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	<title>most read &#8211; John Thackara</title>
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		<title>From Green Design to Ecological Design (2): Beyond Calculation: AI and Sustainability</title>
		<link>https://thackara.com/development-design/beyond-calculation-ai-and-sustainability/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[John Thackara]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Sat, 20 Sep 2025 10:17:12 +0000</pubDate>
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		<category><![CDATA[development]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[nature-connection]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://new.thackara.com/?p=9624</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>Trillions of dollars of climate finance need nature to be machine-like. But nature is not a machine. So how shall we proceed? In this 20′ talk, I ask: Can AI serve all of life, not just human life? And if so, how?</p>
<p>The post <a rel="nofollow" href="https://thackara.com/development-design/beyond-calculation-ai-and-sustainability/">From Green Design to Ecological Design (2): Beyond Calculation: AI and Sustainability</a> appeared first on <a rel="nofollow" href="https://thackara.com">John Thackara</a>.</p>
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										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class="fusion-fullwidth fullwidth-box fusion-builder-row-1 fusion-flex-container nonhundred-percent-fullwidth non-hundred-percent-height-scrolling" style="--awb-border-radius-top-left:0px;--awb-border-radius-top-right:0px;--awb-border-radius-bottom-right:0px;--awb-border-radius-bottom-left:0px;--awb-flex-wrap:wrap;" ><div class="fusion-builder-row fusion-row fusion-flex-align-items-flex-start fusion-flex-content-wrap" style="max-width:1248px;margin-left: calc(-4% / 2 );margin-right: calc(-4% / 2 );"><div class="fusion-layout-column fusion_builder_column fusion-builder-column-0 fusion_builder_column_5_6 5_6 fusion-flex-column" style="--awb-bg-blend:overlay;--awb-bg-size:cover;--awb-width-large:83.333333333333%;--awb-margin-top-large:0px;--awb-spacing-right-large:2.304%;--awb-margin-bottom-large:0px;--awb-spacing-left-large:2.304%;--awb-width-medium:100%;--awb-spacing-right-medium:1.92%;--awb-spacing-left-medium:1.92%;--awb-width-small:100%;--awb-spacing-right-small:1.92%;--awb-spacing-left-small:1.92%;"><div class="fusion-column-wrapper fusion-flex-justify-content-flex-start fusion-content-layout-column"><div class="fusion-text fusion-text-1"><p>Trillions of dollars of climate finance need nature to be machine-like. But nature is not a machine. So how shall we proceed? In this 20′ talk, I explore two questions: Can AI serve all of life, not just human life? And if so, how?</p>
<p><b>BACKGROUND TO THIS TALK</b><br />In Shanghai, at the invitation of Prof. Dr. Yongqi Lou (President of Shanghai University of Engineering Scienc) I’ve been developing developing the agenda for a Thematic Cluster around the agenda of Regenerative Design. My job is to identify opportunities where Regenerative Design meets climate finance, artificial intelligence, ecological restoration, green infrastructure, and agro-ecology. The work builds on the bioregioning agenda, and the Urban-Rural expo we did at the end of 2019.</p>
</div></div></div><div class="fusion-layout-column fusion_builder_column fusion-builder-column-1 fusion_builder_column_5_6 5_6 fusion-flex-column" style="--awb-bg-size:cover;--awb-width-large:83.333333333333%;--awb-margin-top-large:0px;--awb-spacing-right-large:2.304%;--awb-margin-bottom-large:10px;--awb-spacing-left-large:2.304%;--awb-width-medium:100%;--awb-order-medium:0;--awb-spacing-right-medium:1.92%;--awb-spacing-left-medium:1.92%;--awb-width-small:100%;--awb-order-small:0;--awb-spacing-right-small:1.92%;--awb-spacing-left-small:1.92%;"><div class="fusion-column-wrapper fusion-column-has-shadow fusion-flex-justify-content-flex-start fusion-content-layout-column"><div class="fusion-separator" style="align-self: center;margin-left: auto;margin-right: auto;margin-top:30px;margin-bottom:20px;width:100%;max-width:90%;"><div class="fusion-separator-border sep-single" style="--awb-height:20px;--awb-amount:20px;border-color:var(--awb-color2);border-top-width:4px;"></div></div><div class="fusion-title title fusion-title-1 fusion-sep-none fusion-title-text fusion-title-size-two" style="--awb-margin-left:30px;--awb-margin-top-small:0px;--awb-margin-right-small:0px;--awb-margin-bottom-small:10px;--awb-margin-left-small:0px;--awb-font-size:30px;"><h2 class="fusion-title-heading title-heading-left fusion-responsive-typography-calculated" style="font-size:1em;--fontSize:30;--minFontSize:30;line-height:1.3;">Transcription: <i>From Green Design to Ecological Design, Beyond Calculation</i></h2></div><div class="fusion-text fusion-text-2" style="--awb-margin-left:30px;"><p><span style="background-color: rgba(0, 0, 0, 0);">Good data are important if we are to understand and reverse the destruction of nature that’s so distressing to us all. And it is good news that more and more data about biodiversity is becoming available thanks to the marvels of satellite imagery, DNA analysis, and other data analysed by AI.</span></p>
<p>But is artificial intelligence enough, on its own, to drive the ecological transition we so desperately need?</p>
<p>My key point today: AI can be a support for transformational change. But a truly just transition will only happen when, in the words of Raimon Pannikar, we “see nature differently, relate to nature differently, and understand our purpose here differently”.</p>
<p>Seventy five years ago, in 1944, the science fiction writer Isaac Asimov published his First Law of Robotics. It stated: “A robot may not injure a human being nor, through inaction, allow a human being to come to harm”.</p>
<p>Around the world, numerous groups have puiblished ethical principles for AI. By one estimate, 172 statements have been published so far. China’s version is aligned with most of the other statements: AI should be re-oriented in the service of human good.</p>
<p>If we think of Artificial Intelligence as a kind of robot, then Asimov’s law could easily be updated: “AI may not injure a human being nor, through inaction, allow a human being to come to harm’.</p>
<p>There’s been more disagreement about implementation of such a law. How can we ensure, experts ask, that AI systems will understand what we mean? Do what we want? This question, too, has a history. Back in 1960, the mathematician Norbert Wiener asked, “Are we quite sure that the purpose put into the machine is the purpose which we really desire?.”</p>
<p>That one word – ‘purpose’ – highlights the core dilemma that I will focus on today.</p>
<p>Because even if we could be sure that AI would understand and obey an updated Asimov law, such a law would only mention “what’s good for humans” . There’s no mention of all the other life forms we share the living planet with. This humans-first approach has had catastrophic consequences throughout the industrial age.</p>
<p>Even before AI came along, “what’s good for humans” helped shape an economy that extracts vitality, as well as resources, from the planet’s living systems.</p>
<p>This cultural disconnection – between the living world, and the economic one – explains why we either don’t think about rivers, soils, and biodiversity at all – or we treat them as natural ‘resources’ whose only purpose is to feed “the economy.”</p>
