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Will there ever be a truely collective wake up for mankind?

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

Re: Will there ever be a truely collective wake up for manki

Postby Revi » Mon 01 Oct 2007, 20:13:16

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Ludi', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Revi', ' ')The Mayans were not particulaly enlightened by their collapse. They had city after city fall, and the refugees probably died.



And that's why there are still Maya living in Mesoamerica to this day....


cuz they all died.....


I know, I used to live with them. I lived for two years with the Kekchi Maya, who I think were some of those who fled those cities a thousand years before. They are in Belize and Guatemala, near Coban.

The point I was trying to make is that it wasn't particularly enlightening to have their culture collapse. It was just a pain in the butt. They may have realized that the supply of everything was dwindling, but they were too busy defending the collapsing cities, and fleeing when they fell to notice much else.

The people I worked with, however had an older culture's perspective on things. They may have been farming corn on hillsides because it has worked sustainably for a thousand years.

Highland Maya people are more or less in balance with their environment, whereas their ancestors who inhabited the lowlands were living on the civilizational edge, like us.
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Re: Will there ever be a truely collective wake up for manki

Postby Ludi » Mon 01 Oct 2007, 20:19:53

I guess I think we might could take some comfort in the survival of the Maya after the fall of their civilization, and the fact that it is possible to live in a way which is apparently collapse=proof, even if one is on the edges of civilization.
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Re: Will there ever be a truely collective wake up for manki

Postby Revi » Mon 01 Oct 2007, 20:26:25

The meek really might inherit the earth. The movie Apocalypto was an excellent depiction of classic Mayan life. There is a small hunter-gatherer band which is captured and brought into the empire. They were in balance with their environment, but they are taken into a world that is not. The Mayans suffer from all sorts of ailments and live in a very stratified society.

The only part which was a bit unreal was the ending.

I agree with you, Ludi. There is a way to live on the fringes of this society in a way that is sustainable enough that we might just make it throught the nightmare which is coming.
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Re: Will there ever be a truely collective wake up for manki

Postby Ludi » Mon 01 Oct 2007, 20:28:54

Have you read any of the books of Daniel Quinn, Revi?
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Re: Will there ever be a truely collective wake up for manki

Postby Nicholai » Mon 01 Oct 2007, 20:36:15

Ishmael = godly
We're discussing it tomorrow in class, you guys got any ideas how I should go about bringing up PO without looking like the crazy kid?
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Re: Will there ever be a truely collective wake up for manki

Postby Ludi » Mon 01 Oct 2007, 20:38:35

I don't know what you mean by "Ishmael = godly"

sorry.... :cry:
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Re: Will there ever be a truely collective wake up for manki

Postby Ferretlover » Mon 01 Oct 2007, 21:03:09

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Iaato', 'S')peaking of Darwin, how are you going to hoe potatoes with those stubby little arms, Ferretlover?


Wow! I did NOT see that crying jag coming..... Sorry everybody!
And, Iaato, why I'll just grab them with my little arms, and roll them backwards til I reach my hidey hole! :-) (Thanks!)
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Re: Will there ever be a truely collective wake up for manki

Postby Judgie » Mon 01 Oct 2007, 21:16:49

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Ibon', 'I') have been increasingly suspicious over the past couple of years that we may never get to this collective epiphany moment when modern humans wake up to the perils of resource depletion, over population, environmental degradation and the need to change our unsustainable lifestyles. Of course geology and reality will finally impose itself on humans in denial and we will be forced to consume less and live within constraints. But does this automatically mean that we will wake up to a collective epiphany experience of why this has happened and how we allowed ourselves to get there? Will these imposed resource constraints really bring the dawn of cultural transformation toward more sustainability as a cultural objective or will we just readjust to lowered expectations but still run around as the same stupid monkeys that we are, always have been and always will be?

What is the evidence out there that the arrival of ecological limits and energy limits will force a collective wake up in human societies?

None that I see. I'm losing faith in Peak oil and related environmental limits being a catalyst for change. I just don't see it happening and I fear that I projected on to that Peak Oil bell curve some similar bell curve where human ignorance represents the ascending part of the curve leading to a collective wake up at peak and a cultural transformation on the descent. There really is no evidence that this will be the case.


Not bluddy likely, we'd need something like "collective genetic memory" (pulled that from a good little science-fiction read entitled "The Swarm" by Frank Schatzing).
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Re: Will there ever be a truely collective wake up for manki

Postby Kaj » Tue 02 Oct 2007, 01:04:38

Changes always produces strange and unknown results, so its way too late to suggest what the effects of PO, or climate change could be. We are still at the stages of denial. One day it will be undeniable fact.

