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Stirring the pot so it doesn't boil over

General discussions of the systemic, societal and civilisational effects of depletion.

Re: Stirring the pot so it doesn't boil over

Postby Ibon » Fri 20 Mar 2015, 20:35:43

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('KaiserJeep', '
') The competition for the few seats will be fierce at first, but will eventually become who can pay for the ticket to leave the obviously dying Earth.


Oh my! As I allow myself to think out of the box as you suggest the idea only becomes more and more of a nightmare.

If the seats will only be available for those who can pay please consider a moment the self entitlement of the very wealthy and how finely tuned their individual needs are having had enough affluence to maximize their self indulgences. Do you want your grandchildren sitting next to Donald Trumps grandchild on that ship KJ?

For a space colony to work you need a group whose socialization skills are well developed around community, sharing and living in tight spaces. Putting the group before ones personal needs. These social skills can best be found with folks of humble means ...mostly in developing countries.... in other words poor people socialized with humility.

Those wealthy westerners who can afford a seat on a journey to this brave new world are going to be the very least socialized for such an endeavor.

Can you imagine a space ship full of passengers chosen by their wealth? A colony of the super privileged.

You sir are deluded beyond any measure...... I would never say this to someone who I thought was too dumb to know better. You obviously are smart enough to know better. I sometimes think you are baiting us because you like the attention.
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Re: Stirring the pot so it doesn't boil over

Postby Ibon » Fri 20 Mar 2015, 20:55:30

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Pops', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('KaiserJeep', 'W')e can change almost anything - except the basic nature of the critter Ibon calls Kudzu Ape

I don't suffer from the particular brand of self-loathing that sees humans as a parasite or cancer, or even invasive. Kudzu Ape is a nice formulation but wrong — we are our own worst enemy, we don't need a predator.
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Recognizing 7 billion plus humans as invasive and parasitic on the planet is not self loathing. These observations come from sound ecological principals.

An invasive species crowds out native species and harm the habitats they invade
Invasive species often do not interrelate with the flora and fauna of the habitats they invade.
Invasive species are widespread and disperse widely experiencing exponential population growth
Invasive species are defined as having been introduced by humans....well, since we introduced ourselves and we are human I guess that qualifies :)
We extract resources from our environment debilitating our planet and we do not recycle energy back into eco systems. That is not only parasitic but cancerous.

No self loathing. I love humans actually. We are a remarkable species...amazing in many ways...... but alas, we are by every definition of the word invasive as well as parasitic on the planet.... today at 7.3 billion with our current consumption habitats.

My position is not from text books. I have observed native habitats for 40 years on several continents. Experiencing and witnessing the degradation has been for me as visceral as watching a child suffering from cancer.

Will we be Kudzu Ape tomorrow? We'll see.
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Re: Stirring the pot so it doesn't boil over

Postby KaiserJeep » Fri 20 Mar 2015, 21:16:55

Ibon, the simple ability to make money in a society of your peers is an obvious survival trait, one that will ensure that you have a ready and abundant supply of attractive females, plenty of opportunities to mate, and lots of offspring. I have met many polite, helpful, and kindly wealthy people. I have yet to meet a noble savage or a noble peasant.

Keep in mind that off the planet is off the planet. He who takes the high ground of space controls the world, as Dwight D. Eisenhower taught us. He also makes all the rules. It is the ultimate defeat of the ideas of Marx and Engels, laissez-faire capitalism where every habitat is probably owned by a corporation, and they make the rules. Don't like the rules? You are welcome to board the next ship leaving the station, hope you like the next place better. There are no governments, only corporate managers.

It's not as if we are designing a new world. Designing and building a space habitat is akin to building a house or at least, a large hotel. Governments are just collections of flaming rectums that want to mess with people's lives, I would argue they are unnecessary.