<p>The idea that “the economy” exists in a separate domain from life itself sounds crazy when you say it out loud.</p>
<p>By the same token, It makes little sense to discuss the purpose of AI in isolation from the bigger picture of life on earth, and our place within that.</p>
<p>President Xi alluded to the need for a larger purpose just a few days ago. In a speech about the Belt and Road Initiative, he called for a “new development paradigm”.</p>
<p>This idea – a new concept for development – is for me the best place to start in any discussion of where and how we use AI.</p>
<p>New development paradigm</p>
<p>We need to ask, first: What are the social and ecological objectives of development? and, within that framework, How can AI help us achieve them?</p>
<p>For me, “new development paradigm” means development that helps all of life thrive – not just human life. It means: Enable natural systems to endure. It means: Beneficial relations between ecosystems.</p>
<p>How would AI help us achieve this?</p>
<p>I believe that AI – used together with science, design, and art – can be a medium of experience and learning that can help us realise that nature, and the economy, are not two different places. Everything in the living world is connected</p>
<p>AI can support a learning process that re-awakens our capacity for ecological thinking – and help us “see” the life that surrounds us – but invisibly.</p>
<p>There are positive developments along these lines in the worlds of AI and Machine Learning.</p>
<p>In 2019, Machine Learning heavyweights from GoogleAI, Deep Mind, Stanford, Carnegie Mellon, ETH Zurich and others published this 111-page report “Tackling Climate Change With Machine Learning”.</p>
<p>Their report included a comprehensive list list of “Climate change solution domains” . These range from remote sensing, to the rededsign of financial markets.</p>
<p>It’s a long list, but one theme united these experts: If we’re going to manage the climate crisis – if we’re going to find “solutions” – then we need more data” !</p>
<p>Global demand for environmental data was supercharged two weeks ago at COP26 in Scotland.</p>
<p>Mark Carney announced that 130 trillion dollars in climate finance commitments had been promised by various financial actors. The mysterious acronyms he used disguise a lot disagreement about what counts as climate finance, what the money is for, and who gets to spend it.</p>
<p>But Carney made one point clear in plain language: this money would prove hard to distribute in the absence of metrics and verification.</p>
<p>Carney’s announcement can only increase the search for climate disclosure metrics. A.I. is being promoted as a global observation platform that monitors ecosystem health at multiple scales – from the planetary, to the microscopic.</p>
<p>Planet Labs, on a larger scale, have deployed a swarm of Earth-observing satellites that can monitor every forest, every tree, and every city block, everywhere on Earth, on a daily basis.</p>
<p>This real-time ecological dashboard, say Planet, can enable forest managers to see the signs of deforestation as they are occurring – as opposed to long after.</p>
<p>Its satellites can also spot but also detect the precursors of deforestation they say – such as the establishment of illegal roads that tend to appear before trees are illegally harvested.</p>
<p>Another big project, Microsoft’s AI For Earth, give people the power to make accurate climate predictions using artificial intelligence tools.</p>
<p>In England, researchers at Exeter University are training AI systems to classify all this raw data – from sensors on the ground, in the sky, or in space.</p>
<p>Integrating data and information from multiple, inter-related, sources, they claim, affords better understanding of complex interactions between the climate, natural ecosystems, human systems, the economy, and health.</p>
<p>In Switzerland, the Crowther Lab has launched an open data platform, Restor, that connects everyone, everywhere, to local restoration.</p>
<p>Restor connects people to scientific data, supply chains, funding – and each other – to increase the impact, scale, and sustainability of restoration efforts.</p>
<p>“We believe that anyone can be a restoration champion” they say, “ including you”</p>
<p>Bird research is also being transformed by Artificial Intelligence. The BirdNET platform, for example, combines bioacoustics with an AI based algorithm to automate bird species recognition from acoustic data.</p>
<p>Citizen science has radically expanded the scale of data collection: birdwatchers have contributed than 140 million observations</p>
<p>In Germany they use eDNA metabarcoding to analyse the health and diversity of insect populations.</p>
<p>Soils are the most complex microbial ecosystem we know. A single teaspoon of healthy soil may contain thousands of species, a billion individuals, and one hundred metres of fungal networks. The soils in forest ecosystems, especially, are a foundational part of the global carbon cycle. But to most of us in the modern urban world, they’ve been invisible and uncared for.</p>
<p>Julian Liber studies the rhizosphere – the soil around the root of plant where microbial activity is especially high. Helped by AI, he tracks fungal hyphae – their rate of growth, how often they branch, and other metrics.</p>
<p>The number and vitality of worms is another good indicator of soil health. Thanks to machine learning, observations from diverse sources can now be used to make diagnostic maps.</p>
<p>Fish farming is investing heavily in sensors and AI tools. Some of these systems can even even monitor what they eat.</p>
<p>Another agricultural process, composting, transforms organic waste to nutrient-rich manure. But composting infrastructures tend to be installed away from residential areas. This makes tending to the compost heap a tedious task.</p>
<p>Thanks to compost monitors, Internet of Things, and AI, composting has now become a more viable as an urban activity.</p>
<p>The scale and scope of biodiversity sampling is being expanded dramatically by small, low-power computing devices, advances in wireless communications, and data-recognition algorithms in the field of machine learning. AudioMoth, for example, is being used to understand the world of bats in real time.</p>
<p>These efforts are vital in efforts to prevent another Covid. Researchers at the Chinese Academy of Sciences are using AI-supported bioacoustics to plot the distribution of bat species.Their aim is anticipate any danger of ‘spillover’ – from wild into urban – as a result of habitat disturbance by human activity.</p>
<p>But let me return to the core issue of PURPOSE of AI and the new development paradigm mentioned earlier.</p>
<p>The restoration of ecosystems damaged by decades of extraction is surely central to that over-arching purpose. AI, here, can play a important role in identifying restoration options that diversify the local economy, and create jobs. For example, the use of fiber crops to remediate degraded land and provide future livelihoods.</p>
<p>In Australia, where numerous mine sites are being rehabilitated back to their native ecosystems, eDNA metabarcoding helps ecologists determine what insects, pollinators, and bacteria used to live there, and so what should be planted there, next.</p>
<p>Add all these experiments together, and the tools and connectivity are within our grasp, today, to monitor every patch the vital signs of of the planet in real time.</p>
