Does understanding complexity beget a tragic view of life?

April 30, 2009

By Kurt Cobb
http://resourceinsights.blogspot.com/

Sheer exuberance is often enough to carry the young into the most daunting and dangerous of endeavors. But as we age, experience can make us more hesitant. Many people discover that the universe can sometimes be arbitrary, that completely unforeseen events can ruin careers and even end lives, that, in short, life is tragic.

But paradoxically the tragic view of life doesn’t beget mere glumness. Instead, it teaches prudence which can be a good thing and occasionally a lifesaver. It actually inculcates a more profound appreciation of those moments of happiness and bliss, for the tragic view of life cautions us that these are not the products of will and planning, but rather mostly the result of serendipity. Those with the tragic view do not believe that everything must end in tragedy; rather, they believe that tragic endings are an ever present possibility.

As we mature we are ushered into the complexities of life. But when the willingness to accept these complexities is blunted or eliminated, maturity never arrives. Many remain in an adolescent state preferring an optimistic gloss on a simple-minded model of the world. As Thomas Homer-Dixon wrote recently:

Collectively we have been behaving like adolescents – believing we’re invulnerable, living for today while ignoring tomorrow, and sneering at anything that smacks of prudence.

And, we have behaved this way when it comes to the financial legerdemain which has brought the world economy to its knees. The high priests of finance had the adolescent exuberance for trading and making money, but none of the appreciation for the hazards embedded in the complex financial instruments they were selling.

The tragic view of life teaches humility in the face of complexity. That humility is notably lacking in the world of neoclassically trained economists, the ones who run the houses of finance and public policy in nearly every Western economy. The levers and pulleys of the economy seem plainly obvious to them. And, the idea that we could fail to understand the risks we are taking with our financial system or find ourselves dangerously short of critical commodities needed to run modern society is labeled preposterous. (These economists sound a little like the adolescents Homer-Dixon describes above.)

But a deeper understanding of the complexities of a world society embedded in a vastly complex biogeochemical system called the Earth requires a more sober assessment. Homer-Dixon says in his book, “The Upside of Down,” that the emphasis on efficiency over resilience in our various human systems has left us vulnerable to the multiple threats of climate change, energy depletion and biodiversity destruction.

Joseph Tainter, author of “The Collapse of Complex Societies,” posits that increasing complexity in society eventually leads to diminishing and then negative returns and results in a society more vulnerable to collapse.

Jared Diamond, author of “Collapse”, focuses on the environmental damage which led to the disappearance of previous societies including Greenland Norse settlements, Easter Island, the Anasazi in what is now called the American southwest, and the Mayans. Our complex relations with and dependence on the natural world give Diamond concern about the future of modern industrial civilization.

Tainter warns that previous collapses were visited on discreet societies separated by vast distances from others that continued to thrive. The next collapse, he believes, must be worldwide since we have now essentially created one planetary society tightly linked by finance, commerce, technology, and travel.

By contrast the careless optimism of the technologists and the economists is predicated on simple-minded models of society and its relationship to the natural world. We often hear the following: “We’ve always found substitutes for critical materials which were running out. Prices rise for the scarce commodity, and substitutes are developed and introduced.” Jared Diamond would beg to differ that this is always the case. But economists’ thinking doesn’t include the complication of history.

And, for the technologists the focus is on the idea that the natural world can be engineered both to help it regain its equilibrium–geoengineering the climate is just one example–and to provide ever increasing resources from its lowest grade deposits–seawater is often invoked as a source for important minerals such as uranium.

The fact that there is currently no method of extracting uranium from seawater that gives us more energy than we expend doesn’t phase the technologists. “We will figure it out,” they say. “It is inevitable.” Well, very few things are inevitable. In addition, the notion that we could make a mistake in trying to engineer something as complex and poorly understood as world climate and thereby create worse problems barely enters their heads. It is hubris borne of simplistic thinking.

It is not the role of those who adopt the tragic view of life merely to predict tragedy. Tragedies, by definition, will continue to occur no matter what we do. Instead, these prudent thinkers are busy identifying trends that could possibly be forestalled and reversed so as to prevent tragic consequences.

But it takes a tragic view of life to imagine such scenarios in the first place. The simpleminded optimists can dazzle us only so long as they are lucky and skirt tragic failures. Their triumphs–at least so far as population and economic growth are concerned–have gone on for a very long time. But the debt that is building up in the natural world in the form of resource depletion, climate change, pollution and destruction of biodiversity and also in society in the form of overoptimized systems vulnerable to breakdown, can only be appreciated by those who seek to understand complex systems. Also required is the humility to accept that we will never fully understand such systems and must therefore act with a very wide margin of safety.

