by Narz » Sun 03 May 2009, 22:21:41
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Ludi', '
')
Hey, sounds like me, but I'm able work at home, usually 4 hrs a day or less.

But I'm guessing that's not typical for modern people.
http://www.bls.gov/tus/charts/Yeah, most poor saps are mentally ill for nothing.
“Seek simplicity but distrust it”
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Narz
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by Hermes » Mon 04 May 2009, 00:10:09
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Sys1', 'S')ure it would be great for us, but no matter how respectuous to nature we can be, we as a whole are going to die. Later is better, this is the argument for sustainbility.
Simplifying the concept of sustainability to say it's just trying to keep humans from dying out is a mistake. Upon connecting with things deeper, I believe most intelligent, healthy people realize that all things are connected. It's not just trying to keep humans from dying out - it's attempting to help this whole amazing web of life continue to do its dance without bringing it to a premature ending. It's not just about humans dying out.
Furthermore all species evolve. Humans will evolve to other things, if allowed to. Certainly some day the last human will die out, but whatever form we evolve into will hopefully continue to find its place in the world in a way that it's supposed to. The right thing will happen - we need to trust the earth's wise way of doing things.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Sys1', '
')By inventing fire, crops, village, mankind started to manipulate nature to preserve itself.
Crops and villages weren't used to preserve mankind. They were used to preserve the evolving status quo which developed into "civilization" over the span of thousands of years. Humans will get along well without crops and villages.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Sys1', 'S')ince we are too intelligent to contemplate nature without playing with it. Some could call that Pandora's box or promethean dream, but it's our destiny.
A baby playing with a bee is destined to get stung. Then the baby learns a lesson.
Humans placed in the Neolithic, a period conducive to civilization's rise and agriculture, are destined to make civilization happen. I believe this is indeed true! It's taken me years to come to that understanding, but I also believe it's our destiny. However I believe that the mistake most people make upon coming to that understanding is they think that since this advent of civilization was destined, that it's also destined to continue towards some great big wonderfully technologically orgasmic conclusion. It's the story that's told over and over - this is all heading towards "something wonderful". Why? Because it keeps the ball rolling - but in fact if you take a look at things it's obviously not heading towards that.
It turns out that civilization is also
destined to crash magnificently imminently. What's the cosmic plan there? I'm certainly not sure. But I do believe that nature has some plan going on that I'm not big enough to understand yet. On some level I believe it's like the baby playing with the bee. Over the period of the last 10 thousand years we've been playing with a bee. Here comes the big lesson, just around the corner. As with all lessons like this I think it's going to hurt, and we'll be far wiser for having learned it once it's finished.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Sys1', '
')If science reach a point where we totally understand this world, we will be able to do things unbelievable.
by Narz » Mon 04 May 2009, 01:50:10
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('mos6507', 'R')epent, the fact that you would cite that other thread in which you were thoroughly rebutted shows that you don't know what you're talking about.
I don't follow threads here much anymore but I have no idea what he's talking about because he's being incredibly vague.
“Seek simplicity but distrust it”
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Narz
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