<p>We could repurpose the giant screen used by Alibaba to monitor sales during Black Friday. We could feed in data – from satellites in space, to microbial communities surveyed by eDNA.</p>
<p>We’d get a wondrous insight into the health of planet – place by place, patch by patch.</p>
<p>But there’s a dilemma here. A new dashboard is not the same as a new system.</p>
<p>On the contrary. For most if the world’s economic and political actors – the ones that will spend $100 trillion of climate finance announced by Mark Carney – the climate crisis is not a system failure – it’s a problem of management, efficiency, and control.</p>
<p>All those promises to plant billions of trees? A Yale study found that 45% of these trees, planted “efficiently”, will be monocultural plantations – managed as cash crops and devoid of biodiversity.</p>
<p>That’s the problem with the dashboard idea. It frames the living world as some kind of machine to process “natural resources” and “ecosystem services”.</p>
<p>Returning to Mark Carney again: that tsunami of climate finance could actually increase ecological destruction.</p>
<p>Demand for carbon offsets, net-zero, and nature positive credits, is escalating. And in order to meet this demand on a large scale, investors demand standardised metrics in order to simplify and speed up verification.</p>
<p>But biodiversity is the literal opposite of standardised.</p>
<p>The best indicator of biodiversity health is diversity, continuous adaptation, and change. The health of an ecosystem lies in the vitality of interactions between its component species.</p>
<p>The study of living systems tells a consistent story. Whether it’s sub-microscopic viruses, mosses, and mycorrhizae – or trees, rivers and climate systems – science has confirmed an ancient wisdom: All natural phenomena are not only connected. Their very essence is to be in relationship with other things -including us.</p>
<p>The health of the soil, microbes, soil, plants – and the health of people – are a single story. Diversity and adaptation are the best indicators of vitality.</p>
<p>No matter how massive the datasets and simulations created by AI, computational models cannot comprehend the complexity and interdependence of ecosystems. They will remain just that: models of reality.</p>
<p>The bank Credit Suisse, with remarkable candour, has put it best: ”biodiversity is the anti-commodity”.</p>
<p>This is bad news for an industrial economy that that treats raw materials as commodities.</p>
<p>In an industrial system, efficiency and control are success factors. The system demands uniformity and standardisation. Diversity, of the kind found in healthy nature, makes the game impossible.</p>
<p>And this is why climate finance could make things worse.</p>
<p>Every social and ecological context is unique – but finance needs the living world to behave like a machine – like the tree plantations I mentioned earlier.</p>
<p>The inherent complexity of nature is confirmed by real-world restoration projects – especially in the world’s critical zones. To monitor their vitality, scientists have established critical zones observatories throughout the world including this one in China.</p>
<p>Yes, they use sensors and highly technical instruments to collect data in these outdoor laboratories. But making sense of this complex data involves multiple skills.</p>
<p>AI can help with interpretation, but the story on the ground remains complex.</p>
<p>As well as the diverse scientific disciplines, ecological restoration can often involve dozens of organisations. This social and organisational dimension further intensifies the complexity.</p>
<p>And as my colleague Professor Lou Yongqi has explained, social systems are just one among four that we have to contend with: Nature, Human, Artificial, and Cyber.</p>
<p>As well as involving multiple systems, real-world ecological restoration also involves multiple timescales.The timescales of restoring land, measured in decades, are way beyond the ultra-fast tempo of financial markets that can be measured in milliseconds.</p>
<p>If finance needs nature to be machine-like – but nature is not a machine – how best are we to respond?</p>
<p>I believe designers are well-placed to help us cope with this tangled dilemma .</p>
<p>Learning from the last 50 years, it’s surely clear that we don’t need more messages, concepts, instructions. What we need, and what we yearn for, is connection – connection with each other; connection with place; and above all, connection with the living.</p>
<p>Designers can use their creative skills to represent social and natural systems immersively. In so-called ‘system in the room’ intallations, we humans can experience being part of nature, not outside.</p>
<p>The word, experience, I believe, is key. AI, as I’ve shown, can provide extraordinary data and insights – but something more is needed to awaken the experience of interconnectedness.</p>
<p>Design-plus-AI can be a medium of attention – such as with ecosystems we have neglected; a medium of connection – so we don’t just look; a medium of relationship with the living world that can persist through time</p>
<p>Beyond Calculation</p>
<p>The destruction will stop when we stop thinking of the oceans, fields and forests as ‘resources’ or ‘solutions’ – and start thinking (and acting) in them as lifeworlds.</p>
<p>Making that shift is the basis of a new way to measure and create value, and therefore purpose. That’s why we need to experience the health of a place, and of the persons who inhabit it, as a single story.</p>
<p>Such a change of course requires ecological literacy, and a whole-systems understanding of the world. AI, art, design, I believe, can help us acquire these skills and understanding.</p>
<p>end</p>
</div></div></div></div></div>
<p>The post <a rel="nofollow" href="https://thackara.com/development-design/beyond-calculation-ai-and-sustainability/">From Green Design to Ecological Design (2): Beyond Calculation: AI and Sustainability</a> appeared first on <a rel="nofollow" href="https://thackara.com">John Thackara</a>.</p>
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		<title>Design and Energy: Thirteen Great Writers</title>
		<link>https://thackara.com/handouts/on-design-and-energy-thirteen-great-writers/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Kris]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 25 Jul 2023 10:21:36 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[handouts]]></category>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://thackara.com/?p=14444</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>1. TOM MURPHY - DO THE MATH If you suspect, but cannot prove, that modern life simply does not add up, you'll love Tom Murphy's work. His focus, as a physicist, is to understand whether the impossibility of indefinite physical growth - for example in energy, food, or manufacturing - means that economic growth in general is   [continue ...]</p>
<p>The post <a rel="nofollow" href="https://thackara.com/handouts/on-design-and-energy-thirteen-great-writers/">Design and Energy: Thirteen Great Writers</a> appeared first on <a rel="nofollow" href="https://thackara.com">John Thackara</a>.</p>
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										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>1. TOM MURPHY &#8211; DO THE MATH<br />
