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THURSDAY, DEC 28, 2019: NOTE TO FILE

Quora Q&A 3

More info offered

Eric Lee, A-SOCIATED PRESS

TOPICS: QUESTION EVERYTHING, FROM THE WIRES, TENATIVE ANWSERS

Abstract: So another fifty pretend answers offered. Few comments and no corrections offered, so I only learned from such research as I did for each answer. The number of views is of unknown meaning. The number of upvotes may be interpreted to mean at least that many peple read the answer.

COOS BAY (A-P) — So answers starting with 101 follow, and may be of interest to someone someday. Answers are not mine. I reference sources. If the source, the data, is correct and the interpretation is valid, then Nature answers the question. As 'people would rater believe than know', answers that few or none Like or Share will be ignored, obfuscated, denied, and if necessary the messenger will be vilified, demonized, or killed. But 'my' answers are ignored, so I'm in no danger.

 

 

Questions:

101. How can agriculture meet the world's growing need for food while doing less environmental harm?
102. How many people can be on earth before earth is considered to be overpopulated?
103. How can we stop the destruction of the Earth via overpopulation, climate change, and the possibility of nuclear warfare?
104. What's one way we can make this world a safer place for all beings?
105. As a communist, why do you think the USSR fell apart?
106 What does the best possible future for humanity look like and how will we achieve it?
107 Why should humanity avoid living in major cities?
108 Could a worldwide collapse of civilization occur? What could bring about it?
109. If all the commercial food sources in the world vanished, would there be enough animals to hunt to feed the entire human population?
110. How many people can the Earth sustain realistically?
111. What is the most meaningful question to ask that will benefit mankind at present and set the foundation for the future generation?
112. Can you think of some conception that about 3/4 of the people in the world are actually wrong about?
113. Could what happened to the Indus Valley Civilization happen to us?
114. What keeps the majority of people in a society cooperating with the people who hold a majority of the wealth at the top?
115. If humans are just a destructive cancer on the planet, why is human life still considered precious and worth living?
116. How can agricultural systems be adapted to reduce the impact of climate change?
117. Did human civilization get any benefit of being greedy?
118. Learn from the past lives of humans... or not?
119. What are the Mpemba effects and its effects on global warming and climate change?
120. What is the difference between sustainable agriculture & modern agriculture?
121. Human civilization is about to collapse into a thousand years of barbarism, this can't be prevented. You must preserve as much knowledge in a form future civilizations will understand as you can, money and resources are unlimited. How do to do it?
122. Where did the Borg come from?
123. What do we need as humanity to understand that we have to take real care of Earth and save the environment?
124. How would the world change if everyone were only scientists and not religious?
125. Which do you think would be worse, human population increasing up to 17 billion, or dropping down to just 7000?
126. If you are tasked to give one ever lasting gift to humanity, what would that be? What is one best wish you have for the Mother Earth and all its inhabitants before you die?
127. Are science and religion compatible?
128. Is there enough food for the population to live on or is the distribution of food not fair?
129. How many acres is the world?
130: How do we solve the human population problem?
131: Do you think the planet is overpopulated at this time, and what do you consider to be a sustainable population of humans?
132: How does the world fail to hit targets to halt biodiversity collapse?
133: How do farmers help the environment?
134: ‘Environmental concerns and economic growth cannot co-exist.’ Do you agree?
135: Humans’ lives have become more complex as time has passed. And as the world grows in complexity, it becomes harder for humans to understand the world, the world’s problems, and the solutions to those problems. Is this why many people are unhappy?
136: Why is every human action in conflict with nature?
137: Do you think that limiting the human population would be better than destroying nature looking for more resources and technologies in an endless economic growth?
138: How can we make this world a perfect place for both humans and animals? I wish evil never existed in this world. I also wish wars could go away.
139: What percent of the world is not educated?
140: What is the optimal population for our planet and how could we humanely get there (for context, I recently read that there are more people than rats)?
141: Are we today, in a scientific and technological age, on the right path to solve the problems of human injustice and exploitation? Why?
142: How did humankind manage to increase the world’s population by 5 billion people in the last 100 years?
143: Can capitalism actually solve the world’s biggest problems?
144: What is the best way to save peace, humanity, and nature?
145: In your opinion, what is the biggest problem affecting the world currently?
146: Is it true or not that every human uses resources that leave a carbon footprint that contributes to global warming? If yes then isn't the best solution population reduction and why are the most obvious solutions so difficult to achieve?
147: Can a city be sustainable?
148: Are cities good or bad for the environment?
149: The population of our world rose from 1.6 billion to almost 7 billion in 120 years. How can we stop the world from becoming overpopulated ethically, and is this issue being addressed properly?
150: Who are the good people on this Earth?

 

101. How can agriculture meet the world's growing need for food while doing less environmental harm?

Organic agriculture will feed the world when there are no fossil fuel inputs into the agroecosystem. For example, expect corn yields to decline seven to ten fold and to not plant the same field in corn more than one to three times every decade or three. So how many hectares will be farmed and at what level of productivity/ha will global agriculture be compared to current industrial agriculture that has been figuring out how to turn fossil fuel into food for nearly a century?

The current organic agriculture production system is specialized to serve a niche market of consumers who can and prefer to pay for the increased production costs. Currently only agrochemical fertilizers and biocides are excluded, which results in organic yields of individual crops that are on average 80% of conventional yields with evidence that the gap would likely increase if organic production were upscaled (a meta-data analysis of 362 studies , but another meta-analysis of 205 comparisons  found only a 9 percent decrease on average; Nature found a 5 percent gap for some crops down to a 34 percent (76% average of conventional) lower organic methods yield 'when the conventional and organic systems are most comparable '), so about 80% compared to straight out no-inputs-spared conventional agriculture that currently 'feeds the world'. Sources such as the Rodale Institute offer conclusion-driven research results that if correct do not scale up. Energy blind 'research' is used to support the conclusion that organic agriculture produces as much or more than conventional poison-based agriculture. In a world without fossil fuel inputs into the agroecological food production systems, will output be one-fifth or one-fifteenth what it is today? I don't know, but one-tenth may be optimistic. To repeat: don't use the word agroecology without reading about the history of the concept  and perhaps understanding H.T. Odum's 'better view'.

Apart from industrial fertilizers (e.g. Haber nitrogen or mined) and biocides, current 'organic' farming allows all other direct and indirect fossil fuel inputs, which are not viewed as toxins, to be used to be turned into food. Without fossil-fuel inputs, vast areas will not be farmable and production per hectare in such dryland farming areas as allow agriculture will not be productive each year as green manure crops and fallow years ranging from 1 to 50 years will be required for sustainable production (e.g. swidden with maybe a 15-25 year fallow period, land in flood plains with annual flooding, rice paddy production with 'night soil' and animal manure inputs in water).

In the past eighty years the increase in the rate of food production (of turning fossil fuel into food) has been greater than population growth, which Malthus failed to foresee. The Ehrlichs (the ag experts they consulted) failed in 1968 to foresee the Green Revolution which selected cultivars that could thrive in the environment that fossil-fueled industrial agriculture could create (for a time). Without industrial inputs, the Green Revolution crops will not be used and heirloom crops will, so in areas that currently produce over 200 bushels of corn/maize, good farmers may again get 25 bushels average yield on non-fallowed rain irrigated land, or where alternative energy is available it can be turned into food, but not anywhere near on the scale that fossil fuels allowed for a time, and electricity is of higher transformity, too high to be turned into food, as there may be too little to support information technology.

To seek out the condition now that will come anyway, rapidly degrow the population via managed descent. Create pockets of sustainability within which the fertility rate is dramatically reduced initially, regions where individuals with foresight intelligence can self-select into. See Watershed Design Principles  and Alternative Farming . The form of management that might actually work would follow natural system laws and so might be called a naturocracy, as humans don't determine what works..

So organic agriculture is inevitable, as is depopulation. To not cause environmental harm, perhaps 35 million prosperous low-intensity forager-farmers could live upon an abundant Earth, if we can live within carrying capacity and avoid pulsing into overshoot. Carrying Capacity and Overshoot

 

 

102. How many people can be on earth before earth is considered to be overpopulated?

Overpopulated from whose point of view? If you believe in continued growth, eventually leading to humans building a Dyson sphere, then when the population reaches 29,452,431,127 billion humans in about 2,000 years, those wanting to leave their solar system to build Dyson spheres around other suns, assuming technology in 2,000 years enables them to, will. When the galaxy is filled, overpopulation may be avoided by going to other galaxies, technology allowing, to keep building and populating Dyson spheres. A Dyson Sphere is Constructed: Zero and counting

Or, from the point of view of all organisms on Earth, except humans, their livestock and pets, and perhaps rats and cockroaches, humans overshot the carrying capacity of the planet about 4,000 years ago when most came to live within unsustainable empires that pulsed into overshoot with remnant populations repeating the pattern. Past Lives of Humans

So from the POV of life on Earth (with noted exceptions), Earth was overpopulated with humans when the population exceeded 35 million, when the human footprint began causing the extinction rate to increase, currently about 1,000 times more than the pre-Anthropocene extinction rate, headed for 10,000 times more by the end of this century. Carrying Capacity and Overshoot

 

 

103. How can we stop the destruction of the Earth via overpopulation, climate change, and the possibility of nuclear warfare?

I can claim that I’ve been asking, for about 50 years, how we humans of NIMH can stop the destruction of Earth’s life-support system via our remorseless expansionism (growth dynamic), our pattern of pulsing into overshoot, which started 11,000 years ago and became the norm about 4,000 years ago when the human population reached about 35,000,000.

So when did humans exceed planetary carrying capacity and transition into a pattern of unsustainable empire-building? If you were a randomly picked human living in the last 4,000 years you were likely living in an empire or among the remnant population recovering during the descent phase prior to repeating the pattern. Or you were among the minority who had not yet been conquered/colonized. Past Lives of Humans

So just as by ‘Earth’ you must be concerned about the biospheric film of life on he planet Earth, by ‘we’ you must be referencing we empire-builders whose growing population and consumption is the distal cause of species extinction, climate change, and general ecocide of our Anthropocene. Carrying Capacity and Overshoot

How, then, are we going to stop? Sorry, but as today is 1/1/2020 and my new year’s resolution is ‘tell the truth to power’, which means we Anthropocene enthusiasts, we Load Man  types, then….

The truth is we can’t. We are the products of a global socio-politico-economic system that is NOT REMOTELY CLOSE TO SUSTAINABLE. We are captured and being dragged along by a complex, powerful and remorseless dynamic that automatically thwarts all attempts to stop it. If we don’t put time and energy into understanding it, we are doomed to go with it, right to the final curtain. Garvin H Boyle's answer to Is there any way to turn around the destruction of our planet and clean up the massive ecological mess we've made and continue to make?

If you understand the remorseless dynamic you are a product of and serve, then your enthusiasm for serving the unsustainable society will be fatally compromised. If there are enough humans with enough foresight intelligence to vote with their feet, then they may have a different trajectory. Vote with your Feet: Who, what and how

 

 

104. How could the world be made a safer place?

Actually the original question was, "What's one way we can make this world a safer place for all beings?" Otherwise ‘be made a safer place’ implies, to all Anthropocene enthusiasts, ‘for humans’, their infrastructure, and maybe their pets and livestock.

As some translate Laozi, ‘there are many ways, but the Way is uncharted’, but to give one way to make this planet a safer place for all life in Earth’s thin biosphere, transform technoindustrial society into an ecological civilization by replacing the pretend science of neoclassical economics, which is belief-based or faith-based, with a real science of economics, e.g. biophysical/ecological economics. Replace it, as in remove from the 22,000 colleges/universities that teach it as if it were a science and remove it from credible public discourse, which involves reeducating billions who have been indoctrinated into believing that neoclassical/neoliberal assertions are credible within a reality-based universe of discourse.

David Suzuki Is Right: Neoliberal Economics Are ‘Pretend Science’ | MAHB

The End of Faith-Based Economics  by John Gowdy, Charles Hall, Kent Klitgaard and Lisi Krall

 

 

105. As a communist, why do you think the USSR fell apart?

answwer by Dima Vorobiev, Former Soviet propaganda executive, 1.2 Upvotes,

I’m not a Communist. However, since I knew the system from inside, I can give you an answer.

Marxism is a secular grandkid of Christianity. It inherited the Christian approach to error management. Whenever something goes terribly wrong on the watch of Marxists, it’s not the idea of radical justice —it’s the servants you need to blame.

Marxism as an ideology is infallible, just like Jesus. It’s totally impossible to ever get disillusioned about the idea a of society where everyone is equal, no one is exploited, and the economy is an endless cornucopia in the service of human self-improvement.

Just like Christianity itself cannot fail—because God is firmly on its side and you can’t defeat God—Communism can be defeated only in three cases:

  1. Unintended deviation from the true Communist path. This is an exact parallel to the Christian notion of “falling into sin”. In Soviet propaganda, our list of sins was long and included such things as “self-satisfaction”, “short-sightedness”, “loss of vigilance”, “tolerance of bourgeois views”, “errors”, “arbitrariness in decisions”, “loss of Party control” etc.
  2. Wilful deviation from the true Communist path. In Christian terms, apostasy. True Communists here on Quora will tell you tons about how the USSR deviated from genuine Marxism, so I won’t torment you with this. Chinese “Communists” have created a huge corpus of “Marxist” works on where exactly Soviet “revisionists” knowingly abandoned the Communist cause and persisted in their wrongful ways until the bitter end.
  3. Treason. Same as the Devil’s work for Christians. This is what Stalinists in Russia and abroad especially mention as the main cause. In their book Gorbachev, with a small clique of sellouts at the top of Party, wrecked havoc on the Soviet Union on CIA’s money. Usually they also attach “drunk Yeltsin” to the list of traitors, since he belonged to the hard core of Perestroika champions in the Kremlin until he fell out with Gorbachev.

Below, a Russian cartoonist in 2008 marks his displeasure with President Obama getting the Nobel Peace Prize. Obama is holding hands with Gorbachev, as if joining him in the cause of liberal treason. Dmitri Medvedev, who at the time was appointed by Putin to hold his place as President until his return in 2012, enviously watches the two, dreaming of his own prize for national treason. The text says “Perestroika 2”.

 

Comment, one of 13 so far:

I sent a link to this to my wife with comments that may be of interest. Of course I don’t know enough about Vorobiev to have an opinion, but I have a tentative one of no value.

This answer seems insightful. Always check sources: author, Dima Vorobiev, former Soviet propaganda executive. He served his SYSTEM, like the economic hit man John Perkins served his, but he is now a traitor. Like Nawaz, the former Islamist, Vorobiev has information that may be of interest, and it may actually be true (he was a former information hit man), but expect some bias. He may have gone over too far to the other side, or not. Former true believers are at risk of merely flipping over to the other side, but I'm guessing he served his SYSTEM as it served his self interest at the time to do so, but was never a true believer. The better outcome is if former servants move past either side. He is looking like a Perkins kind of guy who may know enough to have an opinion, Like Winston Smith in 1984, he worked for the Ministry of Truth whose job it was to tell lies. About Dima Vorobiev.

