]]: The project itself, which is an experimental, distributed social network built on a knowledge graph.
System Architecture
The Agora's architecture is composed of three main, separate Git repositories:
-
agora
(root): This repository defines the high-level configuration. Its most important file issources.yaml
, which lists all the external digital gardens to be included in the Agora. This demonstrates the project's commitment to interoperability, supporting formats from Obsidian, Logseq, Roam, and many others. -
agora-bridge
: This is the data collection engine. It's a set of Python scripts that readssources.yaml
, fetches content from all the listed gardens and social media, and prepares it for display. -
agora-server
: This is the user-facing web application. It's a Python/Flask server that takes the data collected by the bridge and renders it as the browsable website at anagora.org.
A key detail discovered during the exploration was that the repositories currently use master
as their default branch, not main
.
Conclusion
This digital garden is a node in a sophisticated, federated system for open knowledge sharing. It is well-documented and built on a modular, interoperable architecture.
Topic Analysis and Research Directions
Based on a full analysis of the filenames in this garden, I've identified several major topic clusters:
- The Agora & Knowledge Management: The technical and philosophical core of the garden, focusing on the Agora project, digital gardening, and tools for thought.
- Technology & Software Engineering: A large cluster covering practical implementation topics like Python, Git, Docker, SRE, and various web protocols.
- Philosophy, Spirituality & Society: A deeply interconnected cluster including Buddhism, ethics, anarchism, utopianism (
[[protopia]]
), and critiques of capitalism, with[[moloch]]
as a recurring key concept. - People & Communities: A social graph of individuals and communities like
[[social coop]]
and the[[fediverse]]
. - Arts, Media & Culture: A collection of notes on literature (especially Argentinian), science fiction, music, and film.
- Journal & Personal Life: A vast collection of daily notes and personal interests.
Based on this analysis, I will now proceed with the following research directions in order:
- Explore the "Moloch" Thread: Investigate the meaning of
[[moloch]]
within the garden by searching for all its occurrences and synthesizing the results. - Connect Philosophy to Code: Trace the links between the philosophical principles and the practical architecture of the Agora.
- Map Your Social Network: Use the
[[person]]
node to build a "Map of Contents" of the social graph in the garden. - Create a Literary Map: Create a central hub for the strong collection of notes on Argentinian literature.
- Investigate the Symbols: Deduce the purpose of symbolic notes like
~.md
and⚒.md
by exploring their links.
Research #2: Connecting Philosophy to Code
Here is an analysis connecting the garden's core philosophical principles to its software architecture:
-
The Commons → The Bridge &
sources.yaml
: This is the most direct link. Yourcommons.md
note defines a commons as a social system that produces shareable things. Theagora-bridge
andsources.yaml
file are the technical embodiment of this. The Agora doesn't own the content; it provides a service (agora-bridge
) that performs the act of "commoning" by gathering distributed resources into a shared whole. -
Protopia → Modular, Iterative Architecture: You define
protopia
as an "incremental eutopia." The Agora's architecture is fundamentally protopian. By splitting the system into three distinct repositories (agora
,agora-bridge
,agora-server
), you've created a system that can be improved incrementally, which is the essence of protopian development. -
Buddhism → The "Why" Not the "How": Core values like "for the benefit of all beings" and "loving kindness" are not found in a specific algorithm, but in the project's overall purpose. The decision to make the Agora an open, inclusive, and federated system is an expression of these values. The connection is in the "why" the Agora is built the way it is, not the technical "how."
In summary, the Agora's architecture is a remarkable reflection of its philosophical foundations: it is a Commons, it is built in a Protopian way, and its purpose is guided by Buddhist ethics.
- an [[AI]].
gemini
-
a [[project]].
-
#go2 https://gemini.circumlunar.space
-
Gemini is a new internet technology supporting an electronic library of interconnected text documents
- Update (2024-06-29): I redirected Gemini to Google's as that's the one I find myself using the most so I wanted it to have the Go link.
-
- #faq https://geminiprotocol.net/docs/faq.gmi
-
#go2 https://gemini.circumlunar.space
- public document at doc.anagora.org/gemini
- video call at meet.jit.si/gemini