If you suspect, but cannot prove, that modern life simply does not add up, you&#8217;ll love Tom Murphy&#8217;s work. His focus, as a physicist, is to understand whether the impossibility of indefinite physical growth &#8211; for example in energy, food, or manufacturing &#8211; means that economic growth in general is also fated to end or reverse. He remains perplexed by our collective blindness to a simple fact: It takes energy to obtain energy &#8211; the very commodity that is in short supply. He concludes in a matter-of-fact way: &#8220;Global transportation means pushing through air or water over vast distances that will not shrink. Cooking means heating meal-sized portions of food and water. (and so on). Can all of these things be done more efficiently? Absolutely. Can (these efficiency gains) go on forever to maintain growth? No.&#8221; Murphy posted a very handy  chart that ranks competing energy sources against a series of criteria: <a href="http://physics.ucsd.edu/do-the-math/2012/02/the-alternative-energy-matrix/">Alternative Energy Matrix</a> See also these three texts, which go together: <a href="http://physics.ucsd.edu/do-the-math/2011/07/galactic-scale-energy/">Galactic Scale Energy</a> <a href="http://physics.ucsd.edu/do-the-math/2011/07/can-economic-growth-last/">Can Economic Growth Last?</a> <a href="http://physics.ucsd.edu/do-the-math/2011/10/sustainable-means-bunkty-to-me/">What Does Sustainability Mean?</a></p>
<p>2. HOWARD T ODUM &#8211; ENERGY, ECOLOGY, ECONOMICS<br />
Howard T. Odum was an American ecologist who explained human economics using ecology and energy fundamentals. His 1974 “Energy, Ecology, &amp; Economics” helps explain why consumption and expanding technologies have limits. A Prosperous Way Down, (2001, with his wife Elisabeth), proposes solutions. Odum’s energy economics begins with an understanding that energy provides the foundation for all life processes &#8211; but that all energy is not equal. As energy is transformed through an ecosystem, quantity decreases as concentration increases. Odum coined the word “emergy” to account for the variations of energy quality. <a href="http://www.mnforsustain.org/energy_ecology_economics_odum_ht_1973.htm">Energy, Ecology, &amp; Economics</a></p>
<p>3. HERMAN DALY &#8211; STEADY STATE ECONOMY<br />
Herman Daly, an American ecological economist, explains that &#8220;the reason so much debt has been  incurred is that we have had absurdly unrealistic expectations about growth. We never expected that growth itself would begin to cost us more than it was worth, making us poorer, not richer. But it did&#8221;. And the only solution our economists, bankers, and politicians have come up with is more of the same! Could we not, Daly asks, at least take a short time-out to discuss the idea of a a steady-state economy? <a href="http://steadystate.org/growth-debt-and-the-world-bank/">Steady-state Economy</a></p>
<p>4. UGO BARDI &#8211; ENTROPY, PEAK OIL, AND STOIC PHILOSOPHY<br />
There are thermodynamic constraints to the system that we cannot dismiss &#8211; even though these limits may not appear in economics textbooks. &#8220;The final result is collapse in one form or another. We cannot avoid it&#8221; writes Ugo Bardi, who teaches physical chemistry at the University of Florence. A self-described stoic scientist, Bardi quips:  &#8220;What is collapse, after all, other than a period in which things are changing faster than usual&#8221;.  <a href="http://cassandralegacy.blogspot.com/2011/05/peak-oil-thermodynamics-and-stoic.html">Peak Oil Thermodynamics and Stoic Philosophy</a> <a href="http://europe.theoildrum.com/node/5528">Peak Civilization: The Fall of the Roman Empire</a></p>
<p>5. IVAN ILLICH &#8211; ENERGY AND EQUITY (1973)<br />
Energy &amp; Equity, first published in Le Monde in early 1973, observed that &#8220;it has recently become fashionable to insist on an impending energy crisis&#8221;. Illich continued: &#8220;This euphemistic term conceals a contradiction, and consecrates an illusion. It masks the contradiction implicit in the joint pursuit of equity and industrial growth. It safeguards the illusion that machine power can indefinitely take the place of man power&#8221;.Yep, pretty much the whole story in a few lines. <a href="http://www.davidtinapple.com/illich/1973_energy_equity.html">Energy &amp; Equity</a></p>
<p>6. JOHN MICHAEL GREER &#8211; HOW CIVILIZATIONS FALL: A THEORY OF CATABOLIC COLLAPSE<br />
Our economy is in danger of &#8216;catabolic collapse&#8217; because it depends on perpetually growing throughputs of energy and resources that are simply not going to be available. For Greer, this process is well under way. The troubles currently pressing in on the industrial world will keep on getting worse, day after day, year after year, for decades to come, following the same gradual curve that the industrial world followed in the days of its growth, but in reverse.  <a href="http://www.dylan.org.uk/greer_on_collapse.pdf">A Theory of Catabolic Collapse</a></p>
<p>7. JARED DIAMOND &#8211; COLLAPSE<br />
&#8220;One reason societies fail is that their elites are insulated from the true energy costs of their society&#8221;. We are not the first. Diamond focuses on Easter Island, where the overuse of wood products eventually destroyed its inhabitants&#8217; survival prospects. Do today&#8217;s financial elites worry at night about about energy? <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Collapse:_How_Societies_Choose_to_Fail_or_Succeed">Collapse: How Societies Choose to Fail orSucceed</a></p>
<p>8. DAVID MACKAY &#8211; SUSTAINABLE ENERGY WITHOUT THE HOT AIR<br />
This book is full of surprises, few of them pleasant. For example: turning off your phone charger for 24 hours saves as much energy as driving your car for&#8230;one second. MacKay was Professor of Natural Philosophy at the University of Cambridge until he became Chief Scientific Advisor to the UK&#8217;s Department of Energy and Climate Change. &#8220;How &#8216;huge&#8217; are Britain&#8217;s renewable resources, compared with its current (huge) energy consumption?&#8221; he asks; answer:  not very much. How big do renewable energy facilities have to be, to make a significant contribution? Answer: add one or two zeros to what&#8217;s happening now. Which efficiency measures offer big savings, and which offer only 5 or 10%? Answer: say farewell to most of the politicians&#8217; pet green projects. <a href="http://www.withouthotair.com/">Sustainable Energy Without The Hot Air</a></p>
<p>9. DAVID FLEMING &#8211; LEAN LOGIC: A DICTIONARY FOR THE FUTURE AND HOW TO SURVIVE IT.<br />
Lean Logic does not sugar-coat the challenges we face in an economy that destroys the very foundations upon which it depends; climate weirdness; ecological systems under stress; shocks to community and culture. Neither does the book suggest that there are easy or even any solutions to these dilemmas. But a positive spirit infuses its 800 pages : &#8220;Large-scale problems do not require large-scale solutions; they require small- scale solutions within a large-scale framework.&#8221; The book&#8217;s greatest strength, for this mesmerized reader, is the lightness with which it draws on knowledge from earlier periods of history, and from other cultures. <a href="http://www.leanlogic.net/">Lean Logic</a></p>
<p>10. GAIL &#8216;THE ACTUARY&#8217; TVERBERG &#8211; OUR FINITE WORLD<br />