There are still opportunities to prevent societal collapse, the complexity theorists believe. But without swift and thoroughgoing changes in our current practices and priorities, we may all too soon suffer the fate of many societies before us, but on a scale never before seen.

http://resourceinsights.blogspot.com/2009/04/does-understanding-complexity-beget.html


I’ve always liked this idea that we’re just a bunch of irresponsible adolescents that need to grow up.  – Milton

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Tomgram: Chip Ward, Let’s Not Recover

April 28, 2009

posted April 20, 2009 10:36 am
http://www.tomdispatch.com/

It’s natural, whether as a website or an individual, to get caught up in issues that are immediate and urgent. The wars in Iraq and Afghanistan that have been the focus of so many TomDispatch columns are happening right now. People are dying now. The economy is melting down now. The foreclosed and homeless are waking up now in ever-growing numbers. Unemployment lines are getting longer as you read this. Children are hungry this very minute, and the anxiety of a middle-class in freefall is palpable right now almost anywhere you go.

But now and then, it’s also useful to take a step back and ask some longer term questions. Even if we could stop the wars, put people back to work (and back into their homes), even if we could get consumers spending again, there’s always the “what-for” question. What have we accomplished if all we’ve done is reset the clock on the next war, the next bubble, the next bust… and if, all the while, the ice is melting and the globe warming?

Chip Ward, a TomDispatch contributor since 2003, spent 16 years confronting corporations that pollute and run, leaving sickness and suffering in their wake. He was focused on urgent and immediate tasks that made a difference right away (and, while he was at it, running a library system in Salt Lake City that was slowly filling up with homeless people). Recently, he took a break and retreated to the remote canyons of southern Utah where he’s been reflecting on that bigger picture and, as it happens, on the nature of bigness itself at a moment when “too big to fail” is the phrase du jour. Tom

Too Big to Fail

Ecological Ignorance and Economic Collapse
By Chip Ward

“Too big to fail.” It’s been the mantra of our economic meltdown. Although meant to emphasize the overwhelming importance of this bank or that corporation, the phrase also unwittingly expresses a shared delusion that may be at the root of our current crises — both economic and ecological.

In nature, nothing is too big to fail. In fact, big is bound to fail. To understand why that’s so means stepping away from a prevailing set of beliefs that holds us in its sway, especially the deep conviction that we operate apart from nature’s limits and rules.

Here’s the heart of the matter: We are ecologically illiterate — not just unfamiliar with the necessary scientific vocabulary and concepts, but spectacularly, catastrophically, tragically dumb. Oh yes, some of us now understand that draining those wetlands, clear-cutting the rainforests, and pumping all that CO2 into the atmosphere are self-destructively idiotic behaviors. But when it comes down to how nature itself behaves, we remain remarkably clueless.

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Could Food Shortages Bring Down Civilization?

April 26, 2009

By Lester R. Brown

http://www.sciam.com/article.cfm?id=civilization-food-shortages

Key Concepts

  • Food scarcity and the resulting higher food prices are pushing poor countries into chaos.
  • Such “failed states” can export disease, terrorism, illicit drugs, weapons and refugees.
  • Water shortages, soil losses and rising temperatures from global warming are placing severe limits on food production.
  • Without massive and rapid intervention to address these three environmental factors, the author argues, a series of government collapses could threaten the world order.

One of the toughest things for people to do is to anticipate sudden change. Typically we project the future by extrapolating from trends in the past. Much of the time this approach works well. But sometimes it fails spectacularly, and people are simply blindsided by events such as today’s economic crisis.

For most of us, the idea that civilization itself could disintegrate probably seems preposterous. Who would not find it hard to think seriously about such a complete departure from what we expect of ordinary life? What evidence could make us heed a warning so dire—and how would we go about responding to it? We are so inured to a long list of highly unlikely catastrophes that we are virtually programmed to dismiss them all with a wave of the hand: Sure, our civilization might devolve into chaos—and Earth might collide with an asteroid, too!

For many years I have studied global agricultural, population, environmental and economic trends and their interactions. The combined effects of those trends and the political tensions they generate point to the breakdown of governments and societies. Yet I, too, have resisted the idea that food shortages could bring down not only individual governments but also our global civilization.

I can no longer ignore that risk. Our continuing failure to deal with the environmental declines that are undermining the world food economy—most important, falling water tables, eroding soils and rising temperatures—forces me to conclude that such a collapse is possible.

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The painful truth about trainers: Are running shoes a waste of money?