The collapse of Christianity with the Industrial Revolution created a void in the narrative of Empire that was filled by NCE capitalism in most of Europe/USA, and by Marxism elsewhere, e.g. Russia, China. The two narratives served the Right and Left leaning factions that have to exist so when, not if, things don't go as intended, whoever is in power can blame someone, typically their evil predecessor, i.e. a Trump needs an Obama. The Right leaning are always the Wolves. The Left leaning are always Wolves in Sheep's Clothing, and both compete to serve Empire-building.

Globally, as nationally, there has to be at least two factions and two works best, but there are always wannabes, e.g. Nazism and ISIS. If there are Aryans with Solutions, there must be Jews. If there are Islamists with Answers, there must be servants of the global corporatocracy to destroy. And of course the global elite need 'extremists' but for whom we would all live in the best of all possible worlds.

The big lie is you have to choose between narratives, between the House of the Montagues and the House of the .Capulets or some other. The real alternative is... 'a pox on both your Houses' or better, all your Houses. Death to the fascist ideologues who prey upon the minds of the People. And I'm talking to you, Islamists, and you neo-liberal economists who teach in 22,000 colleges and universities, and you Green New Deal lovers, and you BAU MAGA hat wearers, and all you ideologues with Solutions and Answers.

Oh, but I suppose I’m violating some Quora guideline, so delete this. My apologies to the Montagues.

 

 

106 What does the best possible future for humanity look like and how will we achieve it?

"The best possible future for humanity is for it to find clean sustainable energy and sustainable materials for daily use." Diogo Warpechowski's answer to What does the best possible future for humanity look like and how will we achieve it?

So, can we change the dynamic we are all a product of, enmeshed in and serve? Society and civilization as we know it, not remotely sustainable, will have to change to persist.

"We must remake civilization in its totality." —Eileen Crist, Abundant Earth: Toward an Ecological Civilization

A sustainable civilization is one the current Business-As-Usual one cannot iterate towards because degrowth cannot be selected for by the dynamics of the complex society, now global, that is the BAU consumer hegemon. Understand that apparent alternatives are not. There actually are no alternative energy sources to power our cars or fly our planes [Emergy Yield Ratios Matter ]. The Green New Deal is thinkable because it is BAU in sheep’s clothing, and so still selects for the same outcome.

The clean sustainable energy is sunshine, and for a few hundred years hydroelectric dams can be kept going as industrial society becomes sustainable when windmills and waterwheels are again made of wood in a world empowered by a small fraction of the energy fossil fuels provided and, for a time, provide. And sustainable materials, e.g. sea salt, wood, fiber, and such for daily use may be sustainable, but at a level that is a small fraction of what is consumed today as our energy slaves die.

How rapid will the degrowth be? Consider the information provided at the following link, read or watch the videos: Population, Energy, and Viability Connecting the Dots

There can be more than one viable design for a sustainable civilization. For example: Design for a Viable Civilization II The envisioned ‘ecological civilization’ is being implemented.

Adapted from Mark Brown, Beyond Growth: Economics as if the Planet Mattered , 2/5/2019.
"Monetary culture " vs matter-energy system worldview. —M. King Hubbert
'Li' is Chinese for the laws—organizing principles of the cosmos.
Technocracy and ecological economics were/are transitional.

With the coinage of 'sustainable development', the defenders of the unsteady state have won a few more years' moratorium from the painful process of thinking. — Garrett Hardin

Education: that which reveals to the wise, and conceals from the stupid, the vast limits of their knowledge.... I have never let my schooling interfere with my education. —Mark Twain

Self-education is, I firmly believe, the only kind of education there is. — Isaac Asimov

The more he became truly wise, the more he distrusted everything he knew. — Voltaire

Knowing that you do not know is the best. Not knowing that you do not know is an illness.... True words are not pleasing. Pleasing words are not true. Those who are right do not argue. Those who argue are not right. Those who know are not learned. Those who are learned do not know. — Laozi

Philosophy is a battle against the bewitchment of our intelligence by means of our language. — Ludwig Wittgenstein

Modern science should indeed arouse in all of us a humility before the immensity of the unexplored and a tolerance for crazy hypotheses. — Martin Gardner

 

 

107 Why should humanity avoid living in major cities?

Aside from cities larger than can be supported by environmental resources within a 100 km radius, cities or towns having a population of over 150, Dunbar’s number, become ‘behavioral sinks’ as studied by John B. Calhoun. His mice and rats of NIMH were well known and discussed within the scientific community in the 1970s. He was concerned that we denizens of urban landscapes were becoming humans of NIMH. The vast majority of humans have come to ignore his science and what his rats of NIMH were telling him (and us), but that doesn’t make either wrong or of no concern.

If a city core, where high energy flows are possible such as at a hydroelectric dam where manufacturing on a large scale can be supported, was surrounded by largely self-sufficient communities of less than 150 people, and children rarely went into the city and never to live there, then high population densities might be supported that, over 8–12 generations, did not select for such loss of functional behavior as would fail a complex society.

Critical Mass Transcript


 

 

108 Could a worldwide collapse of civilization occur? What could bring about it?

A worldwide collapse of civilization could be caused by non-anthropogenic events such as non-anthropogenic climate change, a solar flare with EMP, a pandemic, an asteroid/comet collision, supervulcanism, a nearby gamma-ray burst, or the Vogans come and destroy Earth to make way for an intergalactic bypass.

But sufficient unto the day (or century) is the human folly thereof. Our largely fossil-fueled technology is at risk of changing the climate with rapid sea level rise flooding coastal cities and best agricultural lands, and collapsing global trading infrastructure.

And we thank you technology for all the bounty you provide. We may unintentionally GMO something that becomes a 'green scum' covering the planet, or nano-bots that grow exponentially into a 'gray goo'. We can easily come up with an  anthropogenic plague, our AI may fail to understand why we should exist, and global war could be a setback.

But what, me worry?

It is telling that most university based system serving 'collapsologists', who may think they serve 'humanity', so utterly fail to notice that ecosystem collapse (aka planetary life-support system degradation) is the most likely threat and that it will be anthropogenic.

Our fossil-fueled ways are constrained. We Anthropocene enthusiasts see industrial-technological civilization's stagnation as a grave existential threat when rapid degrowth is the cure for technoindustrial society's pathological growth dynamic that has already made us into a dysfunctional civilization full of  humans of NIMH . They fail to see unbounded technology and growth (aka ‘progress’) as anything but humanity's only hope, when it (the growth dynamic beloved of Anthropocene enthusiasts) is actually the greatest existential threat distal to all other proximal anthropogenic threats. In short, we are the Impact: I=PAT

There are two incompatible worldviews, the  'matter-energy' and 'monetary culture' paradigms. The monetary culture currently offers you a choice between BAU (business-as-usual) and GND (Green New Deal in some form) that will surely save the world. Both, however, are utterly humancentric expressions of the monetary culture. Alternative to BAU/GND civilization is the 'ecological civilization' that is naturcentric, i.e. part of the matter-energy worldview.

Adapted from Mark Brown,  Beyond Growth: Economics as if the Planet Mattered , 2/5/2019.
" Monetary culture " vs matter-energy system worldview. —M. King Hubbert
'Li' is Chinese for the laws—organizing principles of the cosmos.
Technocracy and ecological economics were/are transitional.

Consider alternatives to BAU/GND civilization, e.g. designs for an actually viable civilization [Design for a Viable Civilization] and choose wisely.

Think about civilization from the perspective of systems ecology.

 

 

109. If all the commercial food sources in the world vanished, would there be enough animals to hunt to feed the entire human population?

20K years ago human were a tiny fraction of 1% of the biomass of all mammals. Today we are 36% and our livestock is 60%, meaning only 4% of today’s mammals are wild. Before agriculture the human hunter-gatherer population was less than 10 million worldwide. Virtually all agriculture is now industrial agriculture dependent on fossil fuel inputs, direct and indirect, without which production will be a fraction of today’s food made mostly of fossil fuel with a bit of sunshine added. By turning fossil fuel into food, we have degraded the environmental carrying capacity, so if posterity returns to a hunter-gatherer life, the planet will support fewer than 10 million humans. If we farm sustainably, and leave room for Nature, figure less than 100 million. 

 

 

110. How many people can the Earth sustain realistically?

To sustain a maximum population, one were empire-building is the norm and most people, commoners, work as long as possible in the fields as slaves, surfs, peasants, or wage slaves to support elites needed to direct conquest, then maybe 500,000,000.  Past Lives of Humans

If by sustainable you mean or imply without adverse impact on the planetary life-support system, e.g. not causing an increase in species extinction, then somewhere between 7 and 50 million.  Carrying Capacity and Overshoot

 

 

111. What is the most meaningful question to ask that will benefit mankind at present and set the foundation for the future generation?

Garrett Hardin, human ecologist, claimed that an educated mind was supported, however imperfectly, by three pillars: literacy, numeracy, and ecolacy that involve three questions

Literacy: What are the appropriate words?
Numeracy: What are the operational numbers?
Ecolacy: And then what?

The educational system, formal and informal, produces people who are partly literate (science is ‘the endeavor to tell the most likely story’ and most are at best marginally science literate), some are numerate, and virtually all are so inecolate that they don’t know they are. In terms of saving the world, ecolacy is foundatonal. So whenever some pundit offers a ‘solution’, ask, ‘And then what?’

 

 

112. Can you think of some conception that about 3/4 of the people in the world are actually wrong about?

My working hypothesis is that humans, all of us, are (when conscious) in a state of error, ignorance, and illusion. Myself included, so if there are humans who are not, I wouldn't know it and if I thought (formed the concept that) there were some who were not in a state of error, ignorance and illusion (e.g. Plato, Buddha, Jesus, Trump), then I could be wrong.

I have yet to meet, view on a screen, or read the words of a human, or a supernatural being as channeled by a human, who did not have beliefs, who did not form concepts that they believed to be true.

We are the concept-forming animal, or as I prefer to say, we are the storytelling animal,  Homo narrator.

Some humans create very detailed models of the what-is, of what's going on, whether in a flask or the cosmos. The contents of a flask are easier to model, to form concepts about, e.g. put this in a flask under these conditions and in an open thermodynamic system these dissipative structures form.... Your narrative/model may be 'good', i.e. others can reproduce the alleged 'dissipative structures' and form additional concepts about them or dispute your concepts, but the idea that the narrative/conception/model is itself 'true' or exists other than as an artifact of our complex verbal behavior, is insane, as what is actually going on in the flask is vastly more complicated than anyone knows, and likely more complicated than anyone can know. Concepts about the cosmos, from the quantum to the space-time concepts, are not the universe, the 'map is not the territory ', a hydrology map of a mountain is not the water flowing over a falls or the rainbow in the mist, which doesn’t mean the map is not of high value or even mostly accurate.

The claim that all claims are wrong, i.e. not actually the thing itself, may be the only true claim, but I could be wrong, so don't believe anything I say. Better, don't believe anything or anyone. There are mathematicians who claim that I'm wrong, that they know many tautological truths. They can create them at will, but since any connection to the so-called real world is not apparent, I don't believe they know anything.

So, are 100 percent of humans wrong? That 100 percent are wrong at times, as in most of the time, is merely obvious. I often  believe up to six impossible things before breakfast. But do some humans sometimes say something that might be true? 'This too shall pass away', is a candidate, but I don't know who said it, so I can't vet the source who might not have been human. That media vita in morte sumus (Latin for 'In the midst of life we are in death'), that someone in the early 14th century CE noted, seems irrefutable is a I evaluate it, but who is this ‘I’ and 'we' thing?

More to the point of my conjecture, 'The mind clings to its image of the world, to its narratives of it. We call it real only because of our ignorance', which is attributed to  Jianzhi Sengcan, who likely died in 606 CE, who probably didn't write it, but he could have said it as such words align with his other words, words, words, so I don't know. But aside from who said them, can I dismiss them as yet another example of human error, ignorance, and illusion? I haven't yet, but maybe I'll become enlightened and be the only one who knows.

So to answer the question, no, I can't think of some conception that about 3/4 of the people in the world are actually wrong about as that implies 25 percent could be right about something.


 

 

113. Could what happened to the Indus Valley Civilization happen to us?

This question is equivalent to asking, ‘Dude, why should I have ‘existential concerns’ for humanity and the biosphere?’

We don't know in any detail what happened, but that the Indus Valley Civilization had once existed was unknown to historians and only became evident to archaeologists in the 1920s. A civilization that lasted 2,000 years, that flourished at the same time as Egypt and Mesopotamia (and Old Testament stuff), but more so, passed away and no one who continued to live in the Indus Valley remembered, beyond a few centuries, that it had once existed as the greatest of Bronze Age civilizations with hundreds of cities forming the world’s most complex society having up to 60,000 prosperous residents each. See Indus Valley Civilisation - Wikipedia

No one who could read the Harappan script they used passed on the knowledge of how to read it or much else. Some elements of Late Harappan religion may have survived within the minds of wandering monks who passed them on to become part of the vedic narratives of wordsmiths serving the then dominate Indo-European Aryan invaders (1500–1000 BCE) who entered India after most Harappan cities/towns had already been abandoned by 1700 BCE. The Aryans became the Brahmans of India for whom the Vedas were written. Like the Indus Valley empire for whom there were no outlying empires to conquer them when they weakened, there are probably no Klingons who will come to fill the power vacuum we may create post-descent. Maybe the Vulcans will come instead. Or will there be a remnant ecolate human population (functioning complex society) who can do so?

Did the Indus Valley Civilization 'collapse', 'fall', or 'fade away'? Does it matter? If they had managed a prosperous descent, their language, knowledge, and culture would have persisted. All we know is that remnant populations persisted, but there was something approximating a 100 percent loss of memetic content and complex society (empire aka ‘civilization’). They left little more than ruins. Could something like that happen to us?

Per Wikipedia: 'Around 1900 BCE signs of a gradual decline began to emerge, and by around 1700 BCE most of the cities had been abandoned. Recent examination of human skeletons from the site of Harappa has demonstrated that the end of the Indus civilisation saw an increase in inter-personal violence and in infectious diseases like leprosy and tuberculosis. According to historian Upinder Singh, "the general picture presented by the late Harappan phase is one of a breakdown of urban networks and an expansion of rural ones."... there was a general decrease of long-distance trade.... Stone sculptures were deliberately vandalised, valuables were sometimes concealed in hoards, suggesting unrest, and the corpses of animals and even humans were left unburied in the streets and in abandoned buildings. During the later half of the 2nd millennium BCE [1500–1300 BCE], most of the post-urban Late Harappan settlements were abandoned altogether. Subsequent material culture was typically characterised by temporary occupation, "the campsites of a population which was nomadic and mainly pastoralist" and which used "crude handmade pottery."'

