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Re: MIT Skeptic SpeaksDrake said Jul 5, 2007, 4:31 AM: |
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Anthony I was hoping you would expand on your closing sentence: |
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Re: MIT Skeptic SpeaksAnthony said Jul 5, 2007, 7:40 AM: |
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Drake, I’m not sure what kind of elaboration you may be looking for, or what I can provide beyond the succinct but comprehensive characterization I gave. If there is a room “teeming” with people, would you say the room was alive? My point is that the individuals populating that room are self-sustaining organisms but the “room” is not self-sustaining - it’s just a space those individuals inhabit. The earth has in common with a living thing that exists in a certain equilibrium but the biostasis of a living thing is self-referent, the equilibrium of the earth is not. It’s simply an agglomeration of phenomena whose relations are basicaly accidental. If my liver fails, my system fails. If some specific organism or group of organisms fail on earth they may well be replaced by others without affecting the overall equilibrium of forces. In other words, while the earth-as-living-thing may be an attractive metaphor, it is just that: metaphor, not reality. When tested, this metaphor, as with the case of all metaphors, will eventually fail on some crucial point of analogy. |
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Re: MIT Skeptic SpeaksWillowbei said Jul 10, 2007, 11:49 AM: |
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Anthony, It is clear that you and I come from very different positions on this whole issue. I accept the quantum physics view that everything is energy and that energy is always changing form. Energy is alive thus everything is alive, in its own way. To speak specifically regarding the earth I feel it is clear that the earth is alive. We see evidence of it every day in the activity of volcanoes, the weather conditions that are constantly affecting us, the shrinking of glaciers and the expansion of deserts. With your opinion that the earth is not alive I can see how you might disregard my views about taking care of our earth. I do not know, because you have not specifically said, if you feel that our earth sustains us or doesn’t sustain us. Over the years it has been proven that organic farming methods increase the health of the soil and the nourishment of the crops grown on that soil (a fact you might choose not to accept, and that is your right). Our consumer economy (see my blog for my essay on money) has created a market for chemicals and built up a huge infrastructure to supply those chemicals to farmers. In this we are not only harming ourselves we are harming our earth. A couple of more comments, please. Indigenous people are not the ones cutting down the rainforests. It was not native people that ran buffalo off of cliffs (that didn’t start happening until the white man showed up). In general most indigenous cultures realized the wonder of the bounty around them, gave thanks to (whatever creator they recognized) for that bounty and harvested that bounty with great care in order that it should continue. Most indigenous cultures also recognize the vastness of life and respect the life of Mother Earth. As far as poor people gaining from working at places that pollute our planet, that is an argument that doesn’t wash. We could easily put as many people to work producing products in a cleaner way and helping clean up the pollution we have created. When the pollution load becomes too heavy upon the planet it won’t matter where one works if one can’t breath to work. Knowing what we know about the pollution we (as a species) have produced it is our moral, ethical and logical obligation to begin rectifying the situation ASAP. You probably disagree with me, but I feel it is important to express what I feel. We need to do everything possible to help our precious planet because it is the future of our survival. |
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Re: MIT Skeptic SpeaksAnthony said Jul 11, 2007, 5:12 AM: |
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Willowbei, I’m delighted that you take the opportunity to express yourself about these important issues. It is with regret that I disagree. You fail to make any case against my actual arguments as to whether the earth is properly described as “alive” in a non-metaphorical sense. To say “energy is alive thus everything is alive, in its own way” is just an evasion.” You might as well argue that a hammer is alive. Surely there’s a meaningful difference in the way a hammer might be thought alive and the way a squirrel might be. There is nothing in what I have written to suggest that we shouldn’t behave responsibly with regard to our use of resources and creation of wealth. Whether the earth is “alive” or not, we harm ourselves by ruining the environment we live in. The problem, I submit, is