A common element of technopaganism is the adaptation of neopagan beliefs, such as
animism, to technology and
cyberspace. Dos Santos writes that a fundamental aspect of technopagan animism is "a
dialogic relationship with the digital environment itself." In a 1995
Wired article, technopagan
Mark Pesce describes how, upon first using
NCSA Mosaic, he realized that the
World Wide Web was the first
emergent property of the Internet: "It's displaying all the requisite qualitiesit came on very suddenly, it happened everywhere simultaneously, and it's
self-organizing. I call that the Web eating the Net." He went on to create
VRML, with one of his motivations having been to bring about a spatial dimension of the Web. ==See also==