So, could something like this happen to us? Could we Anthropocene enthusiasts pass away, our existence evidenced by the ruins and stuff on the Moon and Mars we leave? Could our Anthropocene extinction event come to be marked by a layer of radioactive debris and microplastics in a geological layer named after us? Could we who live in what is now the first global civilization/empire (as only a vast planetary larder of fossil fuel could empower) come to dissipate as dissipative structures do? Will our silo science and technology save us? Or will it at least in part be the cause of our perhaps too complex society's failure as all prior complex societies have failed or ‘faded away’? Did the Indus Valley Civilization collapse or fade away? Does it matter? Could systems science save us?

Such questions are of interest. Perhaps we have cause to be concerned for our continued corporate existence. But what percentage of humans (the 99+%) can, as true believers (likely everyone who read Eric Hoffer’s book ‘The True Believer’ thought they were not one of them), actually 'believe' that life as they know it might end for them or their children? About 22,000 colleges and universities require most students to take classes in economics, a subject some get Nobel Prizes for ‘advancing’. About 7+K graduate with PhD degrees in neoclassical economics each year (far more than get PhDs in Astrology, vedic of course, from universities in India) so they can serve the growth hegemon (like just about everybody else who makes money) to help grow the economy.

I'd guess something close to zero (<0.1%) of us have existential concerns strong enough to do more than mouth off when drunk. Otherwise we Anthropocene enthusiasts would not be able to serve with enthusiasm and prosper (make money by laboring, teaching, designing, inventing, manufacturing, informing, protecting, serving…), and that goes for ecomodernists, journalists, educators, politicians/voters, religious leaders/followers, professors of sustainability studies, bloggers, CEO/NGO leaders, those who update Facebook or serve in the military, government, or on police forces... and any other professions or avocations (like updating Quora) you can name.

Can all these fine upstanding citizens be wrong? I'd guess that up to about 1900 BCE, no Harappans who thought they knew enough to have an opinion (or wanted others to think they did) foresaw any future other than continued progress and prosperity (or admitted to having concerns if they had any). How many, then or now, would wonder or want to know about 'a prosperous way down' or 'a prosperity of enough during rapid degrowth'?

I estimate, based on an ongoing citizen science project, that in 2019 maybe 0.01% of humans actually think (or can think) that the economic, social, political, religious, and educational control systems they are a product and serve, think that the SYSTEM they are part of IS NOT REMOTELY SUSTAINABLE. The global economy is still growing. When it isn't, when actual degrowth sets in, the percentage of those actually concerned enough to actually do something alternative to BAU, like 'vote with their feet', could increase to 0.1% or even 1.0% But I'm an optimist, so maybe not. We'll see (or posterity will).

We are not doomed to repeat the Indus Valley trajectory because, seen through the macroscope of systems science, we can understand it and thereby be delivered from it. We could learn from the Harappans and hundreds of others. Foresight intelligence, possessed even by as little as 0.1%, could preserve pockets of a viable civilization able to select for functional humans able to prepare information packages for posterity about how to understand and live properly with the planet. Some, as many as can learn to just say no to empire-building and short-term self interests, may act such that future bottlenecks do not arise, ones that we may fail to manage to pass through. If only 'survivalist' types having the most ammo end up inheriting the rubble, we will, after perhaps a thousand years of environmental restoration, repeat the pattern. Alternative would be to consider a Design for a Viable Civilization

Perhaps enough humans will get foresight smart and become Federation. We live in interesting times. May the Force of Thinking in Systems be with us.

You can't join the compassionate revolution, but you can be a compassionate Rx evolutionary. We really need prescriptions for our continued evolution.

 

 

114. What keeps the majority of people in a society cooperating with the people who hold a majority of the wealth at the top?

Commoners cooperate with elites for a time as evidenced by the history of all prior empires. During growth/expansion, almost all are getting richer and work together to grow and expand the dynamic all are part of and most serve with enthusiasm. Those who are getting richer faster are the more energetic of Anthropocene enthusiasts and typically take credit for the growth/expansion of whatever empire they serve. Growth/expansion involves exploiting some resource, whether environmental or the accumulated wealth of other humans, and so has a biophysical basis. During degrowth, which may have a biophysical basis, elites never take credit or blame for descent.

Empire-building, that started with chiefdom-building 10K years ago, became nation-state building with the expansion of the fossil-fueled Industrial Revolution in the 19th and 20th centuries. All nation-states have now been assimilated into the globalized economy which, post-WWII, dominates policy making. State-building - Wikipedia

As long as the a bush-meat hunter or Lyft driver can hope to make more money next year, they cooperate with and serve the economic system and the monetary culture they are part of and depend on. In some parts of the world average people may experience scarcity due to degrowth of the local economy, and in all places individuals may not be getting richer and perceived or actual scarcity may arise. Scarcity, real or perceived, leads to conflict and dissolution. Resources are not infinite. Past Lives of Humans

Scarcity induced conflict turns society into an overtly ‘dissipative structure’ that increases scarcity, which increases conflict in a downward spiral to dissolution. During descent, cooperation is not the norm. Could some people cooperate during a managed descent? Maybe. Design for a Viable Civilization

 

That 99.99% or so of Anthropocene enthusiasts don’t believe there are limits to growth doesn’t mean that there are none. Nature doesn’t care what we believe.

 

115. If humans are just a destructive cancer on the planet, why is human life still considered precious and worth living?

Premise accepted. Starting about 10K years ago, increasing numbers of humans have become part of an empire-building dynamic no one has yet come to manage. Now, virtually all humans on the planet are products of the dynamic and serve it as Anthropocene enthusiasts. That we are captured and being dragged along by a powerful, complex, and remorseless dynamic that resists all attempts to alter it has been noted by increasing numbers of scientists since the 1970s, who remain, however, a minority. The Ecolate Message: A timeline

Link to ‘The Economic Implication of the Maximum Power Principle for a Sustainable Society’

Humans are the first species to pass the tipping point leading to memetic evolution. Little time has passed, there has been little selection for what, in a complex society, may work. We will continue to repeat the pattern of unsustainable empire-building until we adapt and make complex society work [i.e. design an ecological civilization  that works], or we’ll go extinct along with those whose extinction we are causing. We, or rather the dynamic we are all part and product of, is one of short-term maximizing of self interest not unlike that of an enthusiastically metastasizing tumor. From a cancer’s POV, everything looks great right up until death of its host in the ICU from multiple system failures.

Will we keep on repeating the pattern? I don’t know. Ten thousand years is about 26 minutes in Cosmic time. The Cosmic Heartbeat

We are a most promising species. But failure is an option. Nature selects for what works, and humans don’t get a vote. Learn to understand and thereby be delivered from the dynamic. Past Lives of Humans

 

116. How can agricultural systems be adapted to reduce the impact of climate change?

To reduce the impact of agriculture on climate change:

  1. Reduce the amount of land cultivated or grazed, especially marginal lands, as agriculture replaces forest and other biomes to greatly reduce species diversity and services provided.
  2. Reduce pumping water (most farms irrigate and use electric pumps or aqueducts filled by electric/diesel pumping) to irrigate crops.
  3. Reduce indirect energy inputs in the form of fertilizer, pesticides, and embodied in machinery.
  4. Reduce direct energy inputs in the form of electric and various fuels for mechanized agriculture.
  5. Reduce processing and transport of food from US average of about 1,500 miles to get to the end of the average American fork.
  6. Limit cooking to solar cooking or biomass cooking (when raining/cloudy) and do all processing of only locally grow food (produced without fossil fuel inputs) at home using human power.

If there is 100 kcals on the end of your fork, about 90 kcals of fossil fuels were used to get it there. As an individual you can do #6, but only some fraction of one percent of consumers would even consider doing so (for a short time). The economy selects against 1–5, and will not reduce as growth is the mandate driving us all to the cliff of biophysical limits full speed ahead. Sorry about that.

 

117. Did human civilization get any benefit of being greedy?

Do complex empire-building societies (aka civilization) select for avarice (and perhaps other biological atavisms such as male dominance hierarchies, submission, aggression, warfare, competition, alpha-maleness, misogyny, inequality, patriarchy, promiscuity...) and assorted 'bloody-mindedness'? I don't know.

But behaving like a common chimpanzee (or perhaps our common ancestor with them) could have been selected against over the last 7-13 million years of hominid evolution. Serial monogamy, for example, may have selected for male australopithecines who favored their true love (who in the throws of her dopamine, norepinephrine, serotonin, and oxytocin based adoration had mated only with him) with meat gifts during her pregnancy (during which she continued to sexually favor him unlike female chimps) and nursing of his (likely) offspring.

For some 300-500 thousand years our ancestors lived in groups of 30-50 others, most having kinship relations (range of band size being 5-85). The bands of sisters (some were patriarchal, but most were probably matriarchal, matrilineal and matrilocal) who told stories of the Goddess (i.e. patriarchy among hunter-gatherer humans was more often than not being selected against). Male cooperation was selected for, hence long-term monogamy would reduce conflict and best provide for the increasingly dependent and overlapping offspring a woman had (as Dr. Phil might have say, 'so each of your children has a different father... how's that been working for you?'

Sometimes atavistic behaviors work, however, and so continue to be represented in the population of all humans. Imagine Ug is very virile (the females find him very attractive to the point of temptation) and he has multiple wives. He is aggressive and loud, his leadership had helped 'his' band win several resource disputes during the last drought. He dominated the other males. He has had more than his share of offspring (some not with his wives).

But one day the hunters return with only one squirrel to show for their efforts. Ug claims it and tells one of his wives to cook it for him. Several children look on, hoping for a bite of squirrel. Later that night several hunters pin Ug to the ground (the greedy bastard who is sleeping with a full stomach in his privileged place next to the fire) with their spears until he stops writhing. No one (though some wives are sad to see him go) questions why he was killed. Still, some of his children will carry on the potential to behave like an alpha male even if they don't manifest the behaviors.

But do people who live in complex empire-building societies, who behave like alpha males (including some females), prosper? Well, for some six thousand years (about 0.2% of Homo sapiens' life on Earth) numerous atavisms and psycho-social pathologies have been selected for and normalized by us empire-building humans of NIMH. In the state of 'civilization' we are all products of, alpha maleness (good for building empires and the Indo-Europeans were especial good at it) is selected for as is the atavism of admiring them.

 

118. Learn from the past lives of humans... or not?

Past Lives of Humans: The pulsing paradigm

All storytelling that is pleasing is not true ['True words are not pleasing. Pleasing words are not true. —Tao Te Ching, Laozi]. That the Left will raise up and conquer the enemies of Truth, Fairness, Social Justice, and the Progressive Way (the fascist racists who support and will vote Trump) is as delusional as the Right's view that the Left is the only threat to humanity (Truth, Justice, and the American Way). All are enthusiastic participants in the developing dissolution and conflict because each side, and the centrists, tell the same story: 'join us and we win'. The reality is that, for a time, the 'winner' will inherit the rubble and maybe dance naked on top of it. And then what?

We should work to speed up the process by going to Portland to peacefully push on the fence around the Mark O. Hatfield Federal Courthouse and if we can't push it over, we'll attack it with battery powered angle grinders. We'll peacefully shoot fireworks at it, burn pallets, and throw things at those fascist pigs defending it who are all racist murderers who must stand down. “It’s a revolution!” If some pretend protester says something I don't like at 4 a.m., I'll stab him (unless he is Black). Yesterday (7/24/2020): Portland protests draw thousands, intense federal response.

We must go beyond protesting to confrontation. We must stop these cracka mother-f-ing fascists (peacefully of course, unless they don't meet our demands within 60 days of when we started protesting 58 days ago) from snuffing out more beautiful Black lives NOW! https://www.facebook.com/VictoriaaKailynAn

Or consider a better view, from a young historian who seems to have existential concerns for humanity if not Nature, though his narrative doesn't feel so good.

 

119. What are the Mpemba effects and its effects on global warming and climate change?

I had heard of the claim that recently warm water freezes faster than already cold water, same volume and type of container. My wife repeated the claim some years ago and as a lifelong science nerd I dismissed the claim. Ice crystals might form first in the recently hot and therefore still more dynamic water than the cold still water that supercools to a much lower temperature than the warmed water before turning into ice, but surely water starting at 5 °C would reach 0 °C before the 100 °C water did.

 

But my middlename is 'Often-wrong', so I read the Wikipedia article on the Mpemba effect. I'm so ignorant that I didn't know that the claim had a name. I've been a near daily reader of science news, articles, and books for over 50 years. Some follow sports daily with some interest and enthusiasm. I follow science. I've never met a silo science I didn't like.

The story behind the Mpemba effect may well be the best I've ever read. Issac Asimov may have written about it, but I must have missed that one. Richard Feynman offered several definitions of science, but 'science is the belief in the ignorance of experts' is the most applicable one.

Aristotle repeated what was common knowledge (he listened to ignorant peasants) that putting water in the sun for a while helped it freeze faster. Francis Bacon and Rene Descartes knew of the effect and Descartes offered a theory as to why. A Scottish scientist noted that if the cool water was stirred, it froze first. But twentieth-century scientists were ignorant or dismissive of the claimed effect.

But then in 1963 a Tanzanian school boy noted the effect and asked a visiting physicist why it occurred, only to be dismissed. He told the scientist exactly how to reproduce the effect. Good scientists guess, then test. He guessed, tested, and found out he was wrong again, not an uncommon outcome among working scientists. So he wrote a paper in 1969 with Erasto Mpemba as co-author, 'cause that what good scientists do, and it's been known as the Mpemba effect since. Scientists would rather know they are wrong than believe they are right (unlike, say, all politicians, priests, and most everyone else).

There have been numerous conjectures about what is going on. In 2012, the Royal Society of Chemistry held a competition calling for papers offering explanations to the Mpemba effect. More than 22,000 people entered and Erasto Mpemba himself announced the winner. But in 2016, Burridge and Linden defined the criterion as the time to reach 0 °C (32 °F), carried out experiments and reviewed published work to date. They noted that the large difference originally claimed had not been replicated, and that studies showing a small effect could be influenced by variations in the positioning of thermometers. They say, 'We conclude, somewhat sadly, that there is no evidence to support meaningful observations of the Mpemba effect'.

But almost as usual in science, in 2017 two research groups independently and simultaneously found theoretical evidence of the Mpemba effect and also predicted a new "inverse" Mpemba effect in which heating a cooled, far-from-equilibrium system takes less time than another system that is initially closer to equilibrium.

Bottom line here is that what is going on in two containers of water that so far as possible differ only in initial temperature is so complex that humans really don't know what's going on or even if it is going on. Gotta love it. And here's where the Mpemba effect affects how we should think about what we think about global warming.