Paradigm shifts are happening all the time. I'm at university, and around me the social power of women, gays and racial minorities is massive, and still growing. The people who fought for rights in these movements probably had their moments of despair, thinking they would never reach this point, you wait till 10 years in the future when all these people are occupying high profile jobs and changing the social fabric around them as they do it.

The environmental movement is gaining ground, incrementally. So is Peak Oil awareness. It will probably take at least major crisis (disaster) to really push it forward. And judging by the size of the coming crisis(es) I can't see how it wont change things in very fundamental ways. The system is so chaotic that we cannot know what is coming exactly, there will be surprises.

Now for the pretencious bit:

WE are the music-makers,
And we are the dreamers of dreams,
Wandering by lone sea-breakers,
And sitting by desolate streams;
World-losers and world-forsakers,
On whom the pale moon gleams:
Yet we are the movers and shakers
Of the world for ever, it seems.
...

We, in the ages lying
In the buried past of the earth,
Built Nineveh with our sighing,
And Babel itself with our mirth;
And o'erthrew them with prophesying
To the old of the new world's worth;
For each age is a dream that is dying,
Or one that is coming to birth.

- Arthur O'Shaughnessy
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Re: Will there ever be a truely collective wake up for manki

Postby Nicholai » Tue 02 Oct 2007, 01:10:27

You really need to read Monte's 3 pages of PO talk. This will bring you down to Earth.
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Re: Will there ever be a truely collective wake up for manki

Postby Kaj » Tue 02 Oct 2007, 01:30:14

Can you link me that?
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Re: Will there ever be a truely collective wake up for manki

Postby Zardoz » Tue 02 Oct 2007, 02:36:02

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Ibon', '.')..What is the evidence out there that the arrival of ecological limits and energy limits will force a collective wake up in human societies?

None that I see...

Of course not. How could there be at this point? There is no evidence to see because nothing bad has happened yet.

Sure, there are some indicators that TS is about to HTF: The melting of the Arctic ice cap, long-lasting droughts, shortages of fuel in poor Third World countries, rapid dropoff of production in some of the major oil fields, and so on.

Meanwhile, the Dow just set a new record, and the Forbes 400 became 290 billion dollars richer over the last twelve months. Do you really expect there to be some sort of indication that we 6,600,000,000 Burger King customers are on the road to enlightment under these conditions?

I don't understand. How could your expectations of us be so high? A small percentage of us are going to lose "their" homes to foreclosure because they got suckered into fools' deals by predatory lenders, but otherwise the rest of us are stumbling along as ever, with no clue of the gathering storm that looms just over the horizon. Virtually none of us have any awareness yet of anything that is coming.

Why would you be looking for evidence of a collective wakeup when we are still deep in R.E.M. sleep, dreaming of 104" LCD flat-panels and 500 HP Mercedes-Benz SUVs?

Certainly you must know that we're going to have to be bludgeoned into changing our mindsets. We'll have to be chained to walls and tormented with the most horrible of medieval torments to even begin to change the way we think. Maybe after we've witnessed the ghastly starvation deaths of two or three billion of our kind there will be the slightest glimmer of recognition in our collective consciousness that we'll need to approach things a bit differently in the future.

Maybe. It may take even more than that.

Try to be more patient with us. Remember who you're dealing with here. We're only capable of coming to grips with a limited amount of reality. You're asking way too much of us to show signs of "getting it" at this very early stage of the game. Give us a break.
"Thank you for attending the oil age. We're going to scrape what we can out of these tar pits in Alberta and then shut down the machines and turn out the lights. Goodnight." - seldom_seen
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Re: Will there ever be a truely collective wake up for manki

Postby Ibon » Tue 02 Oct 2007, 04:00:21

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Jack', '
')It seems that, in the end, we have come to equivalent conclusions. When two people with perspectives as different as ours wind up at the same intellectual destination, it says something.


I don't know if are coming to equivalent conclusions. I am admitting that my belief in cultural transformation through the stresses of peak oil and environmental degradation may be delusional. That does not mean I have taken the cynical leap into your worldview. I am at the moment on a rural island in Thailand without electricity working with local muslims, browner than most Mexicans, and loving the community of people around me. Regenerating coastal forest habitat on a private resort project may end up being no more than building castles made of sand but I am not xenophobic about my fellow humans on this planet nor do I advocate some sort of selective racist genocide which you have in the past.