that the choices aren’t necessarily so easy. There are always tradeoffs. For example, organic farming has various advantages, but it has disadvantages also. Since we consume organic products almost exclusively in my household I know that one of these is cost. The use of fertilizers and pesticides is problematic but it increases production tremendously. I’ve heard it argued persuasively that the world could not produce the quantity of food it does if it relied exclusively on organic methods. It is simply not true that “we could easily put as many people to work producing products in a cleaner way.” That doesn’t mean that we shouldn’t try to make that happen more often, but if there weren’t economic advantages to doing it the “dirtier” way, people wouldn’t be doing it. That ought to be obvious. You’re right in positing that “when the pollution load becomes too heavy … it won’t matter where one works.” I’m only saying that it’s not a choice of pollution versus no-pollution, it’s a matter of working out the tradeoffs. Great economic benefits flow from industry, along with the waste it produces. It’s easy for the industrialized countries to tell the others they can’t enjoy those benefits. Indigenous people are not the ones cutting down the rainforests Well, they’re not the only ones, but traditional slash-and-burn farming is part of the problem today. It was not native people that ran buffalo off of cliffs (that didn’t start happening until the white man showed up). That may fit your dogma about the nature of “the white man” versus “native people,” but it’s not true. Here’s the homepage of a Unesco World Heritage site that basically celebrates this technique as practiced by “native people.” We would probably agree that there is an element of hubris in the modern mentality that replaces awe of the universe with the attitude of regarding it as something to be manipulated. I think we would be allies in asking that we recapture or reinforce that awe of the universe where it is lacking. That said, I’ll reiterate that good husbandry of resources need not perpetuate the myth of the noble savage. Allow me to critique what you wrote: In general most indigenous cultures realized the wonder of the bounty around them, gave thanks to (whatever creator they recognized) for that bounty and harvested that bounty with great care in order that it should continue. Most indigenous cultures also recognize the vastness of life and respect the life of Mother Earth. This is a vast generalization that imposes a current environmentalist way of looking at things on numberless peoples of the past. Where else does this idea come from? Surely “most indigenous cultures” over the history and prehistory of humanity had no concept of environment per se. They no doubt felt at the mercy of what we would call nature. Sometimes they found abundance, sometimes they starved to death. Living in such conditions would certainly inculcate a sense of awe, but it does not mean that people uniformly used resources wisely. It’s just as likely that in many cases population growth resulted in the outstripping of resources leading in some cases to depletion and conflict with other bands/tribes, and in some cases to extinction. It’s all too easy to romanticize the simple life of pre-agricultural pre-industrial peoples. A more sober critique appreciates the benefits and liabilities and, as I said, weighs the tradeoffs. Certainly “our precious planet,” as you say, “is the future of our survival.” We need to conserve our environment, but it won’t do to simply say we must “do everything possible.” Rather, we have to carefully weigh costs and benefits as we make decisions, realizing that there is no easy answer. |
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Re: MIT Skeptic SpeaksWillowbei said Jul 12, 2007, 8:02 AM: |
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Anthony, This dialogue is getting very exciting. I appreciate you sharing your views. Although I may be a bit naive (in an earthly sense) when it comes to the business of business, I have an underlying belief that we are Beings of infinite possibility, which is one of the things that “What The Bleep do we Know” discusses. I believe, and I hope I never quit believing, that through the infinite power of Universal Oneness we, as human expressions of that infinite and limitless power have, can and will accomplish much more than our human mind wants to think is possible. When we, as a species, accept our infinite power and use that power wisely there is so much we can do that we have thought we can’t do. Miracles happen every day to someone somewhere on this planet. I believe all things are possible. As we accept our true spiritual nature we become more morally and ethically (in human terms) directed. As a species, as a culture, as a group, as individuals we can help create a world that honors life to the fullest. I believe that is part of what Zaadz is about. It is not money that keeps us from producing cleaner power or from “discovering” better ways