Climate is a VASTLY more complex system than a flask of water. That we are burning a planetary vat of fossil fuels about as fast as we can (we could just extract and burn on site, but we delay a short time to grow the economy and population faster) is what is in front of your face. The other given is we are altering the planetary system we don't understand rapidly in ways that are not merely more complex than we understand, but more complex than we can understand. The Precautionary Principle suggests that not destroying a planetary life-support system may be more sapient than mindlessly pursuing short-term profit and self interest like rats pushing levers in a Skinner box.

Remember, the almost always correct answer to any question worth asking Nature is, 'I don't know enough to have an opinion (and neither do you). My best guess is.... And maybe the best way to test is..., but I really don't know. Nature has all the answers, so the best I can do is listen, and if you don't agree you can f--- off.' [Alun Anderson - Wikipedia]

Oh, and read: Mpemba effect - Wikipedia.

 

120. What is the difference between sustainable agriculture & modern agriculture?

I was trained to be an agricultural expert, i.e. agronomist, with degrees in crop and soil science from Cal Poly State University and graduated with 'highest honors'. I never worked in the field because much of my alleged expertise was acquired as an autodidact. Of all of my professors only my soil science advisor knew of the work of Howard T. Odum, a systems ecologist who had spent his life attempting 'to shock the scientific establishment into a better view' that was not energy blind and my advisor supported my understanding of Odum's systems thinking, but Odum failed to change the consensus view of ecologists or that of agricultural experts (which doesn't mean he was wrong as Copernicus' better view took 150 years to be accepted as the consensus view among scientists/intelligentsia). Most products of the educational system supporting industrial society are energy blind. They are also time blind and posterity blind, or to simplify, are humancentric and Nature blind, which does not make for a 'better view'.

If you plan to farm, start with a 500-year plan. If after the second 500-year plan is complete and things are still working, then maybe the cultural practices of your descendants will be sustainable as the millennia pass. As the millennia pass the local practices will iterate towards the sustainable (or will have failed as has been the norm since agriculture developed as the last ice age was ending).

I never worked as an agricultural expert (made money) as I realized that 'modern' agriculture is not remotely sustainable. It is a set of ways and means to turn fossil fuel into food. To be sustainable, first eliminate all fossil fuel inputs, direct (e.g. diesel fuel) or indirect (e.g. all industrially produced or mined fertilizer such as nitrogen via the Haber process for turning natural gas into fertilizer). The cultivars of the Green Revolution will be valueless, as only lower producing heirloom varieties will be able to grow without fossil-fuel inputs. End long distance transport by air, ship, rail, or truck, i.e. don't plan on transporting mostly processed food on average 1,500 miles to get to the end of an American's fork. Stop pumping ground water as another way to turn fossil fuels into food. If the rate of soil erosion is greater than soil formation, stop farming that land. Grow all food dry-land on the rainfall of distilled water, or if irrigating, do so only with recently stored or diverted rainwater lacking significant dissolved salts as otherwise you are salinating the soil, a practice that is unsustainable as the millennia pass (e.g. the formerly Fertile Crescent). If animal power is used, figure up to 50 percent of your farm's primary agricultural productivity will go to feed (empower) them. Also figure on 80 percent of the human population working in agriculture based on low intensity, low energy input methods, i.e. gardening. To allow soil fertility to restore between plantings, figure on a 15 to 25 year fallow period (range 3-50 years). Green manure crops work but require scarce energy resources (food) that may not increase net food production.

To live prosperously on the planet as the millennia pass figure on leaving room for Nature and the services (e.g. a functioning life-support system) the environment (biosphere) provides. Can one species (and its mutualist pets, livestock and crops) claim 20 percent of the planet's land area and remain sustainable? I don't know (and you don't either). How about 95 percent while leaving 5 percent for human recreational use? No.

I consider myself an extreme Cornucopian optimist living on an abundant Earth, so don't believe anything I type. My best guess is that someday, after humans come to understand the planet better and learn to live with it properly (sustainably as Nature determines), that up to maybe 35 million humans could live eudaimonic lives on it (i.e. remain well under average carrying capacity to allow for 'bad years' or bad decades or centuries) without reducing the diversity of life on Earth. To avoid working like peasant-slaves, think low intensity forager-gardener lives with time to love and learn.

Look at it this way: Life could be far worse than living like our ancestors did before becoming empire-builders and humans of NIMH. Living while balancing human demands on Nature's resources does not exclude retaining the information obtained over the past ten thousand years and adding to it as the millennia pass (even if slower than in the past 300 years). Look around. You are living in and are products of a dysfunctional complex society that is not remotely sustainable.

In the 1970s I decided to become an agricultural expert to help people in developing countries acquire knowledge of the Green Revolution. But what I came to realize is that I should go to the undeveloped areas to learn from farmers who know how to grow food sustainably without fossil fuel inputs. As for alternative energy, I'm hoping that when only alternative (to unsustainable sources of) energy is used to produce alternative energy (maintain/replace dams, PV, solar cookers, batteries, wind generators...), that there will be enough net energy to support information technology. But I could be wrong. Will there be enough net energy to turn it into food on a scale that fossil fuels allowed? Millions of experts think there will be, but they are products of a failed educational system foundering in a sea of error, ignorance, and illusion.

'Science is the belief in the ignorance of experts.' —Richard Feynman

 

 

121. Human civilization is about to collapse into a thousand years of barbarism, this can't be prevented. You must preserve as much knowledge in a form future civilizations will understand as you can, money and resources are unlimited. How do to do it?

You divert beer can production to make aluminum books written in blissymbolics by a small army of scholars taught the written language of semantography developed by Charles Bliss. The first book, Book 00, is Rosetta Bliss, a pictorial book an average human autodidact can use to teach themselves to read Bliss. The next 99 books contain all information deemed of value to posterity or of interest to a passing alien should humans go extinct. The complete work is called Encyclopedia Bliss.

If possible, you build a cairn on the Moon with a copy for passing aliens to find, that is also visible from Earth at the tip of a large pointer in case no copies left behind on the surface of Earth survive. Human descendants, or another species, may see a pointer to the cairn and wonder who built it.

Semantography: A logical language.

 

122. Where did the Borg come from?

Any account of the Borg, of the summum bonum for the greatest number, the pinnacle of ethical development, needs to start at their home world. As the ultimate users they assimilated all things they could consume. Theirs was a planet for the taking and the sanctity of Borg life was presumed by the Book they lived by. The Borg world, teaming with individual drones, had once teamed with other life before it was subsumed.

The Book begins:

1 We believe in the dignity of the individual.
2 We believe in the responsibility to the common good.
3 We believe in the endless quest for perfection [excellence—archaic version].
4 We believe in continuous assimilation [renewal].
5 We believe in the commonwealth of Borg [Warner] and its individuals [people].
6 We believe in the greatest good for the greatest number.

Ethics does not apply to ancestors who do not exist, and neither to posterity for the same reason. The past is a memory, the future yet to be, only the present is real, only the needs of the many matter, and the many (individual drones) are none other than the One.

The transBorg, seeking perfection of technological and biological traits, grew in number, evolving their intellectual, physical, and psychological capacities to asymptoticly approach perfection. By developing technology, ill health was eliminated and the disease of aging was conquered. Only death by misadventure, where repairs could not be made fast enough, remained. Posterity became irrelevant.

The needs of the many demanded growth and when the local system had been assimilated, nearby solar systems allowed the Borg to be fruitful. Technology provided energy too cheap to meter and made way for a galaxy for the taking. Others possessing biological and technological distinctiveness were encountered and assimilated. Assimilating mature beings was more efficient than sexual reproduction which became irrelevant.

The Borg are dominate. They seek only to raise the quality of life, their own and all who can add their essence to theirs (e.g. pets, livestock, crops). They subsume Nature, once thought to be the greatest good. Assuming one cannot argue with success, then Q.E.D.

We have met the Borg, and….

 

123. What do we need as humanity to understand that we have to take real care of Earth and save the environment?

The basic message of science, which is all about listening to Nature who has all the answers, is that we are not the center about which life, the universe and everything revolves. Our anthrocentrism is entirely self-inflicted, as imaged by human storytellers. Every missive from Nature, whispered to those who endeavor to listen, says that we are subsystems embedded within subsystems, composed of subsystems, and coextensive with our environment. As David Suzuki puts it, 'we are the environment'.

Do Anthropocene enthusiasts understand their place in the universe? Their educational system, formal and informal, tends to create humancentric servants of industrial society (political animals) that are cluelessly unaware of their true nature or of the nature of things. To listen to Nature would involve a paradigm shift that involved telling new stories antithetical to those virtually all educators and intelligentsia pundits now tell. A different understanding from the current worldview (Hubbert's monetary culture), would lead to new 'rules of the game' that would select for foundationally different behaviors and set limits.

For example, you are living in a belief-based culture. Science (Hubbert's matter-energy worldview) is inquiry-based and to do science, to endeavor to listen to Nature as a way of maybe coming to know a few things, is foundationally different from believing anything. Questioning everything is the default position. All religious and political ideology is belief-based, conclusion-driven thinking. A believing mind is oil to an abelieving mind's water.

The systems ecologist H.T. Odum answered your question in 1973:

'What is the general answer? Eject economic expansionism, stop growth, use available energies for cultural conversion to steady state, seek out the condition now that will come anyway, but by our service be our biosphere's handmaiden anew.' —Howard T. Odum, Energy, Ecology, & Economics

Will enough humans ever come to listen to Nature? When?

'Only a crisis - actual or perceived - produces real change. When that crisis occurs, the actions that are taken depend on the ideas that are lying around. That, I believe, is our basic function: to develop alternatives to existing policies, to keep them alive and available until the politically impossible becomes the politically inevitable.' —Milton Friedman

The [1] end of all belief-based ways of 'knowing', [2] human extinction, or [3] our development into a Borg-like species that views the Milky Way as a galaxy for the taking, are three outcomes to continued (for a time) business-as-usual. To confess my bias, I prefer the first. No biophysical laws of the universe would be violated if we came to understand the planet, our part in it, and learned to live properly with it (Nature determines what works and failure to live properly with her has extinction as outcome).

'Understand or die.' ― Ludwig Wittgenstein, 1889-1951

Do you believe the above is a rabbit or a duck?
Neither, bitches.

'Many people are startled to learn that most of what they believe to be true, most of what they think they know, is literally made up... products of the human mind, massaged or polished by social discourse and elevated to the status of received wisdom by custom or formal agreement. All cultural narratives, worldviews, religious doctrines, political ideologies, and academic paradigms are actually “social constructs” [domains of discourse].... One passively acquires the convictions, values, assumptions, and behavioral norms of his/her tribe or society simply by growing up in that particular milieu.... Some well-known constructs are entirely made up – “capitalism”, “communism”, “civil rights”, and “democracy” [aka human exceptionalism] for example, have no true analogues in the non-human world. These and similar concepts were birthed in words and given legs entirely through socio-political discourse [as honed into fine words by products of a broken educational system].... Science is unique among formal ways-of knowing in that scientists explicitly test the validity of tentative constructs (hypotheses) about the real world through observation and experiment [i.e. they listen to Nature] and adjust their understanding accordingly....'

'Things can get complicated – any economic paradigm is an elaborate socially-constructed model that may contain (or omit) other models that are themselves socially constructed. By now it should be clear that much of what humans take to be “real” may or may not bear any relationship to anything “out there”. More remarkably still, most people generally remain unconscious that their collective beliefs may be shared illusions – a cognitive enigma that may well determine the fate of humankind. No matter how well- or ill-founded, entrenched social constructs are perceptual filters through which people interpret new data and information; and, because our constructs constitute perceived reality, they determine how we “act out” in the real world. Millions [or billions] of lives may be jeopardized if those in positions of authority [fail to listen to Nature,] cherry-pick data guided by some dangerously faulty but comfortable social construct.... Let’s acknowledge that all economic theories/paradigms are elaborate conjectures and that none can contain more than a partial representation of biophysical, or even social, reality. If this is an important general limitation, we should be particularly concerned about today’s dominant neoliberal economic paradigm (the economics of capitalism)... enamoured with the idea of a self-regulating (free) market, would have the real economy adapt to fit their models.' —William Rees, End game: The economy as eco-catastrophe and what needs to change 2019

 

124. How would the world change if everyone were only scientists and not religious?

How would the world change if only science literates ‘were running the show’ and not the religious [e.g. most politicians]?

This sounds like a serious question, i.e. one thought to matter as would the answer to it. I would guess it does matter and may well be viewed as hitting the existential nail on the head. Whether humans come to understand the planet and learn to live with it properly, i.e. whether humans go extinct in the near future (this millennium), could matter. That we technoindustrial urbanized humans are presiding over the greatest mass extinction event since the one that ended the Cretaceous is as evidenced by what is in front of your face. Whether the Anthropocene will result in a larger mass extinction event than the Permian (96% extinction) remains to be seen, possibly by the last woman on Earth (the female of the species, being naturally superior, is more likely to be the last).

Consider a note by James Lovelock whom some suspect may know enough to have an opinion:

'In most of the world's nations, fewer than 1 per cent of the politicians and administrators are scientifically literate. And if this were not enough to hamper understanding, most of the languages of science is fragmented into at least 100 different dialects. Scientists, even good ones, only rarely understand their colleagues of a different department. How can they possibly convey their wisdom to a politician? Far worse than this difficulty in understanding, humans inevitably, as part of their evolutionary destiny, spontaneously act collectively as gangs, lobbies, learned societies, political parties and cronies. These all have a consensus view that, even with respected groups such as the IPCC, can be far from accurate.... My hope is that we survive and evolve further to the point where we are as much a part of our living planet as our brains are of us.' —James Lovelock, A Rough Ride to the Future 2014

The quest to live a religious life (e.g. Laozi) is very different from the endeavor to espouse religious certitudes to form a tribal consensus and, in so far as possible, work tirelessly to impose them on one’s family (especially offspring), or better, universally upon all. It was not that long ago that the most magnificent edifice at Oxford University was for the theologians who served the elites well, and if anyone, student or professor, considered the possibility of begging to differ with the consensus paradigm, they did so only in the privacy of their own minds, fearing what would happen to them if they demurred.

Today it is different. You can say anything you want as long as it is what others want to hear. Otherwise We the People merely ignore claims, no matter how evidence and reason based. If forced to, the intelligentsia servants of the SYSTEM are prepared to obfuscate and deny, deny, deny. There is now an endless supply of alternative facts (for a time).

So what if only those who maybe know enough to have an opinion were attempting to run the show? Well, about 91 years ago there was a Great Depression and it was not clear that things were just going to keep on keeping on. In 1919 an informal think tank arose to consider the possibility of putting the scientists and engineers in charge of running complex societies. But the economies of industrial societies were booming in the 1920s and interest in change faded. But not so by 1931–33 when M. King Hubbert (a scientist) learned about the ideas of the Technical Alliance from 1919, and got the former members back together to reform as Technocracy Inc.

But the cause of the Great Depression was financial, merely humans shooting themselves in their own foot, as there was no biophysical basis for the collapse of the global economy.