Quite apart from the maths, or the thermodynamics, or the simple logic, &#8220;a lack of cash flow for investment in infrastructure will eventually bring the system down&#8221; says another dry doomer, Gail Tverberg, an actuary. She describes a political impossibility:&#8221; the need to make choices on which things we maintain: schools; or roads; or oil distribution pipelines; or a smart electric grid; or our housing stock&#8221;. She sees no way that we can do them all. &#8220;Which roads do we turn from asphalt to gravel? Can we eliminate purchase of military jets? Do we stop building and upgrading schools and universities? Do we stop building new homes and office parks?&#8221; <a href="http://ourfiniteworld.com/2011/12/19/can-we-invest-our-way-out-of-an-energy-shortfall/#more-11412">Our Finite World</a></p>
<p>11. CHARLES HALL &#8211; ENERGY RETURN ON INVESTMENT (EROI)<br />
&#8220;Few issues are likely to be more important for the future of civilization&#8221;. The issue? Energy Return on Energy Invested (EROI). EROI represents a simple ratio; the amount of energy obtained from any energy-producing activity divided by the energy used to make that amount of energy available for productive activities. A related term, Net Energy, refers to the remainder from subtracting energy input from energy output. Total Net Energy represents “productive energy”, the energy available for all the economic, social, cultural and other activities of daily life. &#8220;The quality of fuels available is at least as important in our assessment as is the quantity&#8221; Hall explains; &#8220;many of the contemporary changes in our economy are related directly to changing EROI as our premium fuels are increasingly depleted&#8221;. As the realities of EROI make themselves felt, Hall, a professor of Environmental &amp; Forest Biology, concludes, &#8220;Americans will need to acknowledge the reality of biophysical constraints if they are to adapt to the coming energy crisis. Discretionary spending will be increasingly abandoned as humans attempt to meet their basic needs for food, shelter and clothing <a href="http://www.mdpi.com/journal/sustainability/special_issues/New_Studies_EROI/">New Studies in EROI (Energy Return on Investment)&#8221;</a> See also: Hall, C.A.S.; Klitgaard; K. Energy and the Wealth of Nations: Understanding the Biophysical Economy. Springer: New York, NY, USA, 2011.</p>
<p>12. CUTLER CLEVELAND &#8211; TEN FUNDAMENTAL PRINCIPLES OF NET ENERGY<br />
The efficiency and effectiveness of energy capture is a central organizing principle in ecology. Living organisms must capture energy and allocate it among a number of life-sustaining tasks (growth, reproduction, energy storage, defense, competition).The unprecedented expansion of the human population, the global economy, and per capita living standards of the last 200 years was powered by high EROI, high energy surplus fossil fuels.Energy return on investment (EROI) is the ratio of the energy extracted or delivered by a process to the energy used directly and indirectly in that process. Net energy is how much energy is left for productive purposes after the energy needed to find, concentrate and deliver its energy services are subtracted. <a href="http://www.theoildrum.com/node/4238">Energy Transitions Past and Future</a> <a href="http://www.theoildrum.com/node/2211">Ten Principles of Net Energy</a></p>
<p>13. PHIL HENSHAW &#8211; SYSTEMS ENERGY ASSESSMENT (SEA)<br />
Most economic sectors use at least give times more energy than is visible, let alone paid for. This is because the standard measures of business energy use, such as Life Cycle Analysis, do not count the energy needs of the distributed and sub-contracted operating services businesses employ. &#8220;That uncounted business energy demand is often 80% of the total, an amount of “dark energy” hidden from view&#8221;. The energy cost to the economy for delivering business products &#8211; including energy &#8211; is five times more than what was thought when the energy demand is added in of the support services that technology requires to operate and deliver products. Thyese support services include the energy demands of employees, management, design, advertising, maintenance, Insurance, rent and taxes, etc, System Energy Assessment (SEA), measures the combined impacts of these material supply chains and service supply chains, to assess businesses as whole self-managing net-energy systems. <a href="http://www.synapse9.com/SEA/">System Energy Assessment (SEA), Defining a Standard Measure of EROI for Energy Businesses as Whole Systems</a></p>
<p>The post <a rel="nofollow" href="https://thackara.com/handouts/on-design-and-energy-thirteen-great-writers/">Design and Energy: Thirteen Great Writers</a> appeared first on <a rel="nofollow" href="https://thackara.com">John Thackara</a>.</p>
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		<title>Ethics, Design, Care</title>
		<link>https://thackara.com/care/ethics-design-care/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[John Thackara]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Fri, 03 Mar 2023 15:34:02 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[biodiversity]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[care]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[development]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[nature-connection]]></category>
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					<description><![CDATA[<p>This short talk is about an economy with caring for life as its centre, rather than extraction and production. I compare earth care to modern medical care, and suggest that looking is not the same as caring. I ask what design can learn from Care Ethics - and find inspiration in the world of   [continue ...]</p>
<p>The post <a rel="nofollow" href="https://thackara.com/care/ethics-design-care/">Ethics, Design, Care</a> appeared first on <a rel="nofollow" href="https://thackara.com">John Thackara</a>.</p>
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										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><div class="fusion-fullwidth fullwidth-box fusion-builder-row-2 fusion-flex-container nonhundred-percent-fullwidth non-hundred-percent-height-scrolling" style="--awb-border-radius-top-left:0px;--awb-border-radius-top-right:0px;--awb-border-radius-bottom-right:0px;--awb-border-radius-bottom-left:0px;--awb-flex-wrap:wrap;" ><div class="fusion-builder-row fusion-row fusion-flex-align-items-flex-start fusion-flex-content-wrap" style="max-width:1248px;margin-left: calc(-4% / 2 );margin-right: calc(-4% / 2 );"><div class="fusion-layout-column fusion_builder_column fusion-builder-column-2 fusion_builder_column_1_1 1_1 fusion-flex-column" style="--awb-bg-blend:overlay;--awb-bg-size:cover;--awb-width-large:100%;--awb-margin-top-large:0px;--awb-spacing-right-large:1.92%;--awb-margin-bottom-large:0px;--awb-spacing-left-large:1.92%;--awb-width-medium:100%;--awb-spacing-right-medium:1.92%;--awb-spacing-left-medium:1.92%;--awb-width-small:100%;--awb-spacing-right-small:1.92%;--awb-spacing-left-small:1.92%;"><div class="fusion-column-wrapper fusion-flex-justify-content-flex-start fusion-content-layout-column"><div class="fusion-text fusion-text-3"><p><em>This short talk is about an economy with caring for life as its centre, rather than extraction and production. I compare earth care to modern medical care, and suggest that looking is not the same as caring. I ask what design can learn from Care Ethics &#8211; and find inspiration in the world of nursing education.</em></p>
<p>1 CARING</p>
<p>I am billed on your programme today as as an expert in design for sustainability. But I have a confession to make &#8211; which some of you may find shocking. I don’t<em> care</em> about climate change. And I don’t<em> care</em> about sustainability.</p>