to feed, clothe and house ourselves and each other, it is our lack of understanding that we are One. Each person that remembers his/her truth about Oneness helps our planet move closer to all Beings remembering the truth about Oneness. OK, I have to say something about the hammer analogy. In terms of Oneness a hammer is alive. In terms of energy a hammer is alive. Have you not picked up a hammer and had it feel “just right”? Have you not picked up a hammer and had it feel “strange” or “not right”. I know I have done that. When we are in touch with our Oneness we can feel the aliveness that is in everything. We know when we resonate with something, be it a house, a car, a person or a hammer. Within our culture we have been taught to disregard our “instincts” (our spiritual connection to all life – Oneness). Some of us are better than others at keeping those instincts in tact. Some of us are working diligently to remember that we have those instincts and how to use them. It may appear that this dialogue has moved quite a bit from the topic of Global Climate Change, but if we think in terms of Oneness and Spiritual Power and our natural way of creating the world in which we live (consciously or unconsciously) it is part of the same thing. When we allow ourselves to realize or Oneness and our interdependence upon each other, as well as our uniqueness and our independence, we begin to understand the we have it within our power to take the steps (and they can be as easy or as difficult as we decided they are going to be) necessary to honor ourselves and our physical world. I guess that is it for today. Thanks |
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Re: MIT Skeptic SpeaksAnthony said Jul 14, 2007, 12:12 AM: |
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Willowbei, Even if we recognize that energy permeates everything, a hammer is still an inanimate object. Remember my explanation, which hearkens to the systemic character of an organism. A hammer need not be any particular size or any precise shape. It is what it is entirely dependent on the person who forges and finishes it. I fail to see how the fact that a hammer may or may not feel “right” sheds any light on the question whatsoever. If I pick up a hammer, a rifle or whatever, that doesn’t feel “right,” it just means that whoever made it made it badly. It isn’t sound in its construction or balanced in the distribution of its weight. In one case, a person shaped inanimate matter well, in another case they shaped it badly. It says nothing of the materials, plenty about the artisan. Frankly, I don’t see what could be the meaning of hammers (or whatever) that could be either right or not within your vision of all things being alive. Would it mean some hammers are alive and some aren’t? That would be the end of “everything is alive.” I wouldn’t belabor this if it didn’t seem necessary. I still don’t think you have absorbed the essence of my critique of the “Gaia” hypothesis, which is that the earth doesn’t have the same kind of systemic character as a living organism. The resemblance is superficial and the distinction clear. That being the case, one can only apply the hypothesis with justice metaphorically. One can melt down a hammer and shape it into something else. As with a ball of wax, one could shape it infinitely, separate it into many different shapes and sizes and roll them all back together again. One can’t do that with a squirrel. |
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Re: MIT Skeptic SpeaksWillowbei said Jul 18, 2007, 3:27 AM: |
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Anthony, I realized (after the fact) that I made a mistake when I chose to continue with the hammer analogy. To me it is about the same as asking the question, “How many angels can dance on the head of a pin?” It really doesn’t matter. What matters most in this wonderful moment of now is that we, as a species, accept our spiritual nature and the divine power that goes with that spiritual nature. When we do that we are tuned into our inner knowing that ALL THINGS ARE POSSIBLE. Universal intelligence, moving through every part of creation – all Beings everywhere - allows us (when we listen clearly) to know how to accomplish anything we desire. Finding simple, inexpensive, sensible, workable, practical, innovative and safe ways to clean up our environment, feed, house and cloth every individual on the earth, respect our planet and bring her soil, water and air back into vibrant health and more are all possible if we accept that they are possible. Right now many of us use our energy and power through our ego mind. We use it for greed, war, ego power, competition and control. When we decide to use our spiritual energy and power for cooperation, abundance, peace, personal empowerment, education and other positive aspects of our Beingness we can and will, I firmly believe, accomplish things we may currently feel are not possible. Thanks, Willowbei |
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