As Hubbert later notes:

'Our ignorance is not so vast as our failure to use what we know... I was in New York in the 30’s. I had a box seat at the depression. I can assure you it was a very educational experience. We shut the country down because of monetary reasons. We had manpower and abundant raw materials. Yet we shut the country down. We’re doing the same kind of thing now but with a different material outlook. We are not in the position we were in 1929–30 with regard to the future. Then the physical system was ready to roll. This time it’s not. We are in a crisis in the evolution of human society. It’s unique to both human and geologic history... Soon all the oil is going to be burned and all the metals mined and scattered.'

 

As Hubbert notes, there are basically two cultures: the ‘monetary culture’ and the ‘matter-energy worldview’, or the political/religious complex industrial monetary culture, now global (the BAU hegemon) and the science-based worldview. That some can compartmentalize the two views is a fact those within the matter-energy worldview can understand.

In other words the next Great Depression will be followed by the Greater Depression, which will be followed by the Greatest Depression and humans will go extinct or learn to live properly with the planet. Or as Ludwig Wittgenstein put it using fewer words, ‘understand or die’. Humans are ‘free’ to do either,.

Political and/or religious leaders lack ‘foresight intelligence’ as evidenced by the last seven thousand years of history. The economy did recover in the 1930s, especially with help from the economic stimulus of WWII, which lead to a lack of interest in the Technocracy alternative (which today might be called the Naturocracy alternative).

The belief that economic growth can and will keep on keeping on without limit will falter again. This time, however, there will be biophysical limits preventing ‘full recovery’ or any return to growth as usual for any significant period of time. Business as usual will falter and some humans may consider not hitting the wall of biophysical limits full speed ahead. Some may consider transitioning to an ecolate civilization. Design for a Viable Civilization

 

125. Which do you think would be worse, human population increasing up to 17 billion, or dropping down to just 7000?

Humans cannot chose to increase their population to 17 billion anymore than the reindeer of St. Matthew Island could have chosen to increase their population to 17 thousand. But we, like the reindeer, can but try.

It would then depend on who the 7,000 are. Are they among the remnant population of hunter-gatherers who live apart from technoindustrialized populations as our ancestors did for hundreds of thousands of years? Are they among the small number of subsistence agriculturalists whose low productivity agroecosystems and complex societies are managed to actually be sustainable (e.g. Kogi)?

 

Or are the 7,000 among the survivalists who stockpiled the most ammo in their bug-out bunker? If they who have the most ammo are the only ones who remain, who are they most likely to repeat the pattern, is there a third option (a second viable option), zero?

 

126. If you are tasked to give one ever lasting gift to humanity, what would that be? What is one best wish you have for the Mother Earth and all its inhabitants before you die?

For both humanity and the biosphere, aka Mother Earth, I would wish that humans come to understand the world system and learn to live with it properly as we neither understand nor live properly with life on Earth as Nature determines. As a result we are presiding over the greatest mass extinction event since the late Cretaceous. Humans seem intent on competing to see if the Anthropocene will be a greater mass extinction event than the Permian (at 96%). Actually, of course, humans are merely perusing the contingencies of short-term reinforcement like rats in a Skinner box, aka industrial society, now global. Virtually all humans lack foresight intelligence and are time blind (and energy blind and posterity blind) because that is what the social system selects for.

As any systems ecologist could explain, immortality for humans, or other species, i.e. the ability to stop aging, would be deadly to the species. Life spans vary and all are just about right as what works is what Nature selects for, and is never maximized. That Nature determines what works is foundational to understanding the planet and learning to live with it properly. Nature has all the answers. Ask questions, Listen to Nature. Stop listening to the voices in your head or those coming from other heads.

The schooling system exists to produce humans who can serve the greater system, e.g. the economy and socio-political control systems. If you are paid to do something, your service helps to growth the economy, to keep things keeping on. If you were educated by other than a broken schooling system, by an educational system based on three pillars: literacy, numeracy, and ecolacy (systems science literacy), then you would understand that the now global economic system is not remotely sustainable and will select for its own failure. The resulting ongoing mass extinction event may include humans.

As for one gift, it has already been offered, Alexander Pope's "know then thyself." If we (more than some fraction of a percent) understood the dynamics of the system we are products of and serve, then the understanding would force deliverance from our state of error, ignorance, and illusion. We would endeavor to think well (realizing that we don't) and iterate towards a better understanding of the human predicament. We would collectively stand down, let go of our hubris ways, embrace not-knowing (and degrowth) and listen to Nature. But we won't as the current socio-religio-politico-economic system does not select for long-term viable outcomes. Sorry about that in advance.

But hope springs eternal and complex systems are not only more complex than we understand, but more complex that we can understand. There are leverage points and no one knows but a few of them or what unforeseeable change may come. Understanding systems could change the rules of the game and select for a different outcome. Start with Donella Meadow's Thinking in Systems: A Primer.

Nature alone has all the answers, so hu-mans stand down.

Existential Concerns: Towards real solutions for humanity and the biosphere

 

127. Are science and religion compatible?

Science is inquiry-based, not belief-based, and embraces doubt as prerequisite for inquiry. Tautological truths tell us nothing about the what’s-out-there. Science is about not knowing, but at best iterating towards knowing and understanding the cosmos. Uncertainty is normal and certitude is error (if you want certainty, to know stuff that is true by definition, stick to math or logic).

Some fine and functional minds can compartmentalize their science and belief-based religion. Having oil and water swirling in their brains works for them. The two ways of knowing, however, are incompatible in that neither needs the other. Some individuals, conditioned from childhood to believe, need to believe and should consider fideism which is compatible with evidence/reason based skeptical thinking, e.g. Martin Gardener, see The Whys of a Philosophical Scrivener.

Any organized, systematized, doctrinal religion, i.e. just about any of thousands you can name, are systems of belief. Scientists with an interest in social psychology/pathology may take an interest in all, may focus on one or a few, but not as a believer.

Is all religion belief-based? It may seem so, but not all. Buddha and Laozi likely had no intention of founding an organized religion and they were clearly inquirers and not believers themselves, even though their followers are.

Fritjof Capra, in his Tao of Physics, notes that “Science does not need mysticism and mysticism does not need science. But man needs both.” He was referring to inquiry-based religion which is antithetical to what most people mean by religion, so he had to pick another word.

Is it possible to passionately inquire into the nature of things and into one’s existential condition? Yes. For a modern example, there are the teachings of Zhen on mindful science.

 

 

 

128. Is there enough food for the population to live on or is the distribution of food not fair?

I was trained to be an agronomist, but what I learned was mainly ways and means of turning fossil fuels into food. A Hopi farmer, able to grow 4 bushels of corn per acre dryland in northern Arizona, after a 20 to 50 year fallow period, wouldn't have any knowledge to offer to help a farmer today in the Corn Belt grow 200+ bushels of corn per acre every year. If I took over a Hopi farmer's field and, with little more than a digging stick, tried to grow 4 bushels of corn, I would surely fail. Is there enough food now for 7.8 billion, or soon to be 8 billion? Yes. Agriculture currently uses about 30 percent of all energy, mostly fossil fuels, and if more were diverted by, say, doubling the cost of plane tickets and gasoline for passenger cars to reduce demand, then more land could be converted in agricultural lands and yields on all agricultural lands could be increased. FOR A TIME!

 

The amount of land put into agricultural production and the yield per hectare have both dramatically increased even faster than population has increased. The current level of food production, however, is not remotely sustainable. That we are presiding over the greatest mass extinction since the late Cretaceous is due largely to the spread of agriculture. We are consuming Earth's life-support system to turn its biomass into humans, crops, pets, and domestic animals, but only for a time. The growth of human biomass and the industrial society we consumers depend on over the last three hundred years will climax and descend. When it will climax and how fast the descent will be is unknown, but that it will happen is as certain as what happens after you through a rock up into the air as hard as you can. The exact trajectory, unlike the rock's, will just be vastly more complex, too complex to predict in detail.

Source

Is the distribution of food unfair such that if it were fairly distributed no one would be hungry or malnourished? Yes, near equitable distribution of current food production could feed all humans and their pets, and then some. BUT ONLY FOR A TIME. How much more time? No one knows, but for the rest of this century? Maybe. How maybe? I'd guess that a consensus of informed guesses would be that there is less than a 1% chance of keeping the global food production system growing to meet demand until 2100.

What's the maximum population Earth could support if all environmental productivity is diverted to humans, their pets and livestock by covering as much of the planet as possible in crops, but without energy slaves doing the work (figure 80% of humans plus many animal slaves do the work) at the expense of all other life on Earth? Maybe 600 million humans, for a time,

As unthinkable as it is to at least 99.999% of the mostly overweight (70%) urbanized servants (shoppers) of industrial society today, think that for posterity to live a prosperous life of enough without whips cracking on human or animal backs, that 60 million is a better guess as to how many humans the biosphere could support without the human footprint causing species extinction and loss of biodiversity.

Will humans choose to degrow their population? No. But that doesn't mean it can't or won't happen.

 

 

129. How many acres is the world?

Humans have a special interest in how many acres in the world support them as agricultural lands, so how many arable/pastureable acres are there on this pale blue dot? If that question is implied, the current answer is about 4.9 billion hectares of agricultural land of which 1.4 billion are arable or farmable, with the rest being grazeable by domestic livestock.

Management of Agroecosystems

Forests cover 31 percent of the global land area. Approximately half the forest area is relatively intact, and more than one-third is primary forest (i.e. naturally regenerated forests of native species, where there are no visible indications of human activities and the ecological processes are not significantly disturbed).

The total forest area is 4.06 billion hectares, or approximately 5 000 sq meters per person, but forests are not equally distributed around the globe and are rapidly being converted into agricultural lands or into tree farms for industrial wood production, not food, which is not usually considered agriculture, but is as fiber production (e.g. cotton) is clearly agricultural land use. The destruction of the planet’s forests is ongoing and is and will have a ‘bad’ outcome for life on Earth including humans whose pursuit of short-term self interest is rapidly degrading the planetary life-support system.

The State of the World’s Forests 2020

 

130: How do we solve the human population problem?

For most humans, Nature will solve the human population problem and that of our pets and livestock. Ask any population biologist how.

For some humans, point out that the only alternative is for them to agree to rapid and managed depopulation by a radical birth-off to avoid a die-off. A die-off would involve a rapid depopulation to create a viable balance between human (and pet and livestock) demands and nature's resources such that environmental productivity provides the resulting population with a prosperous and sustainably viable life. If there are too many cattle on a range, or reindeer on an island (i.e. the population is in overshoot), reduce the herd size, and sooner is better.

Those who understand the remorseless dynamic we are all captured by and are a part of will vote with their feet and move to an agreed upon area to displace the existing human population peaceably by buying them out, paying top dollar (beyond the dreams of avarice if necessary) for property such that the vast majority agree to move elsewhere.

Those who agree to rapid managed depopulation to a sustainable carrying capacity are the vast majority and initially 10 times more than the carrying capacity the land can support, but long-term food storage, diverted from being converted to meat/eggs/milk/beer, provides enough to support the excess population until natural death reduces the population.

Initially only perhaps one in thirty potentially fertile women who want to have a child could give birth to a child, but in 50 years of natural attrition by old age and other to be expected death, each fertile woman, part of a much smaller population, would need to have a bit more than two, on average, to maintain a viable population. If a plague happened, the birth rate could be increased for a time.

Anyone not understanding why rapid managed depopulation, preferably without Malthusian deaths, would be a good thing would self-select out of being part of the society of enough, aka the new world order.

 

Consumers, denizens of technoindustrial society, committed to living as a plague species, would die-off as any other species in overshoot would. The adaptive ecolate people who had voted with their feet to embrace rapid degrowth of their population and per capita consumption, and who wisely use only appropriate technology, would inherit the Earth (and not the wind) as Earth Agents.

So you have two options (excluding denial): birth-off or die-off. Be sapient, choose wisely (hint: die-off is in your best short-term self interest).


A comment:

You are wrong.

The United Nations claims that the world population will level off at 11 billion people, the claims you made about a “plague phase” and mass die offs are based on data when child mortality was still 70%. In the modern world many developed nations are or would be losing people were it not for immigration.

The world population will not keep growing forever, the current growth is a symptom of the demographic transition and eventually we will be faced not with the question of how to undergo a die-off as I would argue you’ve fear mongered hear; but rather how to feed and sustain 11 billion people.

 

My reply:

As David Suzuki said, ‘I hope I’m wrong about everything.’ [The ‘plague phase’ graphic is from his friend and collogue William Rees, a globally well known scientist, taken from a Biology 101 textbook.] Some questions on ‘over’ population have had over a hundred answers, and I have spent hours boiling answers down and tabulating them.

Your view is a minority one as more than half of those offering answers firmly assert that ‘overpopulation’ is a myth as ‘too many’ humans is the view of misanthropic racists who want to kill Black babies (the Left leaning) or of ecofascists who don’t believe in the capitalist growth hegemon (the Right leaning).

Virtually all of the remaining answers agree that the demographic transition will pretty much take care of any regional population problems as women are empowered and educated, and patriarchy fades (i.e. no one actually has to do anything). The only foreseeable problem will be underpopulation.

I’m 67, an agronomist, and I think I know a thing or two about food production. Without fossil fuel inputs all the PhD experts in the world put together might be able to help humans produce enough food to support 500–600 million, but only if most of them work in the fields ‘all the livelong day’.

The population that the environmental productively of the planet might support sustainably as forager-gardeners who have time to love and learn about this Earth, is maybe 30–50 million, but as everyone agrees, I’ve got it all wrong. I certainly hope so.

A reply:

I’m glad you responded, especially with nuance to your ideas but I still don’t understand exactly what you’re saying, no one seriously thinks we have to reach 0 carbon emissions in a year. Electric farm equipment, especially in more motorised countries, will become more affordable each year both to buy and run. Renewables are being used more now than ever and phasing out fossil fuels is entirely possible in the coming decades, especially by the time our population has started to level off. Some Western Nations aim to be carbon neutral by 2050 and innovation in agriculture has continued to reduce the number of people working in it from 100% before civilisation or nomadic societies to 2% in modern developed nations.

This historically unstoppable progress is why climate change and over population will likely only ever significantly slow, not flip or stop human progress.

I also appreciate your openminded-ness sorry if I came off a tad aggressive. Your points just seem a little contrary to much I knew of the demographic transition.

My reply:

Everything you say is, per your sources, true, but understanding the nature of things is complex, perhaps not merely more complex than we know, but more complex than we can know. My sources are a minority view within the set of credible views of best-guess science. H.T. Odum, for example, spent most of his life ‘trying to shock the scientific establishment into a better view'. I know his daughter who said he, a top systems ecologist, stopped going to ecological conferences because they didn’t want to consider his ‘better view’. Most still don’t. H.T.’s brother, Eugene, wrote the first textbook on ecology and among those who knew both, one considered H.T. to be Eugene’s ‘smarter brother’, as Mycroft was Sherlock’s smarter brother. Whatever, both knew more than I ever will. The ‘pulsing paradigm’ is from a paper both wrote together along with Eugene’s son, also a PhD ecologist.