The people who own the habitats and the space ships make the rules. I am sure that if you advised them of your concerns, they would make the appropriate allowances for your beliefs. :mrgreen:
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Re: Stirring the pot so it doesn't boil over

Postby onlooker » Fri 20 Mar 2015, 21:35:29

this space colonization is truly absurd. Also, to send people out there we need to chose persons who have certain skills, that does not mean the skill of handing out money. Good grief are we talking about Gilligans Island here. Besides with the problems about to beset humankind, I doubt we will have the focus, resources or time to send people to colonize space. Seriously, we are going to forsake a whole planet for the sake of having a few persons venture out there to the perils of space. This is beyond optimistic. I think Kaiser, Ibon is showing more humanity towards his fellow man then you by pointing out our flaws so perhaps in the future we can rectify them. Oh and as for a space dwelling being like building a house, that is just ridiculous. Have you been out to space recently and experienced the perils of being out there? I have not but I have read about them and they are truly formidable. Once we get out of the cocoon which is Mother Earth, it is a brave new world out there.
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Re: Stirring the pot so it doesn't boil over

Postby Pops » Fri 20 Mar 2015, 22:24:13

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Ibon', 'M')y position is not from text books.

Yeah; it is.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'H')ere are five basic rules of propaganda, courtesy of Norman Davies in his extraordinary book "Europe: A History":

[#1]
The rule of simplification: reducing all data to a simple confrontation between 'Good and Bad', 'Friend and Foe'.


You are presenting exactly the same binary choice as KJ, and pardon me saying, just as self serving; Righteous Planet Protector (& mild mannered cloud forest hotelier) VS Evil Kudzu Ape.

Tune in next week boys and girls as the battle continues!

LOL.
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Re: Stirring the pot so it doesn't boil over

Postby Scrub Puller » Fri 20 Mar 2015, 22:33:39

Yair . . . .Kaiser Jeep . With all due respect I suggest that this statement of yours . . . .

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'I') have yet to meet a noble savage or a noble peasant.


. . . summarises your problem and the childish bullshit you go on with, you need to get out into the real world and grow up just a little.

You need to sit in the dust and listen to an old grey beard blackfeller out near Windorah, or his equivalent with a bone through his nose in the highlands of PNG, or the little Cambodian bloke tending five hundred year old rice terraces on some misty mountain so bloody beautiful it brings tears to your eyes . . . and notice I said listen, don't talk, just listen to some simple wisdom.

These people are truly noble and if left alone would have (in our words) "cherished and preserved" this space ship of ours called earth.

But it was not to be and "White Fella Magic" got in the way and will lead to our demise. I am truly grateful to have lived at a time when it was possible to get off my ass and see and see parts of the Pacific that were as "God" intended . . . whatever you perceive him or her to be.

Any notion that you and your ilk promote about life on other planets is absolutely meaningless if we can't manage this one we own.

Cheers.
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Re: Stirring the pot so it doesn't boil over

Postby Ibon » Fri 20 Mar 2015, 22:37:31

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Pops', '
')
You are presenting exactly the same binary choice as KJ, and pardon me saying, just as self serving; Righteous Planet Protector (& mild mannered cloud forest hotelier) VS Evil Kudzu Ape.



Can you clarify the binary choice please? I didn't know I was presenting a choice of anything actually. Or do you think I am not including myself as a Kudzu Ape? And no where did I use the adjective evil in connection with Kudzu Ape. Kudzu Ape's current invasiveness is not good or evil. It just is.
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Re: Stirring the pot so it doesn't boil over

Postby Keith_McClary » Sat 21 Mar 2015, 01:35:49

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('GASMON', 'O')h, for the good old days of real engineering.
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Re: Stirring the pot so it doesn't boil over

Postby Ibon » Sun 22 Mar 2015, 08:57:32

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('SeaGypsy', '
')Highlighted default+letting just to note that even 'letting' is a form of design


SeaGypsy's comment has been nagging at me the last couple of days. By not actively addressing and confronting human overshoot we are in a way designing the solution to come from external consequences. But we wont recognize them this way.

