Like this:
It is said that
Ramana heard a word
so pure and clear
that when he put it in his verse
it was utterly transparent
and could not be seen before or after or from behind.
free dragons for rent
Sustainability rockabilly and fertile birthplace of commonsensical creativity meant to engender wellbeing for all and support from such famous personalities as Dolly Parton
Tuesday, September 14, 2010
Tuesday, August 24, 2010
Does the Ice have to Melt for us to Learn to Swim
Yesterday's New York Times op-ed suggests we will never change until the disaster comes. Sounds like rational choice isn't very rational to me...
Is there another way? Similarly, a power company will wait till the branch hits the wire before it does anything, and an insurance company will pay to replace a roof, but not to trim a tree before it falls on the roof. Maybe Thomas is right. If he is, what leads me to make the environmental decisions now (and I do make them now), before the crises comes...or have I decided the crises is upon us? I think it is one more case of my actions not fitting with predictions for popular behavior, which must say something about me and about predictions of popular behavior. Maybe disaster has nothing to do with it. Maybe I am celebrating something wonderful.
Disaster at the Top of the World
By THOMAS HOMER-DIXON
Aboard the Louis S. St-Laurent
STANDING on the deck of this floating laboratory for Arctic science, which is part of Canada’s Coast Guard fleet and one of the world’s most powerful icebreakers, I can see vivid evidence of climate change. Channels through the Canadian Arctic archipelago that were choked with ice at this time of year two decades ago are now expanses of open water or vast patchworks of tiny islands of melting ice.
read more
Is there another way? Similarly, a power company will wait till the branch hits the wire before it does anything, and an insurance company will pay to replace a roof, but not to trim a tree before it falls on the roof. Maybe Thomas is right. If he is, what leads me to make the environmental decisions now (and I do make them now), before the crises comes...or have I decided the crises is upon us? I think it is one more case of my actions not fitting with predictions for popular behavior, which must say something about me and about predictions of popular behavior. Maybe disaster has nothing to do with it. Maybe I am celebrating something wonderful.
Disaster at the Top of the World
By THOMAS HOMER-DIXON
Aboard the Louis S. St-Laurent
STANDING on the deck of this floating laboratory for Arctic science, which is part of Canada’s Coast Guard fleet and one of the world’s most powerful icebreakers, I can see vivid evidence of climate change. Channels through the Canadian Arctic archipelago that were choked with ice at this time of year two decades ago are now expanses of open water or vast patchworks of tiny islands of melting ice.
read more
Friday, August 13, 2010
Speaking of Freedom
The free expression of opinion
The ultimate source of authority
Foundation of Democracy
Fueling the Requisite Diversity
Sometimes antagonistic
Antagonism is relative to the status quo
Whose aggressors make enemies
OF THE NON-VIOLENT
The ultimate source of authority
Foundation of Democracy
Fueling the Requisite Diversity
Sometimes antagonistic
Antagonism is relative to the status quo
Whose aggressors make enemies
OF THE NON-VIOLENT
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| photo by Don Kechely, courtesy http://bancroft.berkeley.edu/collections/uarc.html |
Tuesday, August 10, 2010
The Beehive Collective & Creative Acitivism
Project is called " The True Cost of Coal" and the event was at Asheville's Firestorm Cafe.
The completed poster:
http://www.beehivecollective.org/images/coal/coalp_prepress9_viewsize.gif
The Beehive site:
http://www.beehivecollective.org/
The True Cost of Coal website & blog :
http://beehivecollective.blogspot.com/
http://www.beehivecollective.org/english/coal.htm
Firestorm Books:
http://www.firestormcafe.com/
short intro to the project by one of the artists & organizers:
http://www.vimeo.com/14031346
beautiful night,
k
The completed poster:
http://www.beehivecollective.org/images/coal/coalp_prepress9_viewsize.gif
The Beehive site:
http://www.beehivecollective.org/
The True Cost of Coal website & blog :
http://beehivecollective.blogspot.com/
http://www.beehivecollective.org/english/coal.htm
Firestorm Books:
http://www.firestormcafe.com/
short intro to the project by one of the artists & organizers:
http://www.vimeo.com/14031346
beautiful night,
k
Sunday, August 8, 2010
Earthday 40.0 Deepwater Edition
In 1969, just after touring the environmental devastation from the oil spill off the coast of Santa Barbara, Senator Gaylord Nelson proposed that every year a day be set aside to celebrate environmental awareness and education, and April 22nd was chosen as that day.[i] Flash forward to April 22nd, 2010, the 40th Earth Day celebration, and the deepest oil well in history is sinking into the Gulf of Mexico, initiating what may end up being the largest oil spill disaster in history.
The well was capped on July 15th, and on August 4th scientists reported that approximately 75% of the oil was in a process of degradation. Public talks turned to the liability of British Petroleum (BP). The financial sector had initially estimated the costs of the Deepwater Horizon spill at less than the Exxon Valdez spill in Prince William Sound ($3 billion). This premature estimate was soon recalculated at $8.2 billion and by early August was as high as $41.9 billion dollars.[ii]
Negotiations and analyses surrounding the cost of the spill and liability for these costs, occurring primarily between BP and the federal government, may prove more controversial than the actual spill, especially if they release BP from any further liability, approving single payouts and assigning liability caps before the environmental cost of the disaster can be assessed. Kenneth Feinberg was put in charge of dolling out the $20 billion that had been set aside for paying out damage claims, and though Feinberg has assured the public that more money can be made available if necessary, some believe dollar amounts are being decided prematurely, and science made to serve corporate interests.[iii]
Friday, August 6, 2010
Wind in the Urban Environment
Should wind turbines be a part of the urban landscape? I still can't decide. Let me think about it and get back to you...