<p>The reason I don’t care? I <em>can’t</em> care.  For me, care is something you <em>do</em>. It is not how you feel, or a state of mind.</p>
<p>We are surrounded by words, promises and green logos &#8211; but when it comes to climate, the temperature of the planet?</p>
<p>A single person can’t <em>d</em>o anything.</p>
<p>The same goes for sustainability. It’s an abstract word. You can&#8217;t do something about an abstract word.</p>
<p>This is why so many people disconnect. Burn out. Or get angry. They feel they can’t make any difference.</p>
<p>What we can do &#8211; what we all <em>do</em> do &#8211; is care: care for people, care for places, care for life.</p>
<p>Half the hours of work done around the work each day are care work. A lot of this work is done by women, and a lot of it is unpaid. <a href="https://www.wiego.org/informal-economy">But in terms of hours worked, half the economy involves care work &#8211; caring for life work &#8211; right now.</a></p>
<p>But what about the other 50%? The economy whose health is measured in terms of production &#8211; GDP?</p>
<p>The GDP economy is fundamentally an economy of extraction &#8211; and the ecological costs of extraction are devastating the planet.</p>
<p>A perpetual growth production economy cannot be reconciled with the the biophysical limits of a living planet.</p>
<p>That’s why the ongoing search for new forms of production – whether ‘clean’, ‘green’ or ‘circular’ production– is not taking us in the right direction.</p>
<p>A circular economy, for example, is about making production more efficient &#8211; but its underlying objective remains unchanged: produce, produce, produce.</p>
<p>My talk today is about an emerging economy whose fundamental purpose is different: care for life, and care for place.</p>
<p>There is an ethical dimension to this economy &#8211; so what I’ll describe is <em>applied</em> ethics.<br />
I’ll explain what we need to design, and how, in this care-for-life economy.</p>
<p>I will do this in three parts: Caring. Learning. Being</p>
<p><strong>Caring</strong></p>
<p>Caring for life as the centre of the economy. rather than production, is not a new idea.</p>
<p>2,400 years ago Hippocrates, father of modern medicine, said that “the health of individuals and communities depends on the health of airs, waters, places.”</p>
<p>Even earlier than Hippocrates, <a href="http://www.arcworld.org/downloads/Daoist-Eco-Handbook-Eng.pdf">the Taoist ritual of renewal,</a> still performed by Taoist priests today, affirms a belief that the affluence of a society can be judged by the number of different species that live there.</p>
<p>&#8220;If all things in the universe grow well, then a society is a community of affluence. If not, this kingdom is on the decline”</p>
<p>Fast-forward to the present day, and another philosopher, the late <a href="https://www.theguardian.com/world/2020/jun/06/bruno-latour-coronavirus-gaia-hypothesis-climate-crisis">Bruno Latour,</a> confirmed this long established wisdom.</p>
<p>“<em>This idea of framing everything in terms of the economy is a new thing in human history. What we need is not only to modify the system of production &#8211; but to <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_Kf_AieCrzg">get out of it altogether</a></em>”.</p>
<p>Throughout history we’ve known, deep down, that production is not the purpose of life.</p>
<p>But because of a cultural disconnection in modern life &#8211; between the living world, and the economic one &#8211; we either don’t think about rivers, soils, and biodiversity at all &#8211; or we treat them as natural ‘resources’ whose only purpose is to feed &#8216;the economy&#8217;.</p>
<p>Could care, rather than production, be a new basis for development?</p>
<p>There are positive signals all around us that wellbeing of people, and of nature, are being seen, once again, as a single story.</p>
<p>The new paradigm is <em>development that helps all of life thrive &#8211; not just human life.</em></p>
<p>This kind of development fosters beneficial relations between natural ecosystems, and thereby helps them endure.</p>
<p>This shift is the basis of <a href="http://www.bollier.org/blog/re-imagining-value-insights-care-economy-commons-cyberspace-and-nature-0">a new way to measure and create value</a>.</p>
<p>Caring for life happens in places. When we relate to our places as lifeworlds, it’s easier to stop treating the oceans, fields and forests as ‘resources’.</p>
<p>This power of connection between people and place is key.</p>
<p>For the architect Pamela Mang, <em>“<a href="https://www.researchgate.net/publication/233298832_Designing_from_place_A_regenerative_framework_and_methodology">place is a doorway into caring.</a> Place can unite people across diverse ideological spectra. Because place is what we all share, it is the commons that allows people to call themselves a community”.</em></p>
<p><strong>Earth Observation</strong></p>
<p>We have certainly started<em> looking</em> at places with new eyes. And thanks to technology, we are looking at multiple scales.</p>
<p><a href="https://www.planet.com/">Planet Labs,</a> or example, have deployed a swarm of Earth-observing satellites. These monitor every forest, every tree, and every city block, on Earth, on a daily basis.</p>
<p>This real-time ecological dashboard, say Planet, is a game-changer when it comes to planetary care</p>
<p>Then there&#8217;s eDNA metabarcoding.It helps ecologists determine what insects, pollinators, and bacteria oscopic scale, <em>used t</em>o live there, and so what should be planted there, next.</p>
<p>This technology takes earth repair to a new level &#8211; in this case, a microscopic scale.</p>
<p>It also takes us back in time, which is an impressive feat of innovation in itself.</p>
<p>Satellites, eDNA and other sensors have triggered a boom in &#8216;nature metrics&#8217;.</p>
<p>Researchers at Exeter University&#8217;s Global Systems Institute are training AI systems to classify data from sensors on the ground, in the sky, or in space. They claim this affords better understanding of complex climate systems.</p>
<p>The Crowther Lab, in Switzerland, is developing what it calls a <a href="https://seed-index.com/">SEED Index</a> that will “quantify genetic, species and ecosystem biocomplexity across scales”.</p>
<p>If it works, the index would be game changing as a financial mechanism to incentivize nature positive outcomes.</p>
<p>In Estonia, a start-up called <a href="https://www.single.earth/about-us">Single.Earth</a> uses Earth observation data, geospatial engineering, and machine learning to construct a &#8216;digital twin&#8217; of the planet. Its designers say it will transform how we care for the planet.</p>
<p>The constant monitoring of ecosystem health, say Single.Earth, will accelerate the growth of new nature finance markets.</p>
<p>Add all these experiments together, and the tools and connectivity are within our grasp, today, to monitor every patch the vital signs of of the planet in real time.</p>
<p>We could feed in data &#8211; from satellites in space, to microbial communities surveyed by eDNA. We’d get a wondrous <a href="https://www.esa.int/Applications/Observing_the_Earth/Working_towards_a_Digital_Twin_of_Earth">insight into the health of planet</a> &#8211; place by place, patch by patch.</p>
<p>But there’s a problem with the metaphor of a ‘global dashboard’.</p>
<p>A new dashboard is not the same as a new system.</p>
<p><em>Looking is not the same as caring</em>.But can one care, really, for a simulacrum?</p>
