Libraries of the Future book cover

Coming 2026


The Book

Libraries of the Future: Hybrid Intelligence and Knowledge Integration in the Post-Agentic World

The title carries an unintentional resonance with Licklider’s 1965 work [1] . We are doing more and thinking less. Generative AI enables productive output at extraordinary scale while the cognitive capacities that make output meaningful quietly erode beneath the surface. We are becoming third-party thinkers relying on second-hand thoughts.

This book proposes that the solution is not resistance to AI but a deliberate redesign of how humans relate to knowledge systems. It introduces two original frameworks:

  • The Perceptiosphere™ — a nested architecture of sovereign knowledge zones enabling composable collaboration across boundaries while preserving contextual integrity
  • The Cognitive Vitality Index™ (CVI) — a composable measurement framework for assessing the proportion and quality of genuinely human-engaged cognitive work within a knowledge system, at any scale
The book itself is a meta-application of its thesis: its annotation-rich format, question-priming structure, and deliberate cognitive friction are designed to maintain your engagement rather than permit passive reading.

The annotations on this page are not decorative1 The annotations on this page are not decorative1 . You can also view this page in our print layout system to see the Paliminar™ publishing system as it appears in the physical book: margin notes in the gutter, footnotes at the page foot, and structured information density across every spread.


Table of Contents

The structure is deliberate: problem mirrors framework [2] .

Preface: How to Navigate This Book

An orientation to the book’s deliberate design choices: annotation-rich format with multiple reading depths, question priming as cognitive friction, structured reflection as a practice, and the meta-application principle (the book practises what it prescribes).

Introduction: Third-Party Thinkers, Second-Hand Thoughts

The central tension: we produce more knowledge output than ever while the cognitive capacities that distinguish active thinking from passive information routing quietly atrophy. Maps what each part covers and offers three reading sequences for different audiences [3] .

Opening questions:

  • When was the last time you formed an opinion without consulting an AI first?
  • If your most-used AI tool disappeared tomorrow, which professional capabilities would you discover have quietly atrophied?

Part I: The Problem

Chapter 1 — Doing More, Thinking Less

The knowledge problem is not an information problem. It is a cognition problem: a systematic erosion of human capability hidden beneath surface-level productivity. This chapter introduces “pass-through” cognition [4] : humans who occupy nodes in information networks without transforming what flows through them.

Empirical evidence from aviation, medicine, and education demonstrates the pattern is domain-agnostic2 Empirical evidence from aviation, medicine, and education demonstrates the pattern is domain-agnostic2 .

Key concepts: pass-through vs. transformation, cognitive agency surrender, the use-it-or-lose-it thesis, non-linear degradation curves, critical threshold

Opening questions:

  • How much of your daily work involves genuinely thinking versus moving information between places?
  • If cognitive skills work like muscles, which of yours have you stopped exercising?

Chapter 2 — From Information to Context

Before proposing how knowledge systems should be architected, we must understand what knowledge actually needs: composability, structural grammar, curation as ongoing practice, and the distinction between information (transferable data) and context (meaning-bearing relationship).

This chapter establishes the requirements specification [5] .

Key concepts: knowledge composability, knowledge grammars, structured reflection, curation as stewardship, the context-information distinction

Opening questions:

  • What makes knowledge different from information, and why does the distinction matter more now than ever?
  • Why do organisations keep losing wisdom when experienced people leave, despite decades of knowledge management investment?

Part II: The Framework

Chapter 3 — The Perceptiosphere

The architectural response. A nested model of four knowledge zones [6] (Self, Trusted Circle, Community of Practice, Public) providing structural mechanisms for knowledge sovereignty, contextual integrity, and composable collaboration. Demonstrates how knowledge context maintains meaning as it moves between zones through deliberate contribution mechanisms rather than uncontrolled extraction.

Key concepts: four zones, contextual integrity, knowledge sovereignty, contribution vs. extraction, composable sovereignty

Opening questions:

  • Who owns the context your AI was trained on?
  • What would it look like to have boundaries around your knowledge that you control?
  • How might knowledge be shared across organisational boundaries without losing the meaning that made it valuable?