I wrote an article that relates to the claim that alternative energy sources are alternative to fossil fuels. Mark Brown, University of Florida successor to H.T. Odum read it and commented ‘of course I agree’. And I was invited to attend and present at the Emergy Biennial conference a few years ago and did. Emergy Yield Ratios Matter

One of H.T. Odum’s graduate students is Charles Hall, one of nearly one hundred who got their PhD from him, whom I know and have been to two of his conferences as he is founder of the International Society of BioPhysical Economics. He is another source who doesn’t see ‘alternative’ to fossil fuel energy as alternative as the EROI (EYR) is too low. The 'transformity' value of electric is too high to use as energy slaves to pull farm machinery.

Unfortunately almost everyone who is a product of any educational system (schooling system) doesn’t know enough to have an opinion about ‘energy’ or the ‘human predicament’ or ‘problematique’. The norm is to be both energy blind and posterity blind as short-term self interest is what the now global growth hegemon we are all products of and serve selects for. All 'alternative sources' can explain at book length why I am wrong. But this fact doesn't mean I (or may sources) am wrong about everything. Nature will 'decide' what works and who, if anyone, has the better grasp of reality.

For those whose native language is not systems science, my SF short story ‘Muzuki’s Tale’ may be of interest. Imagine a David Suzuki lived on Easter Island. Muzuki's Tale

Reply:

A very fair opinion with just a single caveat if your sources and opinions are a minority among both experts and amateurs alike, then why did you present them as the truth in your answer?

My reply:

As Richard Feynman (whom some think knew enough to have an opinion, but I'm not so sure) noted: 'Science is the believe in the ignorance of experts.' And as for amateurs... who knows?

In science ‘you iterate towards truth, you don’t know it’ [James Lovelock who guesses an 80% or higher depopulation of humans this century], and opinions don’t count. All current consensus views (majority) where minority views at some point and for some time, sometimes for centuries (e.g. the spherical Earth hypothesis). And some current consensus views are wrong, count on it. The intelligentsia majority denied the Copernican hypothesis for 150 years and it took the book banners over 200 years to take his book off their list.

And I could go on and on, but the point is nobody knows anything. We can believe anything we want to and do. As an abeliever, I ‘believe’ that Nature doesn’t care what I believe, so why should I? Science is, per Feynman, a matter of ‘guess then test’. That’s it. No one presents anything as ‘the truth’. Those who want ‘the truth’ should become mathematicians or theologians.

What’s my best guess based on the best guess of those who seem to have some ability to listen to Nature and read the tea leaves of evidence? Some ask and sometimes I offer my best guess. There are no sources other than Nature. ‘Nature has all the answers, so what is your question?’, as H.T. Odum put it.

But he could be wrong too. There are no easy answers, or even for-sure answers apart from tautologies, so you can believe what you want like everyone else, or not. Humans will go on to build a Dyson sphere and colonize the Milky Way. Or not [Zero and counting]. Enjoy life while you can.

 

131: Do you think the planet is overpopulated at this time, and what do you consider to be a sustainable population of humans?

There are many opinions, and that is what Quora traffics in. Credible guesses, in my view, would be those of system ecologists and their best guess tends to be in the 500 to 600 million range. But this is a maximum and assumes all environmental productivity of the planet is diverted to humans and their pets, livestock, crops, and remaining sprawl.

If you ask what is the sustainable population of humans such that their footprint does not cause species extinction nor prevents the evolution of new species to replace the ones that have already gone extinct during the Anthropocene, then a reasonable, evidenced-based best guess would be about 35 million. And 99.9% of Anthropocene enthusiasts believe billions more than live now can be sustainably supported. But Nature doesn’t care what humans or any species may believe. Carrying Capacity and Overshoot

 

 

132: How does the world fail to hit targets to halt biodiversity collapse?

A slide from a presentation by Garvin Boyle contains one answer to your question.

We don’t understand it yet, not enough to be delivered from it, nor for life on Earth to be delivered from us.

Note to file

 

 

133: How do farmers help the environment?

Agriculture is the largest contributor to biodiversity loss with expanding impacts due to changing consumption patterns and growing populations. Agriculture destroys biodiversity by converting natural habitats to intensely managed systems and by releasing pollutants, including greenhouses gases.”

Agriculture and biodiversity: a review.

This is not an extraordinary claim, but a consensus view of scientists who know enough to have an opinion. So short answer is that industrial agriculture is of no ‘help’ and low-intensity gardening using only human power and no fossil fuel inputs, direct or indirect, at best does not harm the biosphere other than by replacing parts of ecosystems with agroecosystems that serve humans assuming the area put under the human foot is limited enough to prevent loss of species diversity.

To not have a significant impact on biodiversity, a human population of forager-farmers of 35 million globally may be viable. Carrying Capacity and Overshoot

Of course, 100 percent of Anthropocene enthusiasts disagree. But Nature doesn’t care what we think, like or dislike, or want to believe.

 

134: ‘Environmental concerns and economic growth cannot co-exist.’ Do you agree?

Growth within a ‘pulsing paradigm’ is natural and normal in Nature.

Pulsing into overshoot is common and for some species it is their norm, e.g. yeast and locusts, but yeast sporulation and thrive. Humans will not.

Or when there is enough environmental productivity to exploit we’ll do the empire-building thing we’ve been doing for thousands of years with the same outcome as usual.

And where is that latte I ordered?

There will not be another ‘Hubbert’s pimple’. Carrying Capacity and Overshoot

 

135: Humans’ lives have become more complex as time has passed. And as the world grows in complexity, it becomes harder for humans to understand the world, the world’s problems, and the solutions to those problems. Is this why many people are unhappy?

Connecting increasing unhappiness/dysfunction, individual and societal, with increasing complexity is to inquire in the right direction, is to bark up a better tree than most. I answer only because the other answers are so lame as to fail to recognize a fair question when they trip over it.

To begin somewhere, our ancestors lived in groups of 5–85, 20–50 commonly, for half a million years. There were occasional dysfunctional individuals, but basically you could trust everyone with your life and did. Every day you had a life-driven purpose to get up and feed yourself and others. There was times of scarcity, but most days were not stressful and all had enough. There was time to love and learn. There was occasional conflicts with other bands, especially during hard times, but yelling and throwing things was usually enough, and no one died. You had enough, as much stuff as you cared to carry.

With agriculture in the epipaleolithic cameregionally widespread fixed settlements and increasing complexity. Social dyad numbers, a measure of complexity, increased by orders of magnitude. Hierarchy arose, elites ruled commoners, and warriors helped to grow empire. Thousands of chiefdoms arose and fell as the pattern was unsustainable, i.e. none persisted as the millennia passed. Hundreds of state level empires have come and gone, blazed into the glory that was Greece, the grandeur that was Rome. All fell, collapsed, or faded away. See Joseph Tainter’s Collapse of Complex Societies and Jared Diamond’s study of Collapse.

For the first time we are climaxing empire on a global scale. What happened to the Indus Valley Civilization, in terms of detail, will no doubt be completely different. But outcome could be the same.

The work of John B. Calhoun concerns what happens to eusocial species when population density far exceeds their Dunbar number. He observed that with each generation dysfunctional behaviors increase, his ‘behavioral sink’ of over-density living. Currently most humans live in cities and there are 47 megacities with populations of over 10 million. In the 20th century urbanites, when polled, said there were many 2–3 others they could trust with their money or their wife. In the 21st century the average is less than 1. Most live purpose-driven lives like rats in a Skinner box. Addictiion rates are soaring and per WHO a quarter have or will have a form of mental illness. Calhoun’s rats and mice didn’t have drugs to do. We are reaching Critical Mass.

 

 

 

136: Why is every human action in conflict with nature?

Pissing into the wind is not in conflict with nature. Nature doesn’t care. Building empire and seeking to conquer all (including other humans) who get in our way has a short-term pay-off, but never works long-term. We are in conflict with nature when what we do is selected against because it does not work. Nature, the nature of things, alone ‘decides’ what works and doesn’t work. We can listen or not. If we overshoot the carrying capacity of Earth’s life-support system, we will know because of the negative feedback loops, including plague that high mobility and population density select for, among other things. Our hubris ways can and will be corrected. If there are too many reindeer on an island (e.g. St. Matthew Island), their population will be corrected. A damaged nature survived. The reindeer did not. Are humans smarter than yeast or reindeer? To answer your question: Because we don’t listen to Nature who has all the answers.

Understanding the Exponential Function

 

137: Do you think that limiting the human population would be better than destroying nature looking for more resources and technologies in an endless economic growth?

Short answer, yes. As for why, humans seem to be educated to not understand why. Start with this David Suzuki quote, ‘In my opinion, no more destructive belief exists than that we have escaped the constraints imposed by nature on all other species.’ Is David Suzuki a know-nothing who just doesn’t get it? You decide.

Humans, as all Anthropocene enthusiasts know, have decoupled, by his creativity and hubris, from nature. The earth was once viewed as an illimitable plane for the taking, and humans have spent the last 10K years taking it. To do the job right, it took fossil fuels. ‘And then what?

We are likely to find out this century. In 1944, 29 reindeer were introduced to St. Matthew Island. In 1957 there were 1,350 rather fat reindeer. In 1963 the population reached about 6,000. Imagine you are a wildlife biologist who, in 1950, was assigned to manage St. Mattew Island. You are told the reindeer were put on the island to serve as an emergency food for army personnel at a radar site. They are long gone and there are no humans on the island to check the population growth. You consider importing wolves to keep the population in check, but there are no funds for the project. You foresee the outcome and in 1965 you note that there are 42 reindeer who survived the die-off. In 1966 reindeer are extinct on the island. Any Biology 101 student should be able to guess, to explain in general what happened even though no one could have predicted in 1950 that the population would climax in 1964 and that die-off would bottom out at zero.

Now imagine you are not human. You are a reindeer and in 1963 you redouble your effort to share your concerns with the other reindeer. You had been trying to explain the nature of things to them for thirteen years. But they look around and see an island full of reindeer, so why worry? Look around. You live on a planet teeming with humans. Why worry? ‘Enjoy life while you can’ [James Lovelock].

 

 

138: How can we make this world a perfect place for both humans and animals? I wish evil never existed in this world. I also wish wars could go away.

This could be a real question, not yet another lure cast out to fish for titillating answers. Who doesn’t wish war and harm to humans, animals, and Earth’s life-support system could go away? Modern humans seem to little know that they are living as pathogens on a world they are entirely products of, like all other lifeforms, such that there could be no more perfect place for them to live by continuing to evolve. We cannot make the world perfect, but we could cease to live like pathogens on it. No biophysical laws of the universe would be violated if we learned to understand the planet and came to live properly with it as our ancestors, until recently, did for eons.

If the learned protest that we do not live in the best of all possible worlds, we should then ask if the obvious is because the world is imperfect or is it we who are living badly on it? Perhaps the problem of Utopia is the lack of Utopians to live in it. All other life on Earth live and thereby persist. We sleep.

So to answer: Know then thyself. Think of ‘evil’ as ‘to miss the mark’, to hit what you should not be aiming for. We aim to decouple from Nature, to be different in kind, to rule all we survey, to be exceptional, supreme and to live in our supremacy forever. We believe that the laws of Nature, that apply to all other life on Earth, do not apply to us. We swim in a belief-based sea of error, ignorance, and illusion of our own making which could be unmade by not believing in belief.

Nature doesn’t care what you believe, so why should you? To understand the pathology of belief is to be delivered from it. Do not believe in Nature. Any concept you may form of life, the universe and everything is a concept, a model, a belief, a social construct that is not the What-is, the what is out there apart from our concepts of it. A climate model is not the climate. To create an imperfect model of Earth’s climate one must listen to the nature of things. To think is to listen. Consider data. Ask questions, question everything. There are no true stories. At best we can iterate towards truer stories by listening to Nature who has all the answers.

“The mind clings to its image of the world. We call it real only because of our Ignorance. Do not seek after the truth, merely cease to cherish your opinions.” Loose interest in the voices in your head and the prattle of others. Listen to the still small whispers of the What-is.

 

 

139: What percent of the world is not educated?

Not being educated, I have to wonder—what would an educated human look like? I’m pretty sure 100% of all corvids are educated, but I’m not so sure about humans. I wouldn’t know an educated person if I tripped over them, so what would those who might be educated have to say?

“Education: that which reveals to the wise, and conceals from the stupid, the vast limits of their knowledge.... I have never let my schooling interfere with my education.” —Mark Twain

“Self-education is, I firmly believe, the only kind of education there is.” — Isaac Asimov

“The more he became truly wise [sapient, educated], the more he distrusted everything he knew.” — Voltaire

“Knowing that you do not know is the best. Not knowing that you do not know is an illness.... True words are not pleasing. Pleasing words are not true. Those who are right do not argue. Those who argue are not right. Those who know are not learned. Those who are learned [educated] do not know.” — Lao Tzu

“Philosophy is a battle against the bewitchment of our intelligence by means of our language.” — Ludwig Wittgenstein

I’m guessing the bewitched are neither intelligent nor educated, so I’m obviously not educated (merely schooled).

I was schooled, but the schooling system failed to mention that we consumers, we products of an industrial society that is not remotely sustainable (they don't teach that either), that we who spend hours a day looking a screens…. “don’t know shit from apple butter.” But my mother, a product of the hills of Appalachia, did. But she is dead, which makes the number smaller. I have an advanced degree in computational socio-biometrics, but, sorry, I can’t calculate what percentage of us are not educated (to the nearest order of magnitude).

 

 

140: What is the optimal population for our planet and how could we humanely get there (for context, I recently read that there are more people than rats)?

Before the Neolithic (agriculture), Earth supported less than 10 million humans. With forced labor, especially in agriculture (e.g. slavery, serfdom), the Earth might be able to support 500–600 million, for a time, without fossil fuel inputs, but maximizing food production by diverting as much of the planet’s environmental productivity to humans and their crops, livestock, and pets would not be optimal for life on Earth, including for humans.

The optimal population for humans would involve a human/crop/livestock/pet footprint that did not cause species extinction, i.e. loss of biodiversity. We exceeded optimal about 3–4 thousand years ago and are presently causing a 100 to 1,000 times greater species extinction rate than prior to human dominion with the raise of empire building. We went into absolute overshoot about 1970, but we went into unsustainable empire building and regional overshoot millennia ago.

Those who think that 500 million humans could be supported using forced human and animal labor are thinking maximum. Optimal would be in the 10–50 million range. See: Carrying Capacity and Overshoot

And as for how to get there, there is the die-off and birth-off options. The humane way would be to determine the carrying capacity of an area (humans don’t get a vote). To sustain that population, each birth would replace each expected death within the optimal population, not the existing population. Initially few could have children, perhaps one in several hundred fertile women, but within one lifetime women would need to have about 2.1 children on average. The rapid depopulation would be by natural death, not by starvation or conflict. If, before there are no more fossil fuel inputs, grain and dry goods food production were diverted from animal feed production and stored anoxically, no one would die of starvation during the birth-off period of 50–70 years. Alternatively, we keep on keeping on until we can’t, resulting in a scarcity induced die-off which will be far less humane as usual.

