
I'm sure this is captured elsewhere from others, but here are a few of my own observations from someone who doesn't really have a dog in the fight.
- My perception (right or wrong) is that ERE2 mostly involves very smart people burrowing deeper and deeper into the same intellectual hole using mental frameworks as the shovel. There's nothing inherently wrong with that and I find many of those frameworks useful, but to the extent that ERE2 is supposed to be "emergent" I personally see it as the opposite. Perhaps those deep into ERE2 feel that if you keep digging you'll eventually break through to something, but from my perspective you should try leaving the hole occasionally. I'm not sure anything truly emergent will happen until people start embracing new modes of thinking that can't be easily diagrammed.
- I don't necessarily have a problem with all of the jargon and labels, as I don't really see that as an ERE2 issue but a quirk of the engineering types naturally predisposed to any form of FIRE/ERE. There have been countless Myers-Briggs conversations here and on places like MMM long before WL, colors, and other stuff got mixed in, and I've noted before that the INTJs who dominate these conversations just can't help themselves from trying to categorize everything. That said, I do agree that the increasing levels of jargon places a steep barrier to entry to the vast majority of outsiders who are critical for the "ecology" part of ERE2 to take hold. So maybe finding language that actually supports the stated goal should be part of the plan.
- The thing I like most about ERE is the systems-level "renaissance" perspective to life. I'd also LOVE to find a way to branch that out in emergent new ways to a wider, interconnected ecology of people. I personally try to contribute to that cause not by master-planning the entire system, but by building a helpful node (through my website) that others can plug into their own web of goals as needed. Yes that's just one small piece, but I also see distributed systems as more aligned with the general ERE philosophy than top-down one-size-fits-all designs. And to the extent that conversations focus on tools for my toolchest rather than framework theory or utopian societies, I'll personally be a lot more inclined to participate.
In any case, I say this not to be critical of anyone. Just wanted to do my part by contributing to the conversation.