by MonteQuest » Tue 26 Jul 2005, 01:32:06
The Powerdown Solution: The Plan
We find ourselves at a crossroads on the path to our future. Unlike most animals, we have the ability to reason, predict, and anticipate the consequences of our actions. But by the time mankind had a grasp on science/ecology and realized there were limits, he was already past many of them. Our “special nature” and uniqueness came a little too late. Yes, in the animal kingdom we reign supreme; and with an unmatched arrogance and hubris, we have dominated and exploited our world in a cheap and selfish way, almost totally disregarding nature and the descendants who will inherit our legacy.
There are those who suggest there are no limits, and that technology and the “invisible hand of the market” will always be there to circumvent or overcome them, while others question that assumption with good reason. We seem to find ourselves set exclusively on proving the impossibility of growth, and we are easily deluded by a simple, but false conclusion: that since exponential growth in a finite world leads to disasters of all kinds, ecological salvation must then lie in the stationary or steady state; a utopian world in which both population and necessary resources remain constant. The false conclusion here is not seeing that not only growth, but also a zero-growth state, in fact, even a declining state which does not converge toward a die-off, cannot exist forever in a finite environment. Life is a cycle of birth, death, and renewal; not a linear growth process into infinity.
A steady-state world may for a while be in harmony with its environment, but this utopian world cannot last forever; sooner or later the balancing system will collapse. At that time, the steady state will enter a crisis which will defeat its alleged design and nature.
Undoubtedly, the current growth must cease and be reversed. But anyone who believes that he can draw a blueprint for the ecological salvation of the human species does not understand the nature of evolution, or even of history — which is that of a permanent struggle for survival in continuously novel forms. So, any blueprint must really be a rough sketch that evolves and changes over time; it can’t be carved in stone.
Having said that, will mankind listen to any plan that implies a constriction of its addiction to creature comforts? Perhaps the destiny of man is to have a short extravagant life in a constant battle with his environment, rather than a long introspective one in harmony with it. The necessary conclusion of the arguments in favor of that latter vision is that the most desirable state is not a steady state, but a declining one.
So, I present for your review, my Powerdown Solution Plan for the World.
There will be several phases. This thread will stay locked until all the phases are complete. At that time it will be opened for debate to all comers subject only to the rules of the Code of Conduct and site policy.
A Saudi saying, "My father rode a camel. I drive a car. My son flies a jet-plane. His son will ride a camel."