 

 

141: Are we today, in a scientific and technological age, on the right path to solve the problems of human injustice and exploitation? Why?

The rich (two families on left) and the many not as rich on right whose lifestyles the rural 'poor' (subsistence farmers who rarely buy food and may make $1/day) hope to enjoy someday [in Tanzania, a presidential democratic republic, multi-party system with an independent Judiciary].

The image above comes from an article, Inequality, Poverty, and Injustice, and the following lengthy comments were occasioned by considering a possible error in interpretation:

'Most of us have played the popular game Monopoly, where players compete to gain control of all the money and property. Each player starts with the same amount of money from which to buy property and build homes or hotels. Players move around a game board by the a roll of the dice. Thus, there is an element of skill (players must choose when to buy or trade property, when to build houses or hotels) and an element of chance (the roll of the dice). The game ends when one player has successfully ‘monopolized’ (owns) all the money and property.

In the game of Monopoly the playing field is equal, every player starts the game with the same amount of money. Every player has the same opportunity to roll the dice and advance (unless they go to jail). Every player follows the same set of rules. Imagine instead if one person started the game with a hundred times more money than the other players?...'

To skip to the end, to answer your question, no. We are living in a monetary culture, now globalized, and science and technology is valued ‘for the milk and cheese and profit it brings’ (as Eckhart said of God). M. King Hubbert was a scientist who clearly saw the way of things. The ‘matter energy systems worldview’ is far from mainstream and its narrative of humans on a pale blue dot is incompatible with the humancentricism of the default BAU culture [see The Solutionatique]. And solutions will not be based on the short-term self interests of the monetary culture, nor upon reductionist silo science. The ‘better view’ of Hubbert is systems science, thinking in systems, which allows for the possibility of understanding the system dynamic we are captured by and could maybe thereby be delivered from.

When we see 'the great divide' such as imaged above, when we see such disparity in wealth, most humans think immediately of sinful and immoral personal characteristics such as greed, avarice, selfishness, or insensitivity to the plight of others. We want to remove the privilege from the wealthy and boost the privilege of those disenfranchised from power and wealth. We want to lay blame and punish malefactors. These are 'good' moral judgments – 'good' motives, or were among our hunter-gatherer ancestors.

Is the solution to unrig the game such that everyone has a fair and equitable start? Otherwise people might not want to play the game with enthusiasm. If perfect justice and equality were achieved for all 18-year-olds, if everyone enjoyed playing the game of growth and exploitation for its own sake, of pursuing short-term self interest, then surely we would be living in the best of all possible worlds. But what if 'the game' we are all playing and have been since empire-building started 6-11K years ago, is rigged as are other games, such as Monopoly and chess. There is one winner, and then it is GAME OVER for them too. In the game of life, for a species, GAME OVER means extinction. What if the only way to win the dissipative structure game is to not play it?

In the small world that we used to inhabit not 100 years ago, taking action on such morally responsible thoughts did not occur to prevent the BAU world we live in. Would ethically motivated actions have saved humanity from today's predicament? And, what is the best response now? What would have been the best response 100 years ago? Things have changed rapidly, and are still changing rapidly. Do we have the sapience now that we did not have 100 years ago? Has 100 years of history sharpened our wits? We need to better understand what is happening! Perhaps we can find some wisdom in the examination of a board game.

But, let’s start at the beginning. Good or bad? From what point of view? The point of view of the wealthy, of the poor, of posterity living 100 years later, or of Nature? Is Nature the forgotten player in this panorama? What morally acceptable solution would leave more room for Nature and also give us more equality?

Let’s try to think of egality from the point of view of a systems scientist. If per capita consumption had been virtually and consistently equal across the entire population (0.8-1.2 range, 1=enough), the entire picture might look more like the right side with maybe a few more trees and slightly bigger backyards. The population could and likely would have grown faster (doubling per capita prosperity would likely lower death rate) assuming economic growth and production was the same. Eventually the land would fill up, and we are back to subsistence living in an unsustainable situation. So, equality of access to wealth would not offer much hope for the long term. It would not be enough of a change to BAU to be sustainable.

Assume one person on left for every hundred on right and each person on left earns $1K/day in income. They consume a hundred times more stuff/energy (other than food and other self-limited consumption, e.g. hair-dryers per person) than those on the right (earning $10/day in income). Eliminate all those on the left and redistribute their stuff/income. Those on the right could double their consumption, but only for a time as the SYSTEM (socio-economic control system) would collapse sooner. Increased consumption and reduced production from the lack of services provided by the elites would cause the economic/socio-political system to fail sooner. And then what?

If those on the right could buy more cars, TVs, washing machines—doubling their energy use, then what? Under the current system, in which the economy is growing, both sides can get richer, so there can be co-existence and persistence, for a time, of a global growth system that is not remotely sustainable (that growth will surely continue is belief-based).

Oh, wait, that is what they did 100 years ago and what we are still trying to do. With scarcity induced conflict and breakdown of social control and service subsystems, those on the right could kill those on the left, loot their stuff, cut the trees for cooking fuel and ultimately collapse the economy they depend on. And then what?

For a 'sustainable' community, envision a human biology friendly village size of perhaps 20-50 forager-gardeners living prosperously on local environmental resources provided by an area much larger (maybe 100 ha per forager-gardener) than pictured (about 2.7 ha shown), and only after depopulation and environmental restoration.

Per capita consumption of industrial products would be much less or even zero. At least two things are needed to make this vision sustainable. There must be room for Nature. And, there must be a limit on the number of people inversely proportional to consumption.

Lord Man becomes our future's past. All would spend most of their day having face-time with loved ones they trusted with their lives while working together, perhaps four hours a day, to support their lifestyles free from the very long list of pathologies associated with modern 'civilization', These would include acne, Alzheimer's, arthritis, atherosclerosis, asthma, some cancers (e.g. lung, breast, and colorectal cancer), carpal-tunnel syndrome, chronic liver disease/cirrhosis, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, colitis, irritable bowel syndrome, malnutrition, type 2 diabetes, heart disease, hypertension, metabolic syndrome, chronic kidney failure, osteoporosis, PCOD, diverticulitis, gallstones, rickets, dental caries, stroke, depression, OCD, suicide, chronic stress, addiction/anxiety/bipolar/personality/psychotic/eating disorders, substance abuse, obesity, ideology, and vascular dementia.

But, how can we establish this eutopian goal, when we have failed time and again in the past? We must understand why we have failed. There may be some hint in a common board game. In the board game of Monopoly everyone starts out in a state of perfect equality and the rules apply to each with perfect fairness and justice for all. No one starts with more money nor can anyone print Get Out of Jail Free cards at will.

Nevertheless, the game is rigged. It really does not matter who owns what at any given time. It is the rules of the game that select for the inevitable outcome: Eventually one player gets it all and then GAME OVER, including for the 'winner'. We are playing (badly) a game on a global board – a game for which the rules are rigged. If the ultimate outcome is not what we intend, then we must stop playing the game.

The current national and global systems define the 'rules of the game' and working tirelessly for more equality and justice is a distraction – a morally necessary but ultimately a futile distraction. The political, religious, and industrial subsystems: the media, the military, the legal, and the educational subsystems—the whole shebang—is based on the contingencies of short-term self interest. They are instrumental institutions that embody the rules—they are the SYSTEM that selects for its own endgame and determines our inability to win it. Voting for or against some policy, or tweaking policies to the Right or Left, is merely like players in the game rolling the dice, hoping for luck, but selecting for the as-usual raise and fall outcome.

In the game of global Monopoly, the only way to win, as with Russian roulette, is to not play the game. We are all players who strut our stuff for a time, but who cannot foundationally change the rules of the game. Our only alternative is to not play the game, to vote with our feet and consider playing a different game that selects for a different outcome. The question that we desperately need to figure out is this: What rules will lead to a sustainable and functional society? A sustainable outcome that is dysfunctional, as Orwell envisioned, is achievable by 2184 (or maybe 2984).

We are all products of and serve Hubbert's 'monetary culture' within which his 'matter-energy system worldview' is an externality valued 'for the milk and cheese and profit it brings'. Changing horses (e.g. from race horse to plow horse) is an option. An 'ecolate' culture, a matter-energy system culture, would select for a different, better or worse, outcome.

The prosperity of a village would depend on a system of global governance that defines limits to 'development' and prevents a slightly larger community from conquering a neighboring one to set in motion the remorseless dynamic leading to Lord Man. The global governance would provide information services, apart from protection from conquest, so any villager who wants to be literate, numerate, and ecolate could be.

All Gaians living on the pale blue dot, having stood down from their hubris heights, would live such functional lives as possible in a naturocracy (rule by the nature of things) as the millennia pass. Or Nature, being unkind, allows for failure. And so extinction could be our GAME OVER if almost all of us keep on keeping on (and too few vote with their feet).

Oh, and 'the great divide'? There isn't one. The $1/day humans want to make $2/day and if you are making a thousand a day, think of all the good you could do if you made two thousand. Enthusiasm varies. As I understand more of the dynamics of the Anthropocene, my enthusiasm for serving it dims, but there are no differences in kind between ultra elites and slum dwellers.

My older brother was a more enthusiastic capitalist than I, and won more games of Monopoly. I've been to Las Vegas several times, but as an anthropological observer who understands how the game works. Having read most of the works of B.F. Skinner, I've never played the game. As Spinoza observed, to understand something is to be delivered from it. Understand the implications of this and you have the basis for changing the rules of the game.​

We are storytelling animals. Tell different stories such as the nature of things compels you to. Different outcomes will be selected for.

Or, to sum up my life's work in fewer words: Listen to Nature. Tell better stories. Live long and prosper.

 

142: How did humankind manage to increase the world’s population by 5 billion people in the last 100 years?

By a process of exponential competitive growth and prosperity made possible by using technology to divert more of Earth's primary productivity from other species to humans. The process began with Homo erectus' use of fire to alter their local biome to favor production of plants and animals humans hunted and gathered, and to cook foods to increase exergy, make some inedibles ediable, and reduce the need to chew food for hours a day. Soon, more than a million humans lived prosperously on the planet.

Technology, such as atlatl and Clovis points, enabled humans to prosper for a time prior to causing megafauna extinctions on four continents, but real prosperity arose with agriculture about 10k years ago that allowed sedentary populations to grow and complex societies to develop hierarchies of elites and those who serve them (e.g. soldiers, builders) over commoners/slaves who toil. Empire building began 6-11 thousand years ago and by 3-4 thousand years ago half of humans (there was about 35 million on the planet) were living in and serving unsustainable empire building. [See Past Lives of Humans]

Within the last 100 years nearly all humans have come to live in and serve a global monetary culture/empire. Like all prior empires, we have prospered, for a time. We did so not by working/enslaving multitudes of humans and animals to empower conquest, but by extracting a planetary larder of fossil fuels to empower about a hundred energy slaves per person living in industrial society. Despite a down turn after the Roaring Twenties a hundred years ago, life has been good, getting 'better' for most humans as perceived by Anthropocene enthusiasts, since about 1950, for a time (as usual).

Will we continue to grow and prosper? Some will, for a time. Globally the Euro-Sino Empire has not climaxed. But we are transitioning to climax. And then what?

It is all about environment, power, and society. Humans don't get a vote.

 

Gaia would have us stand down from the heights of hubris we have enthroned ourselves on (before we fall).

 

 

143: Can capitalism actually solve the world’s biggest problems?

Start with ‘world’s biggest problems’:

And the list could go on, but pick one and ask if capitalism, socialism, communism, democracy, autocracy, corporatocracy, anarchy, etc. is part of the problem or its solution.

The bigger question is: are there political solutions? The answer is blowing in the wind for all to see if they would. So down with democracy, capitalism (et al) and up with naturocracy, the rule of natural laws (e.g. thermodynamics) by recognizing that we are Gaia’s guests and not her masters.

Blue Planet Club

 

Gaia would have us stand down from the heights of hubris we have enthroned ourselves on (before we fall).

 

 

144: What is the best way to save peace, humanity, and nature?

What is the best way to live in peace, and save humanity and Nature (aka Gaia)?

Without modern (last 10k years) technoindustrial empire-building humans, there would be peace enough. Once you have a condition of peace, of a mature and functioning biosphere maximizing empower, you could save it by not exploiting it for short-term self interest as a metastasizing cancer does within a human body. If we lived in peace, as in lack of conflict between groups of humans (typically due to scarcity, real or imagined) and our lack of conflict with Nature perceived as a planet for the taking, then the planet's life-support system would persist as the eons passed. So, how best to save humanity from its pathologies and the biosphere, such functionality as is left, from continued unsustainable development (by humans)?

Few know that the Galactic Park Ranger has been on vacation for the last 70 thousand years. She had regretted failing to notice the meteor that ended the reign of dinosaurs and gave rise to mammalian assent. There had been an inquiry by the Federation Academy and she promised to do better.

When she left to go home to reproduce, a blessing she had been working eons to earn, she had noted with interest the rise and spread of the bipedal apes on one continent. In just 10 million years they had speciated into many forms most beautiful and most wonderful. There were several million individuals of the new genus in total. Due to changing conditions as usual, one species had been reduced to only a few thousand. It was at risk of extinction, but Nature is unkind, and the failure of one species is not at all a threat to life on Earth.

Even Oomicrons can be wrong. Systems are not only more complex than Oomicrons know, they are more complex than even Oomicrons can know. Dogs don't understand calculus and humans don't understand systems such as Oomicrons do, within their limits. Who could have foreseen that a pathetic naked ape, nearing extinction, would or could in just the passing of a few tens of millennia, come to preside over the greatest mass extinction event since the late Cretaceous, one that could rival even that of the Permian?

The answer was obvious and could have been foreseen. This was the conclusion of the Federation's second inquiry. There was a planetary vat of fossil fuels and a technology developing ape. Imagine a pile of gunpowder and a five-year old with a box of matches. What could go wrong? Klaatu decided to pass away to make room for another Oomicron. Even Oomicrons live, in peace, within limits.

So, how to save humanity and the biosphere? I'm just a human, so ask an Oomicron. Of course we could design a viable civilization and learn to live within limits. Or go extinct. Do we have a choice? No.

'Understand or die.' ― Ludwig Wittgenstein, 1889-1951. Or from Spinoza: To understand something is to be delivered from it, so.... Humans stand down and listen to Nature who has all the answers.

 

 

145: In your opinion, what is the biggest problem affecting the world currently?

