by MonteQuest » Fri 25 Nov 2005, 01:21:25
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Ibon', ' ') A follow up question is, "What will it take to reach global collective consensus that we have reached or exceeded our limits of growth and what if anything can we engineer socially or politically or economically to make the cultural spiritual transformation required to create a new sustainable paradigm?...Can we have a collapse or our belief system and transformation to a new sustainable paradigm without the collapse of the physical systems that hold our current belief systems in place?
Thanks for weighing in, Ibon. Nice to have you enter the debate.
This is a very good question.
History has shown that mankind always constructs a model for ordering life’s activities; this is essential, it explains why we do what we do. Our current worldview goes unquestioned for the most part; from childhood on it is an ingrained and unconscious response. Few really grasp how if affects their perception of the reality around them. We like to call it “human nature,” and therefore immutable. Other societies (as I have pointed out) would find it rather difficult to comprehend a few of the notions we ascribe to “human nature.” History for us is a continuing exercise in engineering; the smoothness of polished steel, the thunder of a finely tuned motor, or the precision of levers and wheels. The Machine Age.
This worldview has a powerful hold over our perception of reality, such that many can’t possibly imagine any other way of looking at the world. And it is difficult, if almost impossible, (even in scientific discussions) for people of one paradigm to communicate with those who perceive and reason in terms dictated by another different paradigm.
The more steeped a worldview in the material side of life, the less conducive it is to the human quest for spiritual transcendence. Many have speculated over why a certain world view emerges. I think the energy condition of the environment sets the broad frame or model for the worldview that emerges.
Newtonian mechanics emerged in the 17th and 18th centuries as we shifted from renewable to nonrenewable energy forms. We moved from a world of cycles and flows to one of quantities and stocks. The concept of cycles and seasons disappeared. The perception of the world as one of decay and renewal shifted to one of perpetual quantities. Time was divorced from the natural unfolding of life; we were no longer dependant upon the idiosyncrasies of nature's ebbs and flows.
We will soon realize that we are about to return to that world of cycles of flows with the advent of renewables once again. This reality probably cannot be taught, it must be experienced--most likely the hard way.
If we were moving to fusion and rethinking our penchant for material growth and it's impact on the environment, and ultimately, our ability to sustain our society, I would be more sanguine.
However, as this change differs from all the preceding ones in that there is no likelihood of its leading to increases of population, but even perhaps to the reverse, I think it highly unlikely we will go quietly into the dark.
So, no, I am not optimistic that we can change our paradigm without
major socio-economical upheaval.
What can we do? I'm not sure we can do anything at this point besides suggest alternatives. Too much asset and cultural inertia.
A Saudi saying, "My father rode a camel. I drive a car. My son flies a jet-plane. His son will ride a camel."