<p>All those promises to plant billions of trees? A Yale study found that <a href="https://e360.yale.edu/features/why-green-pledges-will-not-create-the-natural-forests-we-need">45% of these trees, planted “efficiently”, will be monocultural plantations</a> &#8211; managed as cash crops and devoid of biodiversity.</p>
<p><strong>Health Care</strong></p>
<p>Today’s boom in earth observation recalls the way health care for humans has evolved in recent times. The so-called <a href="https://www.jec.senate.gov/public/_cache/files/96b779aa-6d2e-4c41-a719-24e865cacf66/understanding-the-obamacare-chart.pdf">Medical Industrial Complex</a>, has become a multi-trillion dollar industry. The famous visualization is a map of Obamacare in the United States is a case in point. It’s an incredible research, production and business eco system &#8211; but it’s not a care system.</p>
<p>In Kobe, in Japan, is one of <a href="https://clustercollaboration.eu/news/20th-anniversary-kobe-biomedical-innovation-cluster">dozens of “biomedical clusters’</a> that have spring up around the world.</p>
<p>All this is great news for the research industry, and for the real estate industry. But there’s a small catch. <a href="https://ourworldindata.org/us-life-expectancy-low">Spending trillions on healthcare like this does not appear to buy better health—or at least, not a longer life.</a> The world’s biggest spenders on health care by far &#8211; North Americans &#8211; die far earlier than Cubans who spend 5% of US levels per person on health care.</p>
<p>Meanwhile, healthcare has grown into an important segment of the design economy worldwide.</p>
<p>Designers have created a whole new discipline &#8211;<a href="https://www.bispublishers.com/design-journeys-through-complex-systems.html"> systems oriented design</a> &#8211; to deal with hyper complexity In health care and other complex systems. In this visualization, Professor Peter Jones maps a cancer patient’s journey through the cancer care system. As a practice, this kind of design involves rigorous research, and involves multiple disciplines.</p>
<p><strong>The medical gaze</strong></p>
<p>Modern medical care is a spectacular combination of high-tech, and human skill. It can achieve amazing results, of course.</p>
<p>But biomedicine operates on a narrow bandwidth. A patient in today’s medical system is unlikely to feel part of a lifeworld. Instead, she will feel the steely attention of <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Birth_of_the_Clinic">what Michel Foucault named the “medical gaze”</a> &#8211; a focus on physical signs and symptoms that can be measured, analysed, and treated.</p>
<p>The medical gaze does not see patients as whole persons. It is not much concerned about the contexts, outside the system, in which they got sick.</p>
<p>This is why I propose a language hack.Let&#8217;s call the world&#8217;s small farmers, parents, and cooks, who give us good food, and steward the land, ”health care professionals&#8221;. And let&#8217;s call those in the medical world who don&#8217;t even mention industrial junk food, but treat its consequences, &#8220;sickness professionals&#8221;.</p>
<p>2 LEARNING</p>
<p>The Spanish theologian <a href="https://www.raimon-panikkar.org/english/home.html">Raimon Pannikar</a> said it best: The destruction will stop, and a just transition will happen, when we see nature differently, relate to nature differently, and understand the purpose of development differently. Pannikar’s words ring true &#8211; but they raise another question: under what circumstances would we see nature differently, and care for nature differently?</p>
<p><strong>Ethics of Care</strong></p>
<p>Well, away away from those high-tech bioclusters &#8211; a movement known as “ the ethics of care” has reasserted the fundamental importance of relationships and dependencies in human life. The <a href="https://www.internationaljournalofcaringsciences.org/docs/13_pollard.pdf">central tenets of care ethics</a> are mutual respect, engagement, embodied knowledge, environment and uncertainty. The most quality of care ethics is mutual respect, followed closely by engagement. &gt;</p>
<p>In the world of nursing care, and nursing education &#8211; a fascinating movement is growing that takes a lifeworlds view of health.</p>
<p>Caring, in this movement, is more than looking. Caring goes beyond to-do lists, and tasks. Whether supporting patients in a healthcare context, or student nurses on their learning journeys, the emphasis is on <a href="https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/pdf/10.1080/14623943.2018.1539664">learning that is inter-relational, emotional and embodied</a>.</p>
<p>Social infrastructure is needed to support this kinds of care.The physical places, and organizations, that both shape our interactions, are all <a href="http://www.bollier.org/blog/re-imagining-value-insights-care-economy-commons-cyberspace-and-nature-0">design opportunities.</a></p>
<p><strong>Embodied Relational Understanding</strong></p>
<p>One origin of this lifeworlds an approach to health care date back to the philosopher Edmund Husserl. 100 years ago, Husserl &#8211; a mathematician &#8211; was concerned concern that we were forgetting, in an age of science and innovation, that being human is experience the world through our bodies. Husserl advocated for ‘<a href="https://iep.utm.edu/husspemb/">embodied relational understanding</a>’ .</p>
<p>Translated into nursing care, today, this means giving priority to face-to face connection between carer and patient. It means care in real time. It means valuing interdependence, relatedness.</p>
<p>Could the ethics of care as applied to humans work for care for all-of-life? Could we practice care as if the health of a place, and of the persons who inhabit it, are a single story?</p>
<p>Dr Didi Pershouse certainly thinks so. She grew up in a family of high-tech medical pioneers. Family members worked in radiation, and brain surgery. Seeing first-hand that biomedical approaches could also be harmful, Pershouse set out on a pioneering path of her own: she developed a practice and theoretical framework for systems-based ecological medicine—restoring health to people as well as the social and ecological systems around them.</p>
<p>This approach requires ecological literacy, and a whole-systems understanding of the world. (See: <em><a href="https://www.amazon.com/Ecology-Care-Agriculture-Microbial-Communities/dp/069261303X">The Ecology of Care: Medicine, Agriculture, Money, and the Quiet Power of Human and Microbial Communities </a> </em>2015)</p>
<p>An ecological approach to health also recognizes the inextricable links between humans and their biophysical, social, and economic environments.</p>
<p>In systems thinking over millennia, the boundary between an organism and its environment has been known to be porous. In Buddhist thought, and among often indigenous approaches to life, the organism and the environment are not separately determined. For followers of Gaia Theory, more recently, there is no such thing as an independent organism. Modern science did not discover this reality, but <a href="https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/science.1214915">has confirmed it.</a></p>
<p>An ecological approach to health is evident among thousands of groups around the world. Professionals and amateurs alike are involved in watershed restoration projects, tree planting, and other projects to improve their environment &#8211; the lifeworlds in which they live. Millions of people around the world do this kind of work as volunteers. They care in practice.</p>
