Bio

Bruce LaDuke is a social architect and futurist.  He lives in Indianapolis, Indiana with his wife, Brenna, and four children; Jordan, Jared, Jonathan, and Hanna.

Bruce has developed a theory and method of artificial innovation with a corresponding performance model that both fit into a larger social architecture.

The key to artificial innovation is understanding the core algorithm of the human mind.  All creativity, creative problem solving, and innovation methods work by this single algorithm.

Published Papers and Presentations

  • A concise framework for medical education terminology, Erin Kingshill, Bruce LaDuke and Steve Willis, Journal of Medical Marketing 9: 131-139; advance online publication, June 5, 2009; doi:10.1057/jmm.2009.13
  • Integral Futuring – Pecha Kucha, April 2008, Indianapolis, IN. 
  • Contributing Author – Collective Intelligence – Creating a Prosperous World at Peace, Earth Intelligence Network, Oakton, VA.  Section Authored:  Knowledge Creation in Collective Intelligence.
  • Contributing Author – 2007 State of the Future - The Millenium Project, World Federation of UN Associations, Jerome C. Glenn and Theordore J. Gordon
  • Future Decision – Proteus Futures Workshop, August 14-16, 2007 -
  • Beyond Polanyi – e.Learning Age – Biz Media – Europe – Jul/Aug 2005.
  • Knowledge Creation: The Quest for Questions – The Futurist. Washington: Jan/Feb 2004.Vol.38, Iss. 1; pg. 68.
  • Anti-Knowledge and Ten Immutable Knowledge Creation Laws – SCI 2002, the 6th World Multiconference on Systemics, Cybernetics, and Informatics.
  • Knowledge Machine, the Creativity Key to Exponential and Mechanized Knowledge Advance, World View 2002:  Futures Unlimited, World Future Society, Philadelphia, PA.
  • American Creativity Association:
    • Feb 1999, Definition, Question and the Creativity Engine, Volume 10, No 1
    • Feb 2001, Creativity in the Third Dimension, Volume 1, No 1

Contact Information:

bruceladuke at gmail dot com

(use the @ sign instead of the word ‘at’ and remove spaces and use a period instead of the word ‘dot’)