The Forest People, which is about the Mbuti, — thewonder
What seems to be more reasonable, ethical, and viable is to actively disengage from society as such, salvaging what is good of it that we can, and to just kind of let it all fall apart. — thewonder
, I am extraordinarily doubtful of that a supermajority of the population is going to agree to participate within a socialist society in the coming eras, I do think that a pluralistic syncretic society is not only requisite, but also preferable, as the incorporation of political ideas outside of what I would prefer to tell you flat out is, but will say that I understand as Anarchism will have the effect of providing a certain balance to what would necessarily be an experiment in governance. — thewonder
The longer you live, the more experiences you have learnt to deal with, and so the less you need to learn. You've long had it all figured out down to the level of automaticism. — apokrisis
Isn’t that relocalisation of economies and transition engineering. I don’t even consider it a battle of left-right - globalising political theories. The best outcome after the collapse of state level order would be communities able to sustain local order - however that looks. — apokrisis
But aren’t any political systems the kind of theory led approach that will have little relevance in a collapse back to small communities scratching a living? — apokrisis
What would be your ways of revolting against death? — Corvus
Honestly, doing things like reading the poems of Arthur Rimbaud, but, I would imagine that there is a kind of joie de vivre that I could actualize upon. — thewonder
I wouldn’t say it’s the number of experiences you cope with that produces growth but the manner in which you organize those experiences. — Joshs
Personal growth is akin to technological advances in cultural history. They evince an overall accelerative character. — Joshs
There'd have to be some model to work with. Anarchism seems rather apt for such generalized chaos. — thewonder
If we can crack fusion in the next decade, it could be game on again. But if it is a civilisational future to be built on wind and solar, then that is a very different growth regime. — apokrisis
Isnt there a distinction to be made between growth defined in classical economic terms ( GDP, etc) and growth of knowledge( scientific, technological, philosophical , literary)? — Joshs
If there were a catastrophic disruption of access to sources of energy for technological use, do you really think this would prevent individuals from continuing to transform their ways of understanding the world? — Joshs
I think that that's kind of a false dichotomy. You contrast technocracy, which, as it is advanced by whom you call "greenies", cyber-utopianism, I think, it is called, with a fringe set of political philosophies as if we ought to take the former at its word without any form of critique whatsoever. — thewonder
:up: No "country" for white swans, Adam Smith/Karl Marx.So the growth of information is the growth of the structure that creates the entropic gradient that dissipates the available free energy. And the availability of some source of free energy (along with a convenient sink to take the resulting waste) are then the reason that some informational structure would inevitably evolve to do the job.
Life and mind - biology and society - are accidents waiting to happen. If some store of free energy has accumulated - like half a billion years worth of heat distilled planktonic hydrocarbon trapped in deep sediment (petroleum), or ancient buried forests of carbon (coal) - then that is a glut of free energy in clear want of a technologically-minded social and economic system. And eventually such a system evolved to do the job - a system reaching its monetised apogee of unbounded growth under neo-liberal financialisation and globalisation.
[ ... ]
What is a bucketlist or an influencer except some new high in terms of essentially heedless entropy production? But fossil fuel really needs bucketlists and influencers to meet its embodied desires. The second law of thermodynamics is the hidden hand behind all forms of modern accelerating growth. — apokrisis
:mask:[The] general line of reasoning is that, in order to salvage the ecology, civilization needs to be so radically transformed that it can only effectively happen after a revolution. Personally, I think that this too is quasi-eschatological, near messianic, and, in all likelihood, completely undesirable, but people within the Left have totally insipid notions of what an actual global revolution would actually be like. What seems to be more reasonable, ethical, and viable is to actively disengage from society as such, salvaging what is good of it that we can, and to just kind of let it all fall apart. In the aftermath of the decline of civilization as we have come to understand it, an alternative and radically new society could hopefully be created. — thewonder
The biggest problem with revolution is the morning after. — Slavoj Žižek
That's all well and good and all, but how does technocracy effectively resolve anything? — thewonder
Obviously, in fields that require expertise, there is a need for specialists, but, structuring the whole of civil society as if it were an engineering department doesn't seem to make too much sense to me. — thewonder
Would it be fair to characterize your thesis as a kind of techno-dialectics? There seems to be a fair amount of Marx in it , with technology moved to front and center. — Joshs
There seems to be a fair amount of Marx in it... — Joshs
A strong society has strong institutions that look to the long view ... coupled to strong democracy that allows constant short-term challenge to those institutions. And you can engineer that balance. It is not about a conflict between left and right, good and evil. It is about plumbing and food security. Boring stuff that keeps the lights on and things headed in desirable directions. — apokrisis
This doesn't need extreme political theories - either about communism or capitalism, left or right. Instead it needs general acceptance that the job of a political system is to encourage the right kind of institutional structure. Everything becomes a shade of some form of social democracy - until fossil fuel looks up and sees its accelerating rate of entropification being threatened. Then you get a bout of creative institution destruction like a world war or Thatcher's Britain. Society can be steered away from the long-termism that was beginning to creep into human affairs - ecological responsibility, anti-consumerism, social equality, etc - and rebuild itself with the shortest institutional timeframes in mind. — apokrisis
On a second review of your post, it seems like you're just arguing for an effective Liberal democracy. That's just how Liberal democracy is supposed to function. — thewonder
That seems like some kind of post-apocalyptic vaguely right-wing regionalism, which is neither not extreme nor beyond charting on the Political Compass. I'm also fairly unsure as to how not looking into the future or considering ecological responsibility is supposed to resolve the ecological crisis. — thewonder
The fact of death provides a basis for which we ought to live according to Friedrich Nietzsche's thought experiment, that of the eternal return. To accept death is to admit defeat. We can only die and lose, and, so, perhaps there is something to accepting it? I would prefer, however, to wage my revolt for as long as I have either the health or mind to do so. — thewonder
I haven't known Nietzsche to say much of Pascal, but, perhaps you're right? — thewonder
I have previously given a rather expository post as to what I prefer to Liberal democracy. — thewonder
Anarchism is a political philosophy and it can more or less be simply defined as "libertarian socialism".
Do you mean?....
Anarchism is a political philosophy and it can more or less be simply defined as "libertarian socialism". — apokrisis
The hey is about allowing vigorous and messy interest promoting - strong competition - but within a plastic set of global social constraints so a holistic balance can be arrived at. — apokrisis
So where I speak of successful modern technocratic societies, they are more "anarchic" in being an active and dynamical jostle of institutions. The state is merely a framework for delivering some kind of structured accomodation to the mass of often conflicting desires. — apokrisis
You'd have seven or so people in a small city committed to the project and just generalized chaos everywhere else. — thewonder
What do you say to people who argue that the notion of personal growth is often an archaic and romantic one and problematic in its measuring? — Tom Storm
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