April 24, 2009

An interesting article about weather or not we need expensive footwear (that needs replacing annually).  It makes me wonder what other products have we been sold on but actually make our lives worse? – Milton

By CHRISTOPHER McDOUGALL
http://www.dailymail.co.uk…

Thrust enhancers, roll bars, microchips…the $20 billion running – shoe industry wants us to believe that the latest technologies will cushion every stride. Yet in this extract from his controversial new book, Christopher McDougall claims that injury rates for runners are actually on the rise, that everything we’ve been told about running shoes is wrong – and that it might even be better to go barefoot…

…Runners wearing top-of-the-line trainers are 123 per cent more likely to get injured than runners in cheap ones. This was discovered as far back as 1989, according to a study led by Dr Bernard Marti, the leading preventative-medicine specialist at Switzerland’s University of Bern.

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Spreading Manure over Astroturf: Why Ad Men Hate ‘Brown’

April 22, 2009

By Kathy McMahon, Psy.D.
Published October 22, 2008
http://www.peakoilblues.com/blog/?p=806

Sharon Astyk is one of those “loony tunes” who shows her concern for the planet by depriving her children of central heat and baseball, or at least that’s how she’s portrayed in the New York Times article by writer Joanne Kaufman. Is she a “role model,” a “colorful eccentric with admirable intentions who has arrived at a way of life close to zealotry,” or instead an “energy anorexic, obsessing over personal carbon emissions to an unhealthy degree?” Kaufman asks.

The photo of her kids is labeled “Potential Energy”—little bodies offered up– much like the hero in the Matrix offers up his life-force– for the good of the “child collective.”

Their four sons, Kaufman writes, “often sleep huddled together to pool body heat.”

Going Nuts Over Climate Change
The article is littered with words like “unplugged,” “fruitcake” “energy anorexic,” “zealous,” “nuts,” “impracticality,” “compulsions,” “pulling stunts”, and even “ordure”- a rare term which can apply to animal manure, or the alternative meaning: “an example of obscene or immoral behavior.”

Questions like: Normal? How normal? are asked repeatedly, and answered by the writer. “Crazy” is a term thrown around about people who wash out plastic bags for soiled diaper reuse, or who cycle to work in all kinds of Seattle weather. “Not everyone thinks that Ms. Lavine and her ilk are crazy,” Kaufman tells us, but such “extremes,” she confides, can end intimate relationships and can “suggest mental illness.” Not discouraged by the fact that “[T]here is no recognized syndrome in mental health related to the compulsion toward living a green life,” she coins one: “Carborexic.”

Carborexia” she warns, “might raise a red flag” about anyone’s sanity.

More…

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The Great Recession: America Becomes Thrift Nation

April 20, 2009

By Nancy Gibbs

http://www.time.com/time/nation/article/0,8599,1891527,00.html

Sometimes we change because we want to: lose weight, go vegan, find God, get sober. But sometimes we change because we have no choice, and since this violates our manifest destiny to do as we please, it may take a while before we notice that those are often the changes we need to make most. We ran a good long road test of the premise that more is better: we built houses that could hold all our stuff but were too big to heat; we bought cars that could ferry a soccer team but were too big to park; we thought we were embracing the simple life by squeezing in a yoga class between working and shopping and took an extra job to pay for it all.

Now we’re stripping down and starting over. A platoon of TIME reporters and pollsters fanned out to every corner of the country to measure — anecdotally and empirically — what’s changed in the way we set our priorities and spend our money since the Great Recession began. Most people think the pain will be lasting and the effects permanent: only 12% expect economic recovery to begin within six months, half believe it will be another year or two, and 14% believe we are at the start of a long-term decline. (See TIME’s special report on how Americans have adjusted to the recession.)

Our institutions watch for economic vital signs. But maybe, for individuals, the sickness is what came before — the hallucination that debt would never need to be repaid, that values only rise, that bubbles never burst. When the markets collapsed, that fever broke. In our assumptions and attitudes and expectations, the recovery is already well under way.

Talk to people not just about how they feel but about how they’re living now, and you hear more resolve than regret. Nearly half say their economic status declined this year, and 57% now think the American Dream is harder to achieve. And yet pain and promise are a package deal; even after all this, fully 56% believe that America’s best days are ahead. It would be nice if it took something short of a heart attack to get us to work out, eat better and spend more time with our kids. But in the end, where we wind up matters more than how we got there.

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The End Is Near! (Yay!)