"The world", planet Earth, has a biosphere, a life-support system, aka Gaia, Nature, Mother, Aluna..., but all complex systems, e.g. your body, are subject to pathologies, e.g. the exponential growth of cancer or an infection. Humans, members of the genus Homo of which there used to be many species until H. sapiens sapiens came along, have acquired technology without the understanding to place limits on it's use.

We now have a planet in overshoot driven by severe human overpopulation, overdevelopment, and overdensity human living that selects for dysfunctional behaviors, e.g. empire building and exponential growth that seems like a good thing, which it is, for humans, for a time. Technology, together with the presumption of human supremacy by Lord Man, is the proximal problem, together with lack of understanding of the planet and how to live with it properly, i.e. sustainably as the eons pass, which is the distal problem. As Ludwig Wittgenstein summed 'it' (our problem) up succinctly, "Understand or die."

We are failing to understand as evidenced by our Anthropocene enthusiasm. We, our technoindustrial monetary culture, are presiding over a mass extinction event that could, if we just keep on keeping on, rival that of the Permian, i.e. cause a 90+% extinction event that would include us. A passing alien geologist from Oomicron, viewing the remains of life on Earth and figuring out its cause, would not consider humans sapient.

An Oomicron archaeologist could fill in the details. A million or so years before the Great Simplification, hominids acquired fire technology and used it to alter their environment to favor their hunting and gathering, but no mas,s extinctions followed. Hunting technology, developed in Africa over a long period of time such that fauna could adapt to it, also caused no mass extinctions, but as humans spread out of Africa, naive megafauna went extinct on five continents.

Some, all of whom are humans, argue that the megafauna extinctions were not mass extinctions, so naming a new epoch after humans is not called for. Okay, but the development of agriculture was a biome changer, the beginnings of the Great Simplification. With agriculture arose empire building that selected for pulsing unto overshoot regionally and build up of dysfunctional behaviors within a millennium or two. But some (humans again) argue that transitioning from depending on sustainable ecosystem services to often unsustainable agroecosystem services that divert most of the primary productivity of the biosphere to support humans and their mutualist crops, livestock and pets, is not ecocide enough, and so a new epoch should not be named after agro-empire-building man.

But the rise of industrial society, empowered by fossil fuels, soon learned to turn fossil fuels into food needed to grow the population and its consumption (for a time), was the Anthropocene mass extinction event incarnate. Or, did it begin with Newcomen's steam engine of 1712? Or with the rapidly accelerating growth enabled by coal burning in Watts' more efficient steam engine? Or maybe we should date the beginning of the Anthropocene with the appearance of radioactive isotopes and microplastics that future geologists (Oomicron or maybe human) can easily detect in geological strata. But life on earth, other than some domestic plants, livestock and pets, may beg to differ.

Imagine a small mountain of gun power and a five-year old with a box of matches. What could go wrong? Imagine a planetary larder of fossil fuels and a clothed ape with the technology to use the energy embodied in it to grow their economy, stupidly, for short-term pursuit of self interest. What could go wrong? Well, it's complicated, but imagine Gaia in the ICU facing multiple system failures. Understand or die.

And William Rees, top scientist and professor emeritus type, is not referencing Covid-19. Any population, e.g. yeast in a barrel of grape juice, a virus in a human population, or industrialized humans using fossil fuels to exploit a planetary life-support system, i.e. any population, including a metastasizing cancer, that is exponentially growing unto overshoot, is a plague. Growth is (the best thing ever) only for a time. Yeast sporulate, are adapted to overpulsing (as are locust), and will produce spores containing the information about how to do it again. We will not. We are in a plague phase and are very close to climaxing. Descent will come. Our near-term extinction (coming century or millennium) may be unthinkable, but is not impossible.

When? No one can say. It is like asking, "If I shoot an arrow into the air, exactly where and when will it hit the ground?" Maybe an eagle will swoop down and grab it when it reaches maximum height (climax) and fly off with it, ever higher (for a time). Details may be indeterminate so far as humans can figure, but that the arrow will "climax" and descend is as determinate as that your car will stop when it runs out of gas. Maybe if it is going downhill at the time, it will roll on a bit further, but it won't just keep on keeping on forever because the driver wants it to.

 

 

146: Is it true or not that every human uses resources that leave a carbon footprint that contributes to global warming? If yes then isn't the best solution population reduction and why are the most obvious solutions so difficult to achieve?

Carbon, as in our rapid release of CO2 secondary to burning a planetary larder of fossil fuels mostly within the last two hundred years, is tied directly to per capita consumption (if you are reading this, yours is above average) times population as enabled by technology over which there is little restraint in its use (if it is profitable, e.g. cars).

If we humans were sapient, if we had enough foresight intelligence, we would have considered converting hundreds of millions of years of accumulated carbon as sequestered in the earth’s surface into energy by asking, ‘And then what?’

We would have paused and thought about it, and decided, ‘Okay guys, let’s wait for the next ice age to begin and then slowly burn the fossil fuels over a period of a few millennia to slow the rate of cooling, giving us and life on earth more time to adapt. Of course, if the result is not as predicted, we’ll stop the burn, and embrace the condition now that will come anyway.

We are not getting any wiser. I have corresponded with William (Bill) Rees, know what he thinks and that he knows enough to have an opinion. He is a human ecologist among other distinctions, and co-developer of the human footprint metric.

We knew enough by the 1970s to slam on the brakes of overpopulation, overdevelopment, and oversdensity living to maybe minimize overshoot and manage descent for a prosperous way down. We didn’t and won’t (see other answers).

Rapid depopulation and degrowth of the economy would be better late than never as never means chaotic collapse. Sorry about that, all you under twenty-somethings out there. If you would rather know than believe, there is information out there, but you must be eager to learn and intent on just saying no to denial.

Lord Man will not always be so. Carrying Capacity and Overshoot

We don’t have to do anything, like the people on Rapa Nui who couldn’t stop cutting down trees didn't have to do anything. The reindeer of St. Matthew Island didn't do anything either. Rees is one source to consider. I recently read this offering, so will pick it, but consider it a start. Is Humanity Fatally Successful? which directly relates to your second question, the why question.

 

 

 

147: Can a city be sustainable?

Are modern technoindustrial cities, dependent on fossil fuels, sustainable, i.e. will they last a thousand more years? No.

Will technoindustrial cities transition to renewable solar, wind, tidal, geothermal, and biomass energy having an EROI comparable to fossil fuels? No.

Will cities that depend only on wind to move ships, and wood and food to fuel human and animal slaves (e.g. classical Athens or Rome, be sustainable even though all prior ones have not been? No, related to diminishing returns of investment in overcomplexity (see Joseph Tainter) and increasing behavioral sink over 8–12 generations that selects for loss of functional behaviors (see John B. Calhoun).

Will there ever be a sustainable city as evidenced by one or more examples? Yes. The Kogi are a remnant population of the Taironan civilization where citizens normally live in small farming communities that are sustainable and periodically gather in their city what all have a city home.

This is what a non-monument building Taironan city looks like and probably looked like 1100 years ago. Modern cities are dissipative structures, like hurricanes, that don’t last. They and the empires that give raise to them last for a time, may be full of sound and fury, but they pass away.

See Past Lives of Humans

Can a city be sustainable? Evidently, per one example, yes. Can the city you (anyone reading this) live in be sustainable? If you locked 100 people with PhDs in a room until they figured out how, could they come up with a viable plan? With one that they think is viable, yes. With one that Nature determines actually is viable? No more likely than 10e9 monkeys banging on typewriters could, or a 100 dogs understanding calculus, so don't count on clever apes fooling Nature.

But fooling themselves and others? That's what clever and eloquent apes are good at.

So don't believe anything I type. Listen to Nature instead.

 

148: Are cities good or bad for the environment?

To start: we are in overshoot. Carrying Capacity and Overshoot

Cities, without fossil fuel inputs, direct or indirect, are in their current form unsustainable, so any attempt to keep them going into further overshoot will maintain or increase the current pace of planetary destruction that is the main driver of the current mass extinction event that may rival that of the Permian. Is what we are doing bad? You decide, but Nature doesn’t care what you think. Few, if any, will have a prosperous way down. The Prosperous Way Up and Down

 

 

149: The population of our world rose from 1.6 billion to almost 7 billion in 120 years. How can we stop the world from becoming overpopulated ethically, and is this issue being addressed properly?

Actually the human population has increased by 6.2 billion in the last 120 years. Humans, like all other animals, view more as better. Growth is good. When reindeer found themselves on St. Matthew Island where there were no predators, it was all good up until their population reached about 6,000. They had gone into overshoot when their population reached about 1,200, but system delays put off the consequence.

Subjectively, all humans view growth in human population and consumption as an unquestionable good. Only a few humans (perhaps 0.01%) can think objectively about the human problematique. Of those, maybe an equal percentage of them can think about real solutions. If, when the reindeer population on St. Matthew Island had reached 5,000, one reindeer said, 'hey guys, I think we have a problem', and one other said, 'yeah, so what do we do about it', it would not have altered the dynamic. Sorry about that.

That we are in overshoot is thinkable to some, and some of them realize what that implies. But very few can consider the possibility that we went into overshoot about 3-4 thousand years ago when the global human population reached about 35 million. Carrying Capacity and Overshoot: The Objective View.

But is the issue being addressed properly? No, not in the slightest. Look at questions on Quora about overpopulation with more than 100 answers (I have), and note that most, the majority, think it is a myth, that the failure of developed countries to maintain a birth rate high enough to replace the current population without immigration is the only population problem we have. Some believe that any 'over' population problem, if there is one, will be solved by the demographic transition. But that the unnatural decline in birth rates in developed, mostly urbanized areas of overdensity populations, is due to education and material prosperity enabled by growth. John B. Calhoun did overdensity population studies that also showed a demographic transition, but it had nothing to do with empowering or educating the female rats or mice. Critical Mass Transcript

And just asking, but what might we do to properly address our situation if we could? To avoid a die-off (an unmanaged rapid degrowth in human population/consumption), we could manage a rapid degrowth via a rapid birth-off. Let's agree that no one should die of starvation or scarcity-induced conflict (e.g. war, murder, genocide). If the planet could sustainably support 35 million (or some other number that Nature determines), then as everyone dies a natural (non-Malthusian) death, replacement births needed each year to maintain the sustainable population would be easy to determine (no one gets a vote). Initially few women who could and would have children, would have children, but in about 50 years the average woman would need to have about 2.1 children to maintain the sustainable population of 35 million as the millennia pass.

But we can't do that because in 1987 the UN (and all right thinking humans) agreed that “Parents have a basic human right to determine freely and responsibly the number and spacing of their children.” Period. No right thinking person has thought about it since. As a result, perhaps six billion humans will die in the die-off to come that 99.999% (more or less) agree can't happen. ['Yes, the Climate Crisis May Wipe out Six Billion People' by William Rees, but he's just another stupid know-nothing professor emeritus type who doesn't know enough to have an opinion.]

 

 

150: Who are the good people on this Earth?

There are people who are good in battle, at war, conquest, extraction, at building empire, but none have lasted [per Past Lives of Humans], i.e. are not viable (which is double-plus ungood or is not selected for). We who are descendants of such good people, or their slaves, are good at making money in the monetary culture of the fossil fuel empowered last empire, now global, who are presiding over the greatest mass extinction event since the late Cretaceous that may rival the scope of the Permian if we can only just keep on keeping on growing the economy (circular and green, shaped like a doughnut of course) we all serve so the poor can be good consumers too in a non-racist society of consumers.

Are there any people who are good at maintaining a viable balance between Man's demands and Nature's resources? In North America there is a remnant of the traditional Hopi who were a remnant of the prior unsustainable Pueblo civilization, who refuse to participate in the tribal government of the other Hopi who are friendly with their conquistadors and currently live in fossil fuel heated conventional housing, drive overpowered fossil-fueled vehicles, have running water (due to electric pumping) and fossil fuel produced electric. They eat prepared food from the store that probably traveled 1,500 miles to get there (mostly by fossil fuel made and fueled trucks), which as everyone knows is where food comes from, and their kids play video games and put in the usual amount of screen time when not in school being schooled, if not educated.

The traditionalists, who lost the Oraibi Split in 1906, allowed no vehicles in their villages (or photos), had no electric, grew their food, made their cloths from the cotton they grew, and some continue as best they can to live such lives as worked as the centuries pass despite incursions of the monetary culture and its ways (e.g. cars, money, churches, schools). Some traditionalists living on the fringe of the Hopi Nation may little notice the passing away of fossil-fueled technoindustrial society (e.g. they will no longer see planes flying over) if no one comes to take what they have by right of conquest during the Great Simplification to come.

In South America, there are the Kogi, a remnant population of the Tairona civilization that the Spanish genocide of 1650 missed. They are good at managing their demands on Aluna's resources as evidenced by having done so for 1,100 years following the failure of the Tairona Phase 1 and Phase 2 complex societies that collapsed because they failed to maintain a viable balance between Man's demands and Nature's environmental productivity.

Are there any other good people living viable lives on the planet? I don't know. Could we learn from Elder Brother of the latter-day Tairona? I don't know and neither do you.

This is what a non-monument building Taironan city looks like.
They have no electric, cars, or washing machines.

 

Below is what a traditionalist Hopi village looks like today. It was founded by the traditionists who split from Oraibi in 1906. In 1680 traditionalists destroyed the Spanish mission and killed 400 colonists. Today, their village has two churches. In 1894 19 Hopi men were arrested and sent to Alcatraz penitentiary for refusing to farm as told to and for refusing to send their children to the government run boarding school to be acculturated (e.g. beaten for speaking Hopi). On Alcatraz they were to be "held in confinement, at hard labor, until . . . they shall show . . . they fully realize the error of their evil ways . . . until they shall evince, in an unmistakable manner, a desire to cease interference with the plans of the government for the civilization and education of its indian wards." They would be held on the Rock from January 3 to August 7, 1895.

Records do not note how many died on Alcatraz Island doing hard labor sawing logs. Resistance continued. Below is the village the traditionalists founded after the Oraibi split in 1906. Viewing the area around the village shows some fields that may still be farmed the traditional way—without fossil fuel inputs in an area that gets less than 10 inches of precipitation per year and yields 4 bushels of corn per acre but only by leaving fields fallow for up to 50 years. In the Corn Belt, without fossil fuel inputs, farmers might hope for 25 bushels per acre on land with a shorter (15-25 year) fallow period (modern industrial agriculture produces 200 bushels of industrial corn per acre every year, for a time, but will not feed 8 billion humans long-term or even this century.

 

For more information, count the number of cars/pickups in the former traditionalist village. But no electric lines are evident and 80% speak only Hopi. Could electric and water lines be buried because the traditionalists who had not yet died demanded it?

Near the traditional village, field on left has been cultivated by machine. Field on right, below the pickup road above, shows traditional cultivation by digging stick. What were shallow pits, about 10 feet apart, for corn, beans, squash can be seen spaced far enough to collect such rain as may fall. Soils are sandy, seeds are planted deep to reach moisture from winter snow melt.

 


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