I am dropping my expectations more than anything as regards to Peak Oil and moving into a frame of mind that just simply draws a blank as to what awaits us. Can you say the same or are you fixed on some future scenario playing out?
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Re: Will there ever be a truely collective wake up for manki

Postby Ibon » Tue 02 Oct 2007, 04:06:26

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('EnergyUnlimited', '
')You was considering me "defeatist" several months ago and now you are submitting to that mode yourself.


I am dropping preconceived notions but that does not mean I am joining your defeatist world view. Perhaps I am dropping having a world view and just moving into an acceptance of not knowing.

Your posts in the past have sometimes worked as a chisel chipping away at my perhaps utopic ideas of cultural transformation. So debating you has been valuable. But I see you still as defeatist. Where as I have dropped my opinions as to where humanity is heading can you say the same?

Uncharted waters best sums it up. To hold on to utopic beliefs in some cultural transformation coming up ahead is just as delusional as convincing yourself that we are inevitably heading toward wars etc.

It's nice to drop the baggage of having a belief that you try to twist reality around. Can you say the same?
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Re: Will there ever be a truely collective wake up for manki

Postby Ibon » Tue 02 Oct 2007, 04:11:19

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('BigTex', ' ')

The best approach is probably to try to reduce personal consumption as much as possible, be a good leader and role model for those around you, and try not to worry about it too much.


I agree. I was obsessed with this topic and going to conferences and couldn't drop it from my mind for several years. Lately I am letting it go.
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Re: Will there ever be a truely collective wake up for manki

Postby Ibon » Tue 02 Oct 2007, 04:18:19

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Kaj', '
')The environmental movement is gaining ground, incrementally. So is Peak Oil awareness. It will probably take at least major crisis (disaster) to really push it forward. And judging by the size of the coming crisises I can't see how it wont change things in very fundamental ways. The system is so chaotic that we cannot know what is coming exactly, there will be surprises.


There will be surprises with the chaos that is coming. Yes I agree.

But this idea you have of the environmental movement gaining ground sounds like wishful thinking while sitting here in South East Asia. China , India and all these small countries that encompass the region are totally lacking any kind of environmental ethic or movement that you speak of. I worked 15 years in Latin America before coming here and the environmental movement there was light years ahead of Asia. Business, progress and money are occupying 99% of peoples minds here in urban areas. The rural areas are getting infected by television and the promises of modernity.

Where the hell do you see this growing environmental movement? In University campuses? In a few enclaves of conscious folks? That is absolutely nothing compared to the vast percentage of the 6.5 billion people who haven't a clue what is happening.
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Re: Will there ever be a truely collective wake up for manki

Postby kokoda » Tue 02 Oct 2007, 06:52:51

It will take a monumental event.

Even when Peak Oil is confirmed most people will believe that alternative energy sources will be found.

When economies collapse people will believe that it is only a matter of time before they bounce back.

... and when those same people are starving in the streets they will believe that a relief agency is organising a food drop and sending in medical teams to save them.
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Re: Will there ever be a truly collective wake up for manki

Postby Jack » Tue 02 Oct 2007, 08:52:07

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Zardoz', 'M')aybe after we've witnessed the ghastly starvation deaths of two or three billion of our kind there will be the slightest glimmer of recognition in our collective consciousness that we'll need to approach things a bit differently in the future.

Maybe. It may take even more than that.


Well said!

And it leads to the question...how long will we remember our lessons? A century? A millennium? Ten millinnea? Changing the belief in perpetual growth may well be a central challenge for the species. I am not at all sure that humankind is up to the task.
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Re: Will there ever be a truely collective wake up for manki

Postby mos6507 » Tue 02 Oct 2007, 15:21:55

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('turmoil', 'I')t's why insect species have survived for millions. They get by on nothing.


That's kind of a terrible example. Insects have a huge "churnrate". They live like five seconds.
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Re: Will there ever be a truely collective wake up for manki

Postby gasguzzler » Tue 02 Oct 2007, 15:54:22

i've tried to post a similar thought before, probably poorly worded. I doubt that peak oil will ever be recognized widely even when the problems it creates are everyday reality for the majority. I suspect peak oil will lead to tensions, which will lead to war (probably nuclear) which will lead to further shortages, famine, and die-off. Countries and groups will each blame their problems on any of countless other countries, groups and religions. Once the population correction is over, peak oil will go largely unrecognized by the masses as the cause of the catastrophe and whatever civilization manages to carry on in the future will emerge having learned squat about sustainable living. Maybe historians of the future, if they exist, will be able to see peak oil as the root cause for the coming collapse, but I doubt the people as they are living(or dying) through it will recognize the cause as anything other than war.
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