War for example. Current geopolitical conflicts in the middle east are about resources. This is something we have designed as much as it is a default consequence of allowing ourselves to be dependent on energy from an unstable region. Strictly speaking this is not a consequence of human overshoot since we could still feed ourselves and survive without the resources in the middle east.

Since we are defending a status quo that consumes so much non essential energy it is really difficult to conclude that war in the middle east is a consequence of human overshoot. The same could be said for all the other constraints. Since we use so much water for non essential use or since we waste so much food etc. it will be very difficult for our modern civilization to have this light bulb moment of realization that consequences around us are a result of ecological imbalances or human overshoot. Consequences will always be framed from issues within our civilization and not from the externality of our biosphere and environment. Even when the deeper origins are indeed related to ecological constraints.

This leaves me with a disquieting realization in terms of a central part of my thesis that consequences will be the driving force of transition.

At what point will consequences be understood for what they are, as ecological constraints, instead of as conflicts of civilization?

There are so few of us out there that look at our global situation through the lens of ecology. I have been maybe deluding myself in thinking that all we need to bring ecology back into central focus is for consequences to wake people up.

This line of thinking requires more incubation as I am not clear at the moment. Any thoughts are appreciated.
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Re: Stirring the pot so it doesn't boil over

Postby onlooker » Sun 22 Mar 2015, 09:16:13

I comment for what's it worth Ibon as your understanding of the issues in this matter surpasses mine. I do believe though that in so much as the environment has been viewed as a means to an end, we as a civilization see nature not as the main issue but a side issue. Are main issues as you correctly pointed out lie within civilization, or so we think at this time. It has not dawned upon the mass of people that all our issues with each other and our societies ultimately will hinge upon the ecology-biosphere and how healthy and giving it is or not. Not until we can solely focus on the paramount important of nature will we recognize consequences as deriving from matters concerning nature. That is my two cents.
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Re: Stirring the pot so it doesn't boil over

Postby kanon » Sun 22 Mar 2015, 14:02:10

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Ibon', 'T')here are so few of us out there that look at our global situation through the lens of ecology. I have been maybe deluding myself in thinking that all we need to bring ecology back into central focus is for consequences to wake people up.

This line of thinking requires more incubation as I am not clear at the moment. Any thoughts are appreciated.

Thanks for your previous posts.

The theory I have been trying to develop is that civilized people are motivated by social status concerns, and these could possibly be manipulated away from acquisition towards ecology. I am doubtful, as it occurs to me that the Humanist basis for philosophical or moral values is self-referential and prevents any values outside the social milieu being the basis for consensus or action. Coupled with what has been called the "Iron Law of Oligarchy," I expect the consequences of overshoot will be interpreted (propagandized) in terms of status competition. I have probably not expressed this very well. For example, the public is concerned about the environment, but nearly all information on environmental issues is filtered through some special interest agenda and used in PR campaigns to benefit the special interest. The public is not going to do objective research and therefore has little reliable information, and so the public cannot "wake up" as you put it. Besides, I think the effect of "consequences" will shorten people's horizons and narrow their focus, i.e. closer to just survival, making the long view or big picture less important.

IMHO, it is not hopeless, but bringing ecology into central focus will not just happen. There likely has to be some group or alliance who will educate and advance the cause as much for their own benefit as for any other reason. The selfish benefits do not need to be acquisition or dominance, but these play a role. I think the ranks of "ecologists" are growing, but I don't see any congealing or ascendency at this time.

Just my opinion.
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Re: Stirring the pot so it doesn't boil over

Postby onlooker » Sun 22 Mar 2015, 14:23:11

Your post is very interesting also Kanon. I think what we have here is consensus that the masses are ignorant and that they respond to near term matters which affect them directly and that they frame many issues within the sphere of social relations. Solutions, no easy or obvious ones. But I do not think Ibon is wrong in his initial observation that consequences can "wake" people up. The focus will be narrowed more and more as this century transpires to the view of the Earth. Why? Because the consequences will involves shortages of basic necessities ie. water-food, weather anomalies, droughts, crop failures etc. Of course wars can also have pernicious consequences. In the end it really does not matter what people perceive to be the exact cause of disruptions or problems. People will be in survival mode. Only in the aftermath will the need to educate those remaining be truly important. Those who remain will wonder what are the real causes for this Cataclysm. At that point, mankind must understand in the most profound sense that by using and abusing Earth, humans almost became extinct.
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Re: Stirring the pot so it doesn't boil over