Wednesday, July 28, 2010
Considering Dialectics
I’ve been asked by one reader to speak more simply. At first I balked at the request, and told him, “You get what you pay for.” Meaning, in this case, not that the blog was free, but that the harder we work at ideas that are difficult the more we get out of them. I’m ready now to give up on that notion, and speak plainly, and seek ideas that speak plainly to me.
Right now I’m fascinated by the idea of dialectics – which, in the way I mean, could also mean I’m fascinated with the way dualisms move in the progression of one’s thought. Many take a single idea and then see opposing tensions inherent within that idea. From this they build a hopefully productive back-and-forth between the poles of tension. Others take oppositions/dualisms and seek to unify, to find the synthesis of the tensions, as a forward movement in one’s thought. Recently I’ve come across this interesting little quip from Dewey:
I can see that I have always been interpreting dialectic wrong end up, the unity as the reconciliation of opposites, instead of the opposites as the unity in its growth, and thus translated the physical tension into a moral thing... I don't know as I give the reality of this at all,... it seems so natural & commonplace now, but I never had anything take hold of me so.
I like this quote because it makes me imagine the silhouette and growth pattern of a tree. I imagine something like the multiple bifurcations of branching as a fractal pattern of growth. And I think finally it makes sense to me that no theory, no philosophy will today describe all situations, or be everywhere applicable. There is no universal theory and every passing moment it becomes less possible. The relativist believes the world is full of truth…
Wednesday, July 21, 2010
Sunday, July 18, 2010
From Newton's children to the Diver's clothes
Saturday, July 17, 2010
Advise from Love on Love
From a long conversation about changing a relationship came these things…
She wrote him, saying what she couldn’t voice, “I love who you are. I haven't known any friend as much like myself as I find in you now. I've grown apart from any friend I have ever known and find myself growing to this place that seems to be exactly where you are. At the same time, I feel extraordinarily ambivalent about our friendship. I value you dearly. And I grow weary. I can't stop being in love with you. I can't pretend that I won't have my heart broken repeatedly when you find the one you are looking for, if our friendship won't forever fit into the plans when your future love life unfolds, if our friendship is forsaken. I have to consider breaking my heart with you once will be easier to deal with in the long run than to do it several times over. Not having even friendship is an idea that hurts me terribly. I do not know how to remedy this.”
Then she wrote in sweet sustained invitation, “As an individual with some of the greatest insight I have ever wished to hear, would you have insight into this?”
Thursday, July 15, 2010
A 1 Act 4 Idealism
Scene: A dusty smoky brothel. A single oppressively bright lamp shines down on a table occupied by Nietzsche’s distant and under appreciated half-brother. He is drunk, still drinking. A woman with rosy cheeks, a woman with sunglasses, a woman with no makeup(confidently), and a woman with dusty dry curls of brown sit with him at the table. While he rants in a slow and confident drunken slur, the women watch him and occasionally pass knowing glances to each other when he’s not looking.
Nietzsche’s half-brother:
Sustainability for some is a collective immortality flag; some may never see sustainability. Religion for some is a collective immortality flag; some may never see how religion promotes sustainability.
Many read the history of war and violence – the history of oppressors, and see no signs of religion wholesome and in touch with a deep ecology.
The work of religion goes unseen.
Losing Victories Already Won?
A different public, existing in those times beyond the scope of my nature or my public, though perhaps not beyond my scope of natures or publics, lay in the 1950s and the inception of environmentalism as an anti movement. This distinction, this separation from my subject does not add grace to mine or any other historical project, yet this distance can hardly be a defect. For it is as the gaze of a lover’s longing, that science and its public’s infatuation with distance must be described; it is hard to trace a shape here, a meandering flow of consequences stretching to the horizon, no matter how distant the horizon, yet consequences felt ever more personally, ever more apparent on each and every doorstep. It is a connectedness of such depth and richness as cannot be fathomed, and so it is viewed from afar with scope and speculation, and it is pined after by intellect and passion.
The Gunnell to My Head
We should begin by considering how such an endeavor will be of use, and likewise speculate how it may do no great harm. It is conceivable that the sense of helplessness that accompanies the inspired passions of many a student of sustainability might have sprung up similarly in the early days of social science. But helplessness teased, dear professors of reason and criticism, must not make hopeless the student. Accordingly, when an eager student seeks to design solutions, even and perhaps especially solutions based in theory, all the various impediments and personal cynicism of the professors at attention will likely flame as dry tinder awaiting just such a spark.
Tracking Down the Wonder
Here's where Carson's The Sense of Wonder first appeared, as a magazine article. It wasn't published as a book until after she died. The magazine, Woman's Home Companion, began in 1873 and ended the year after Carson's article was published.
My Hypothesis (see Losing Victories Already Won):
is that despite Carson having won a National Book Award, etc., she is remembered in the public consciousness as the battler against DDT and big Ag Industry, rather than the woman who offered a deep wisdom for living in the world. I see this as a sign post in the anti of environmentalism today. I plan to research every instance of mention of Carson within Science magazine, and see if any mention her other work and if so how.
My Hypothesis (see Losing Victories Already Won):
is that despite Carson having won a National Book Award, etc., she is remembered in the public consciousness as the battler against DDT and big Ag Industry, rather than the woman who offered a deep wisdom for living in the world. I see this as a sign post in the anti of environmentalism today. I plan to research every instance of mention of Carson within Science magazine, and see if any mention her other work and if so how.
Wednesday, July 14, 2010
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