April 19, 2009
By JON MOOALLEM
Published: April 16, 2009

The stage lights went up at the Panida Theater, a classy old movie house in Sandpoint, Idaho, and the M.C. stepped out of the dark with one finger high in the air. There was an uprising of applause and cheering. Then, shouting like a head coach before a bowl game, she said, “Sandpoint, are you ready?”

It was a Friday night last November. All around the little town of Sandpoint, beetles were blighting north Idaho’s pine forests. The previous day, the U.N. reported that emissions from automobiles and coal-fired power plants were collecting in brown clouds over 13 Asian and African cities and blocking out the sun. Iceland’s main banks had crumpled, and American auto executives were about to fly to Washington in private jets to plead for a bailout. Off the coast of Africa, Somali pirates were hijacking oil tankers. But the folks at the Panida Theater wouldn’t stop clapping. The Sandpoint Transition Initiative, a new chapter of a growing, worldwide environmental movement, was officially coming to life.

The Transition movement was started four years ago by Rob Hopkins, a young British instructor of ecological design. Transition shares certain principles with environmentalism, but its vision is deeper — and more radical — than mere greenness or sustainability. “Sustainability,” Hopkins recently told me, “is about reducing the impacts of what comes out of the tailpipe of industrial society.” But that assumes our industrial society will keep running. By contrast, Hopkins said, Transition is about “building resiliency” — putting new systems in place to make a given community as self-sufficient as possible, bracing it to withstand the shocks that will come as oil grows astronomically expensive, climate change intensifies and, maybe sooner than we think, industrial society frays or collapses entirely. For a generation, the environmental movement has told us to change our lifestyles to avoid catastrophic consequences. Transition tells us those consequences are now irreversibly switching on; we need to revolutionize our lives if we want to survive.

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EZ Harvest

April 17, 2009

Introducing the EZ HARVEST Raised Bed Vegetable Garden! Let us do the heavy lifting. We plant. You eat. (just add water)

The EZ Harvest service provides TWO 3 foot x 6 foot RAISED GARDENS. They build, deliver two Raised Garden Treated Pineboxes to your yard. See brochure.  (You can think of it as a “lemonade stand by boys that refuse to grow up.”)

Order & Installation $799. (50% payment due with order)

Fax this order form to: 847-729-7892 and PayPal 50% deposit $399 to newmedia@ameritech.net

Orders for May 2009: This is what is included:

We deliver and install two treated pineboxes and ~3,000 pounds of soil, along with instructions for care.

We will pre-seed your garden with:

Potatoes, Spinach, Beets, lettuce, celery, kale, radishes, parsley, carrots, marigold (keep rabbits away).

For one, it’s good for you (health), good for the earth (sustainable), and good for families struggling to make ends meet during these turbulent times. In an age when kids are digitally-tethered, what better excuse than to get them out of the house and into the dirt. Until Alice Water’s brings the “Edible Schoolyard Project” from San Francisco to Chicago, we can all start in our own backyards. 

Second, I like hanging out with Mike and inventing things. We’ve been doing it since we sold our first product circa 1989 @ Bradley University (the now legendary “Drink of the Week” calendar). This is an opportunity for us to continue to build the empire!

But, mostly, we’re using this opportunity to teach our oldest boys – Charlie and Eion – about principles of entrepreneurship. As you can imagine, as entrepreneurs ourselves, Michael and I both have great aspirations for our kids to someday have the opportunity to sign both the front and the back of their paychecks (regardless of how large those paychecks may be!). 

Here’s to your health,

Andrew Razeghi

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Live off the land — in the city

April 17, 2009

By Donna Freedman

Wild greens, mushrooms, fruit and even fish and game can be harvested in America’s urban jungles. Dandelion salad, anyone? Or some batter-fried squirrel?

Feeling squeezed at the supermarket? Maybe you should be looking for food in the parking lot, or in your neighbor’s yard.

We’re talking dandelions, feral mushrooms, gleaned fruit, local fish or even those wascally wabbits that overrun city greenbelts. Ingenuity plus a little sweat equity can put fresh, healthful food on the table and possibly provide other benefits as well: exercise, relaxation and a different way of looking at your neighborhood.

more…

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Life After Oil

April 14, 2009

The Transition Town movement aims to wean us off our fossil fuel addiction — without knowing if it’ll work. How an unproven social experiment is becoming a phenomenon

By Rachel Dowd

In the late 1980s, Joanne Poyourow’s life looked like the American Dream. A certified public accountant in charge of multistate taxation at a boutique practice in Newport Beach, Calif., she had earned the shiny little sports car, three-inch heels, and business class flights to which she had grown accustomed.

Then she left it behind. more

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