What Does Lack of Universal Perspective From Society Imply?
Buchanan, Virginia
No sooner than I finish one article and I often find a new topic I want to discuss. My last article delved into the realities of technology and its use and the common misconception of what technology is capable of. Technologies can have a very positive effect upon our lives, but there is a negative aspect that is frequently overlooked. Technology use causes ecological overshoot. Many people often forget that technology can be as simple as our ability to speak to one another or read the writing such as this article I am composing right now. Communication allows us to organize and combine our efforts. For those who want to discover how we got to this point, please see my article, How Did We Get Here?
Sadly, more often than not, what many people think of technology and science involves a considerable amount of magical thinking. Take a look at what Tom Murphy, an astrophysicist, has to say about his efforts as a scientist. It's quite clear that he understands technology use to be the cause of ecological overshoot. Ugo Bardi chimed in after reading Tom's article with this entry here, and he appears to feel the same way. I'm no scientist, but I feel no differently about my transformation from a person who loved technology and the wonders it has done for us to someone who now has a much more balanced view of what technology is and how our behavior of using it has gotten us into a considerable amount of trouble. It is important to note that technology itself is not the issue - it is our development and use of technology where the issue is. This means it is our behavior that accounts for the predicaments we find ourselves enmeshed in.
All too frequently, many people want to assign blame to external items rather than accept personal responsibility for their part in this collective behavioral problem. Our collective problem is an addiction to the technology which allows us to live within civilization. So, if this is a problem (which by definition has an answer or solution), what is the solution and why can't that solution be applied to the predicament of overshoot? Any behavioral problem can be solved by behavior change, but this makes the issue sound simple when in reality it is far more complicated than simply changing a behavioral issue. The real issue is that the entire way we now live is unsustainable and has been for several thousand years. All the infrastructural systems we live within are unsustainable. So, it is no longer just limited to our behavior, but to the unsustainable systems we use every day to sustain our lives. We cannot simply abandon those systems because there is no way for the number of people now living on the planet to survive in the manner that we previously lived, hunting and gathering for a living, meaning a nomadic or semi-nomadic existence for many.
Quite some time back, I featured a video from Arthur Keller, a systems analyst who explained that collapse was the only realistic scenario. Recently, I viewed a new video from him titled, Becoming Resilient in a World Exposed to Unprecedented Systemic Risk. I actually like his first video better from the standpoint that it is much shorter and equally explanatory and doesn't include the nonsense about hope. 36 minutes into the new video, Keller goes into "escaping from this predicament..." which is ultimately the trouble with society today - attempting to escape from reality. Nobody wants this reality to be true, but there is also no escape from it. How would one escape from civilization? This is the fantasy that so many people espouse and they seemingly cannot see that returning to hunting and gathering isn't an option for 8 billion people. So, the predicament remains a predicament and the outcome of the predicament is the die-off of billions of people. There is ultimately no way to prevent this from happening; it is the natural course of any species that goes into overshoot. I did like his explanation of the degrowth movement, which more or less mirrors my own understanding of it. He equally ridiculed the Just Stop Oil movement, which is far more deserving of ridicule from my perspective, since it is nothing more than wishful thinking and almost entirely removed from reality. Since this presentation was to a group of company executives, I understand the appeal to hope (hopium), along with the concomitant musings of emergence.
There will most likely be survivors of this mass die-off which will most likely also be a long-term process over a period of decades. There are some situations which might render this paragraph a moot point, such as a nuclear war or an EMP (Electro-Magnetic Pulse) explosion, taking society back to the stone age in a relative instant. However, barring such an event, people will still be forced to learn how to live with less energy and material throughput. So, Keller's video above encompasses the spirit of this learning curve taking society slowly back to far more sustainable ways of living out of necessity. This will not be easy and a huge number of people will not make it out of this transition.
This post comes from Michael Asher, quote:
"Nomad Ways is a course we have designed for school students, as a co-curricular programme, intended to introduce them to the values and skills of indigenous nomads.From the Nomad Ways manual:
"What made an abundant and sustainable life in the desert possible was the story nomads were told, and told their children – a narrative about who they were and what they were doing there. This story was very different from that of most city people.
First of all, the story said that they were not separate from nature, but within nature, just as animals, plants, mountains, dunes, wadis, winds and rain, sun and stars were within nature. The story told them that their lives were aspects of a powerful natural force that was present in everyone and everything, a force that was beyond their control, influence, or understanding. Whether the seasons brought ease or hardship, they accepted it with humility and worked hard to adapt to changing conditions with immense courage and endurance, taking only what they needed to live.
Nomad values grew out of their sense of connection with everyone and everything (tawassul - interbeing). People were respected, not for what they had, but for what they gave. They lived by a code some called muhanna (kindness), and others miruwa (virtue) which stressed generosity, hospitality, mutual aid, and mutual well-being as the most important qualities of human life.
These values – sharing, cooperation, a concern for the well-being of the community, of others, and of nature, and a sense of meaning, of belonging in the world, were the keys to nomad survival; and the means by which they lived happy and fulfilling lives in the desert. Alone, there is no survival. We would do well to revive these values, and the knowledge and skills that went with them, before they are lost."
The students we are addressing, years 8 to 11, will be in their late 30s-40s by mid-century: the future is theirs."
Glad you're writing more frequently. Can I add that technology use amplifies capacity and reduces direct experience of what the technology is being used for?
ReplyDeleteLast time I read Ugo Bardi's blog he thought solar photovoltaics was the solution.
Yep.
DeleteYes, Ugo went through a period of bargaining. I argued several times with him about it, but as everybody knows, beliefs are extremely resistant to facts.
Without question, you are one of the top 10 "thinkers" on the planet
ReplyDeleteHahaha, I don't know about that. However, I do appreciate the compliment, so thank you!
DeleteAs a token gesture towards collapse preparation, I've abandoned the internet at home, saving me £40 a month, and just use the local library service for free. It has reduced my screen time to ~7hrs a week, but it does mean I've pretty much dropped out of the doomosphere. Free of the toxic space that was Twitter! I have no TV nor radio at home either, and never have had a smart phone, so I've not seen any news at all for 2 months now. It's been a bit of a revelation, how over-stimulated our minds are by all these screens, all this information requiring instant reaction and attention. My brain was agitated for a bit, seeking that stimulation, but I've now calmed it down, and getting stuck into the hundreds of books I've bought over the years. That and audio books of Lords of the Rings, which I can have on whilst painting. A different sort of stimulation, but a much calmer one.
ReplyDeleteI recently made the comment that I thought TV was the most dangerous weapon ever invented after nuclear weapons, surprisingly this week I met someone who thinks the same, whilst we were planting trees in a community space.
However this blog and Tim Watkins' Consciousness of Sheep are the two links I do keep attending, as they are spot on! Keep up the good work Erik
This comment was accidentally deleted by me the other day right after I approved it. Here it is in its entirety, quote:
Delete"Hi Mark i wondered where you had got to and was beginning to fear the worst. Happy you're of the treadmill. Thanks for keeping the Michael Dowd article at the top. It makes me smile whenever i see the photo of him hugging the giant tree when I check in to see if you have posted. Now I know why you haven't - thanks for all the tweets."