Chapter 4 — Measuring Human-Engaged Cognitive Work

The measurement response. The Cognitive Vitality Index™ (CVI) [7] defines “genuinely engaged” cognitive work (transformation versus pass-through) and provides a composable framework operating from individual cognition through team dynamics to organisational knowledge systems.

The chapter introduces the Resonance Wheel™ [8] for visualising interdependencies between dimensions.

Key concepts: Cognitive Vitality Index™, transformation vs. pass-through, six major dimensions, Resonance Wheel™, critical threshold, non-linear degradation

Opening questions:

  • If you scored your own cognitive engagement at work over the past year, would the trend line be rising or falling?
  • How would you know if an entire organisation’s collective thinking capacity was silently eroding?

Part III: Frontiers

Chapter 5 — Compelling Questions™ for the Field

Four open frontiers posed as structured invitations to the field [9] :

5.1 — Digital Sovereignty and the Context Economy How might we create a labour economy based on licensing dynamic knowledge context rather than selling time, without the value collapsing due to static decay or exposing creators to catastrophic liability?

5.2 — The Living Archive How might we establish a Living Archive that ensures institutional wisdom is captured across generations, without creating surveillance culture or punishing experts for training their replacements?

5.3 — Cognitive Agency in Education How might we deploy Socratic AI Partners that accelerate learning, without removing productive struggle or creating Algorithmic Mono-Thinkers constrained by a single foundation model?

5.4 — Composable Knowledge for Collaborative Innovation How might we enable collaborative innovation so that diverse problem-solvers build on each other’s context, without collapsing contextual integrity or creating a knowledge commons tragedy?


Conclusion: The Post-Agentic Human

What it means to be human in a world of infinite automated output. The scarce and valuable human contribution is not production but curation, judgment, and the maintenance of cognitive vitality. Moving from “Users” to “Curators of the Perceptiosphere.”


Key Features

  1. Meta-Demonstrative Design — The book practises what it prescribes. Its annotation-rich format, question-priming structure, and deliberate cognitive friction maintain reader engagement by design rather than instruction.

  2. The Perceptiosphere Framework — A novel knowledge architecture model (nested sovereign zones) providing practitioners with a structural grammar for designing human-AI knowledge systems.

  3. The Cognitive Vitality Index™ — A composable measurement framework grounded in cognitive reserve theory and automation deskilling research, providing an early warning system for cognitive erosion at any scale.

  4. The Resonance Wheel™ — A visualisation methodology for revealing interdependencies between complex index dimensions, making trade-offs and feedback loops visible.

  5. Compelling Questions™ for the Field — Structured invitations using design fiction and scenario off-ramps that position the book as a catalyst for further research.

  6. Empirically Grounded — Built on validated research (cognitive agency surrender, AI-induced skill degradation, cognitive reserve theory) and primary data from semi-structured interviews with knowledge management professionals.


Writing Samples

Published entries demonstrating the annotation-rich Multi-Depth Writing format. Each is available in equivalent web and print (8.5×9”) views:

Lexicon (Framework Definitions)

  • Cognitive Vitality Index: web | print Ch 4: composable measurement framework for human-engaged cognitive work
  • Perceptiosphere: web | print Ch 3: sovereign knowledge architecture with concentric zones
  • Knowledge Composability: web | print Ch 2: structural interoperability through shared frameworks
  • Multi-Depth Writing: web | print Preface: meta-demonstrative publishing methodology
  • Hybrid Intelligence: web | print Ch 3-4: HI-Scaling teams orchestrating agent workforces

Research Questions (Ch 5 Methodology)

  • How Might We Build a Living Archive?: web | print Ch 5.2: knowledge succession across generations
  • How Might We Deploy Socratic AI Partners?: web | print Ch 5.3: cognitive agency in education
  • How Might We Build a Digital Sovereignty Economy?: web | print Ch 5.1: context licensing and static decay

Methodology

  • Compelling Question (Foresight): web | print Ch 5: constraint-based futures methodology

For Stakeholders

Detailed proposals and the presentation deck are available with passcode [10] :