We conclude Part Two with Chapter Eight, A Larger View of Time.
This chapter describes our culture’s and industrialized economy’s myopic focus on maximizing short term gains (and underpricing risk), likening this to a Ponzi scheme, and explores how we might reexpand our concept of time. For example, the authors highlight how industrialized overfishing led to the collapse of Northwestern Atlantic cod in the span of a few decades. In contrast, when Oxford University’s New College dining hall was built in 1379 foresters planted a grove of oaks on college land, knowing it would take several hundred years for them to grow to the size needed to replace the roof.
Time is speeding up, the authors contend, as a result of economic success measured as speed of growth and computer technology providing the instantaneous data that drives it.
The Cost of Speed (a sprint can’t be sustained):
* Short term benefits outweigh long-term costs.
* We don’t see disasters coming our way.
* Short term timescapes are self-reinforcing.
* We export problems to the future.
* Short-term timescapes diminish the meaning and purpose of our lives.
The second half of the chapter encourages us to contemplate the full span of time on earth and our species’ time on earth, backwards and forwards, from multiple viewpoints. Do you think of yourself as one point family line? Can you see your as an ancestor looking out for those who will come after you?
The authors write, “ Ecological intelligence involves thinking in terms of deep time—a temporal context that includes our whole story…given our technologies, our actions have consequences, extending millions, even billions of years. Take the thousand tons of depleted uranium weaponry used in Iraq and Afghanistan. The cancer causing aerosol it leaves behind has a half-life of 4.5 billion years. That is as long as the age of the Earth.”
If you wish, try the following exercises:
Letter from the Seventh Generation
Letter to the Future
Here are a couple of interesting links. The first is a short video of the history of the earth conceived as 24 hours (I couldn’t find one that represented human history as 24 hours). The second is about the scientific evidence for damage we’re causing future generations.
4.5 Billion Years in 24 Hours
https://www.nrdc.org/bio/jennifer-sa...%20generations.
How do you imagine we might plan with future generations in mind? I feel quite cynical that caution will ever outweigh the allure of a quick profit and our inability to comprehend to effects of actions we can’t see.
Gassho,
Naiko
st
This chapter describes our culture’s and industrialized economy’s myopic focus on maximizing short term gains (and underpricing risk), likening this to a Ponzi scheme, and explores how we might reexpand our concept of time. For example, the authors highlight how industrialized overfishing led to the collapse of Northwestern Atlantic cod in the span of a few decades. In contrast, when Oxford University’s New College dining hall was built in 1379 foresters planted a grove of oaks on college land, knowing it would take several hundred years for them to grow to the size needed to replace the roof.
Time is speeding up, the authors contend, as a result of economic success measured as speed of growth and computer technology providing the instantaneous data that drives it.
The Cost of Speed (a sprint can’t be sustained):
* Short term benefits outweigh long-term costs.
* We don’t see disasters coming our way.
* Short term timescapes are self-reinforcing.
* We export problems to the future.
* Short-term timescapes diminish the meaning and purpose of our lives.
The second half of the chapter encourages us to contemplate the full span of time on earth and our species’ time on earth, backwards and forwards, from multiple viewpoints. Do you think of yourself as one point family line? Can you see your as an ancestor looking out for those who will come after you?
The authors write, “ Ecological intelligence involves thinking in terms of deep time—a temporal context that includes our whole story…given our technologies, our actions have consequences, extending millions, even billions of years. Take the thousand tons of depleted uranium weaponry used in Iraq and Afghanistan. The cancer causing aerosol it leaves behind has a half-life of 4.5 billion years. That is as long as the age of the Earth.”
If you wish, try the following exercises:
Letter from the Seventh Generation
Letter to the Future
Here are a couple of interesting links. The first is a short video of the history of the earth conceived as 24 hours (I couldn’t find one that represented human history as 24 hours). The second is about the scientific evidence for damage we’re causing future generations.
4.5 Billion Years in 24 Hours
https://www.nrdc.org/bio/jennifer-sa...%20generations.
How do you imagine we might plan with future generations in mind? I feel quite cynical that caution will ever outweigh the allure of a quick profit and our inability to comprehend to effects of actions we can’t see.
Gassho,
Naiko
st
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