Postby Ibon » Sun 22 Mar 2015, 21:34:46

Back in the 70’s the environmental movement was ideologically driven but lost to a competing ideology of Yuppism and conspicuous consumption, starting in earnest during the Reagan years. Some of us oldsters here remember this well.

I have been saying for years on this site that this time around it isn’t ideology but rather the catalyst of consequences that will drive transition. I am beginning to realize that this assumption is not correct, for reasons we are discussing here. Consequences alone will not be enough.


$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('h2', '
')The other glaring unexamined bias here of course is a fundamental humanism, which leads a mind to conclude that it is better to generate and sustain more humans at all costs today than to drop populations so humans can also live tomorrow, along with the remains of our fragmented and destroyed ecosystems. Humanism of course is a pathological mental disorder


This is part of the problem. Humans exceptional and apart from nature. This goes along with what I mentioned above about consequences being framed from within our civilization and not seen as ecological.


$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('kanon', '
')The theory I have been trying to develop is that civilized people are motivated by social status concerns, and these could possibly be manipulated away from acquisition towards ecology. I am doubtful, as it occurs to me that the Humanist basis for philosophical or moral values is self-referential and prevents any values outside the social milieu being the basis for consensus or action.


I am also doubtful but there is some possibility here. Status seeking is innate for humans. The symbols however associated with that status can change.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('kanon', '
')IMHO, it is not hopeless, but bringing ecology into central focus will not just happen. I think the ranks of "ecologists" are growing, but I don't see any congealing or ascendency at this time.


Yes perhaps growing but growing faster is the number born into urban landscapes. If you think of the largest story of human migration in history of our species, 400 million chinese migrating from subsistence agriculture to urban environments chasing their first factory job, the hundreds of millions in Indonesia India and Brazil and many other countries wanting to quench their thirst with material improvements, etc. Think of any inner city. There is no growing in the ranks of ecologists.

Here is my reason for some optimism though. In the 70's yuppism won the ideological struggle and environmentalists were portrayed as wearing burlap bags for clothes. Yuppism was new and gltizy, a shining new morning in America and what followed was an amazing chapter of affluence and materialism. Oil was cheap, technology blossomed and the Yuppi ideology of materialism was echoed by a strong economy, blossoming technology, the unfolding digital age, optimism. You Can have it all. To repeat Yuppism was a product of the abundant times. How could the environmentalists with their passive solar heaters compete with this exuberance?


Today this counter point to environmentalism has lost its shine. The status quo has cracks and is aging and does not have the gleam it did back then. There is not going to be another round of this exuberance and material cornucopia. Instead there will be flat lining and ratcheting down in the decades ahead as constraints squeeze. . In this scenario frugality and conservation and sustainability will create an ideology that will match these physical constraints. That is where an ecological orientation can win out this time, because consequences will keep the status quo constrained and there will be no "Yuppie competitor".

Consequences alone are not enough. But the ideology that can evolve around these consequences can be a winning ideology this time around. It is the status quo that is increasingly wearing the burlap bags as clothes this time around as it fails to delivery on its promises.

Short term urgency of crisis solving will take precedent over the longer view of ecological sustainability but there will be emerging generations that will question like they always do.... and they will look for a sexier set of status symbols than the dying paradigm around them is offering. So yes Kanon, maybe you are on to something there.
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Re: Stirring the pot so it doesn't boil over

Postby WildRose » Mon 23 Mar 2015, 01:44:13

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Ibon', '
')
Today this counter point to environmentalism has lost its shine. The status quo has cracks and is aging and does not have the gleam it did back then. There is not going to be another round of this exuberance and material cornucopia. Instead there will be flat lining and ratcheting down in the decades ahead as constraints squeeze. . In this scenario frugality and conservation and sustainability will create an ideology that will match these physical constraints. That is where an ecological orientation can win out this time, because consequences will keep the status quo constrained and there will be no "Yuppie competitor".


I agree, Ibon. What I've observed is that the current generation in my small part of the world, especially those who have lived in Canada all their lives, really want something different than what the status quo offers. They are not as willing to work two jobs to afford a large home or the best cars and instead choose to buy an old clunker or live without a car, opting for walkable neighborhoods and sharing accommodations. They're choosing this lifestyle over consumerism because they want more time away from work, more time to be with their families and to spend time outdoors. This in itself should bring greater awareness of ecological concerns to the forefront. I'm happy to say I know quite a few young university students who are working towards degrees because they want to follow a passion, to earn a living but not be a slave to it. This is quite a contrast to the Yuppie years. And the elders among us just want to be able to survive our old age, we've been wrung out by taxes and insurance and inflation. Things just aren't so important. I don't know how the economy is going to reconcile this. I do think as this trend continues, more attention will be paid to climate, conservation, living locally, etc.
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Re: Stirring the pot so it doesn't boil over

Postby Ibon » Mon 23 Mar 2015, 07:25:05

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('WildRose', 'T')hings just aren't so important. I don't know how the economy is going to reconcile this.


Demand destruction may not only come from economic contraction but from culture as well if the emerging generations continue to disassociate themselves with "material things" as a source of happiness.

I am also noticing this trend with the young generation as you have said. Kanon mentioned the same when he said he observed the ranks of "ecologists" growing.

But we have to be careful about this assumption because of the huge chunk of humanity just entering higher consumption. That is why you mentioned you are seeing this culture of less consumption in Canadians who have lived in Canada all their lives. What you observe does not apply to recent Chinese and Filipino immigrants in your country.

On the other hand the North American way of life of owning your house and car has been the worlds model that is now being copied everywhere. But if North Americans themselves can no longer afford or culturally move away from jaded materialism what becomes the world's new cultural model?

Are we experiencing the opening acts of cultural transition away from materialism in this current crop of millennials?
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Re: Stirring the pot so it doesn't boil over

Postby kanon » Mon 23 Mar 2015, 14:30:46

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('onlooker', 'O')nly in the aftermath will the need to educate those remaining be truly important. Those who remain will wonder what are the real causes for this Cataclysm. At that point, mankind must understand in the most profound sense that by using and abusing Earth, humans almost became extinct.


I suggest the possibility that it may be the ones who are educated that see the aftermath.

I was looking into critics of the humanist viewpoint and came across the old essay The Historical Roots of Our Ecologic Crisis, published in 1967. He concludes:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')he greatest spiritual revolutionary in Western history, Saint Francis, proposed what he thought was an alternative Christian view of nature and man's relation to it; he tried to substitute the idea of the equality of all creatures, including man, for the idea of man's limitless rule of creation. He failed. Both our present science and our present technology are so tinctured with orthodox Christian arrogance toward nature that no
solution for our ecologic crisis can be expected from them alone. Since the roots of our trouble are so largely religious, the remedy must also be essentially religious, whether we call it that or not. We must rethink and refeel our nature and destiny. The profoundly religious, but heretical, sense of the primitive Franciscans for the spiritual autonomy of all parts of nature may point a direction. I propose Francis as a patron saint for ecologists. (emphasis added)

And from the Franciscan religious order, A Franciscan Approach to Climate Change which I take to be an elemental statement of their philosophy, despite knowing little about them.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')he stewardship approach sets humans at the top of the Creation hierarchy, and implores people to be responsible and considerate when they exercise dominion over Creation. Franciscans are much more humble and intimate in our outlook. We are to treat Creation as our brother and sister and mother, as members of our family. We are not in a position of power and control, but rather in a loving relationship of mutual concern and care for our family. Right relationship with Brother Wind, Sister Water and Mother Earth helps us to encounter God in Creation. Climate Change affects our family, and puts our entire family into harm’s way.


However, John Micheal Greer has a different take. He often talks of pendulous, slow developments of culture and makes the comment in The Barbarism of Reflection
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 't')he abstract conceptions of contemporary industrial culture have become dependent on the civil religion of progress, and are at least as vulnerable to the spreading failure of that secular faith to deal with a world in which progress is rapidly becoming a thing of the past.

It’s here that reflection, the third mode of thinking discussed in last week’s post, takes over the historical process. Reflection, thinking about thinking, is the most recent of the modes and the least thoroughly debugged. . . The trouble with reflection is that thinking about thinking, without the limits just named, quickly shows up the sharp limitations on the human mind mentioned earlier in this essay. . . . Jean-Paul Sartre’s fiction expressed the resulting dilemma memorably: given that it’s impossible to be certain of anything, how can you find a reason to do anything at all? . . .

It so happens, for example, that there’s one consistently effective way to short-circuit the plunge into nihilism and the psychological and social chaos that results from it. . . the raw figurative narratives of religion. What Spengler called the Second Religiosity—the renewal of religion in the aftermath of an age of reason—thus emerges in every civilization’s late history as the answer to nihilism; what drives it is the failure of rationalism either to deal with the multiplying crises of a society in decline or to provide some alternative to the infinite regress of reflection run amok.


In a follow up, At the Closing of an Age, Greer goes on to say
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'I')n an age of decline, religious institutions that have heavy financial commitments usually end up in deep trouble, and those that depend on support from the upper reaches of the social pyramid usually land in deeper trouble still. It’s those traditions that can handle poverty without blinking that are best able to maintain themselves in hard times, just as it’s usually those same traditions that an increasingly impoverished society finds most congenial and easiest to support. Christianity in the late Roman world was primarily a religion of the urban poor, with a modest sprinkling of downwardly mobile middle-class intellectuals in their midst; Christianity in the Dark Ages was typified by monastic establishments whose members were even poorer than the impoverished peasants around them. Buddhism was founded by a prince but very quickly learned that absolute non-attachment to material wealth was not only a spiritual virtue but a very effective practical strategy.

These are in the 2013 November archive.

Perhaps we are expressing the concerns and musings of our time. It does seem that focusing on a successful life in poverty, improbable as that sounds, should be a focus of "educational" efforts.
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Re: Stirring the pot so it doesn't boil over

Postby Ibon » Mon 23 Mar 2015, 15:20:11

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('kanon', '
')
I was looking into critics of the humanist viewpoint and came across the old essay The Historical Roots of Our Ecologic Crisis, published in 1967. He concludes:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')he greatest spiritual revolutionary in Western history, Saint Francis, proposed what he thought was an alternative Christian view of nature and man's relation to it; he tried to substitute the idea of the equality of all creatures, including man, for the idea of man's limitless rule of creation. He failed. Both our present science and our present technology are so tinctured with orthodox Christian arrogance toward nature that no
solution for our ecologic crisis can be expected from them alone. Since the roots of our trouble are so largely religious, the remedy must also be essentially religious, whether we call it that or not. We must rethink and refeel our nature and destiny. The profoundly religious, but heretical, sense of the primitive Franciscans for the spiritual autonomy of all parts of nature may point a direction. I propose Francis as a patron saint for ecologists. (emphasis added)


Beautiful passage and spot on. On the thread I started regarding Worshiping the Overshoot Predator we discussed quite a bit the need of a religious renaissance of sorts in our relationship with nature. So many posters here are so jaded by institutional religions with their atheistic leanings that they cringe over any reference to religion.

Secular scientific materialism has done more harm to our environment than the Christian passage on dominion. There is the argument that the spiritual foundations of the industrial revolution are those very christian passages of domination over nature but I don't buy into that 100%. If we all became secular atheists tomorrow would we abandon our destructive relationship toward mother earth? I doubt it.

If you take Saint Francis proposed view of nature with equality of all creatures and humans instead of human domination then you can no longer rape and pillage native ecosystems and replace them with human artificial environments. What this actually means is the willful cutting off of resources that allows for our consumption and population growth. A new religious orientation toward nature that holds the sanctity of natural ecosystems with the same right that we extend toward property ownership.
Worshiping those forces that hold us within limits is not supporting a death cult. There are resource poor places on the planet today where communities humbly allow their aged to die without pumping insane amount of resources to extend life. Is this not related to the humility a Franciscan is promoting?

Cynics will shake their heads that we are truly delusional in even discussing this as we seem so hell bent on consuming our way through our planets resources.

I have always believed that the consequences will be draconian enough to lay the foundation for a religious renaissance that puts nature and our biosphere in the center displacing the current humanism...... which after all is an ism also :)
Patiently awaiting the pathogens. Our resiliency resembles an invasive weed. We are the Kudzu Ape
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Re: Stirring the pot so it doesn't boil over

Postby kanon » Mon 23 Mar 2015, 16:17:13

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Ibon', '
')If you take Saint Francis proposed view of nature with equality of all creatures and humans instead of human domination then you can no longer rape and pillage native ecosystems and replace them with human artificial environments.

The only problem is the Franciscan view is generally ignored.
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Re: Stirring the pot so it doesn't boil over

Postby onlooker » Mon 23 Mar 2015, 16:19:09

I invite Ibon and Kanon and others to the thread I started about humanism. It is fascinating in so much as it deals with the inner psyche of a human and a collections of humans. In a source none other then the bible which I am somewhat familiar with as I am nominally a Christian, passages deal in a straight forward manner with the idea of self-centered materialism which seems to have plagued mankind since the dawn of time. A passage "For what does it profit a man to gain all the kingdoms of the world yet lose his soul". Or something to that effect is simple yet direct. While I see the wisdom of laying blame to this self-centered Humanism expounded by Christianity and Modern Secularism, ironically it may be a form of humanism that will allow us to have the spiritual backbone to deal with the coming difficult times. Why do I say this, well some explanation is on the thread on Humanism I just created. Basically, it is about accepting our limitations and flaws honestly. This form of humbling ourselves will allow us to adopt these precepts and ethics which whether they be called a new religion or whatever are about having a reference point by which to base our behaviors into the future. My point being that at this point we are ready to disavow the notion of the "supreme" human being and embrace the notion of our true place on this planet and in this universe. Meaning living in harmony with everything and everyone. We do this by introspection seeing ourselves if you will. We are metaphorically speaking the center of everything right now because we are facing this existential crisis together and will together have to deal with it.
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Re: Stirring the pot so it doesn't boil over

Postby Ibon » Mon 23 Mar 2015, 17:07:00

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('kanon', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Ibon', '
')If you take Saint Francis proposed view of nature with equality of all creatures and humans instead of human domination then you can no longer rape and pillage native ecosystems and replace them with human artificial environments.

The only problem is the Franciscan view is generally ignored.


Exactly. Which is why we are speculating on those forces that can cause a change in our cultural outlook toward our mother earth. Consequences and ideology and how they will interplay. Younger generations emerging will deal with this. We can really only be mentors from what we have lived in our own generation. We can't do more than this and should also humbly accept our own increasing obsolescence every day.

The cultural tools that will resolve this will happen living through the realities as an emerging younger generation. We can at most be mentors in how we may inspire through our words and acts the younger generations who will physically live through this.

We should not forget we are sitting in our arm chairs still very much embedded in the culture that derived from affluence and abundance.

You have to remember that nothing changes now while resilience in the status quo remains. Don't expect the momentum of change to match your own biological life span. If you do you will get frustrated for the chances of change matching your own life's aging is very very remote.

I come and dabble in these topics and the drop them like a hot potato and go back to pinning bugs and walking the cloud forest trails.

Take my advice. Don't over obsess. Change is not in cerebral speculation. It happens in the interplay between physical consequences and ideology and the actors in this play are the generations emerging, not us.
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