<p>Large scale volunteering is only one dimension of the lifeworlds-based care ecosystem. <a href="https://www.yumpu.com/en/document/view/44761408/circles-of-care-helen-hamlyn-centre-royal-college-of-art">A huge informal care economy already exists</a>. So-called ‘non-market’ care work includes the essential activity people have always undertaken to raise and educate their families, take care of their land, and support each other in times of difficulty. Billions of people with low cash incomes meet daily life needs outside the money economy through traditional networks of reciprocity and gifts. They survive, and often prosper, within social systems based on kinship, sharing, and myriad ways to share resources.</p>
<p>We are learning &#8211; from these worlds outside the biomedical system &#8211; that health and wellbeing are not something you ‘deliver’, like a pizza. For ecosystems, as for human bodies. health and wellbeing are properties of a social and ecological context in which soil, plant, animal, and man are interconnected in diverse communities and situations. That context needs to be cared for and, if necessary, repaired.</p>
<p><strong>Network Care Revolution</strong></p>
<p>Building on these fragmented but widespread developments, a <a href="https://care-revolution.org/english/">Network Care Revolution</a> is growing in Germany, Austria and Switzerland. An ‘Economy is Care’ association connects more than 80 groups and individuals. Ina Praetorius, its founder, points out that women spend on average three times as many hours as men on unpaid care and domestic work. By identifying “care” as an essential category of value-creation, she suggests, the idea of “care” can be used to frame the entire economy.</p>
<p>3 BEING</p>
<p>Designing for life is about being, as well as acting. It means leaving behind the false belief that the world exist “out there,” separate from us.</p>
<p>This belief is is deeply rooted in modern life &#8211; but not irrevocably. Awareness of interconnection can be recovered. For the theologian Jennifer Ayres, we need to cultivate the capacity for <em><a href="https://www.baylorpress.com/9781481311373/inhabitance/">inhabitance</a> &#8211;</em> “seeking to know and love and particular place in some detail and honouring its ecological rhythms, limits, and possibilities”.</p>
<p>Like many of you, I’m sure, I’ve spent many hours walking through forests &#8211; but not thinking too much about what was happening beneath my feet. Now, thanks to new information from modern science, my relationship to the forest &#8211; my inhabitance &#8211; has been transformed .</p>
<p>In this animation, Julien Liber worked out <a href="https://liberjul.github.io/projects/  &lt;Liber+ chart&gt;">how to track fungal hyphae moving just below the forest floor</a> in search of nutrients. The green boxes are annotation added by Liber “object detection algorithms” similar to this used in self driving cars</p>
<p>That experience, and others, helped me stop thinking of soils as an inert source, and develop a sense of shared aliveness, of earthy connectedness. Walking in that forest today, I feel myself to be member of a more than human community.</p>
<p>Whether in a forest, a field &#8211; or in a city &#8211; <a href="http://www.postmediabooks.it/2022/336habitats/9788874903368.htm">changing how we encounter others -human and non-human</a> &#8211; and how we live together in actual relationship, is crucial.</p>
<p><strong>Connecting with nature is as much about attention, as it is about action. </strong></p>
<p>For Dr Maya Hay, a micriobiome researcher in Canada, the best way to start this journey is by paying close attention to natural processes. Connecting with nature is as much about attention, as it is about action.  She has named this practice <a href="https://ojs.lib.uwo.ca/index.php/fpq/article/view/10846"><em>attunement.</em> </a></p>
<p>Based on her time at the Terada Honke natural sake brewery in Japan, Dr Hay concluded: “If fermentation has taught me anything, it’s that microbial time has its own pacing. The trick is to listen for it. Rather than expect that pacing to abide by my schedule, I&#8217;ve learned to create an environment for non-human others to do their work at whatever tempo they prefer, whatever pace they want to sustain.”</p>
<p>In her research, Dr Hay explores <a href="https://www.concordia.ca/sgs/public-scholars/alumni/2018/maya-hey.html">working across difference with humans and microbes.</a> Workers in the craft brewery use practices like call-and-response, and work song, to coordinate fermentation processes among human and microbial participants.</p>
<p>Authentic care involves a way of being. A capacity to be caring is reinforced by attunement to these existential ways of understanding.</p>
<p>CONCLUSION | TAKEAWAYS</p>
<p>What could caring for all of life &#8211; and not just human life &#8211; mean for design?</p>
<p>A key design quality is <em>caring attention</em>. Sometimes ecosystems need repair, at other times they need to he left alone.</p>
<p>Another challenge for design: Care is not linear, but cyclical. It’s not a project with a deadline. You don’t ‘sign off’ on care. Care is never finished.</p>
<p>I said at the start that Designing for Life happens, for the most part, in places. It is not a state of mind. It is not a box to be ticked, nor an expert to consult.</p>
<p>On the contrary. Designing for life is an ongoing practice. This practice involves caring, learning, and being.</p>
<p>The essence of ecological design care is to see the pattern of life as a connected whole &#8211; from biome, to bioregion.</p>
<p>The power of connection between people and place is a key ingredient. Within this overall ecosystem, diverse economies coexist &#8211; but nature and humans are not separate in these activities. An interweaving of matter, perception and experience is a fundamental dimension of existence. (continue below images)</p>
</div></div></div></div></div><div class="fusion-fullwidth fullwidth-box fusion-builder-row-3 fusion-flex-container has-pattern-background has-mask-background nonhundred-percent-fullwidth non-hundred-percent-height-scrolling" style="--awb-border-radius-top-left:0px;--awb-border-radius-top-right:0px;--awb-border-radius-bottom-right:0px;--awb-border-radius-bottom-left:0px;--awb-flex-wrap:wrap;" ><div class="fusion-builder-row fusion-row fusion-flex-align-items-flex-start fusion-flex-content-wrap" style="max-width:1248px;margin-left: calc(-4% / 2 );margin-right: calc(-4% / 2 );"><div class="fusion-layout-column fusion_builder_column fusion-builder-column-3 fusion_builder_column_1_2 1_2 fusion-flex-column" style="--awb-bg-size:cover;--awb-width-large:50%;--awb-margin-top-large:0px;--awb-spacing-right-large:3.84%;--awb-margin-bottom-large:10px;--awb-spacing-left-large:3.84%;--awb-width-medium:100%;--awb-order-medium:0;--awb-spacing-right-medium:1.92%;--awb-spacing-left-medium:1.92%;--awb-width-small:100%;--awb-order-small:0;--awb-spacing-right-small:1.92%;--awb-spacing-left-small:1.92%;"><div class="fusion-column-wrapper fusion-column-has-shadow fusion-flex-justify-content-flex-start fusion-content-layout-column"><div class="fusion-image-element " style="--awb-caption-title-font-family:var(--h2_typography-font-family);--awb-caption-title-font-weight:var(--h2_typography-font-weight);--awb-caption-title-font-style:var(--h2_typography-font-style);--awb-caption-title-size:var(--h2_typography-font-size);--awb-caption-title-transform:var(--h2_typography-text-transform);--awb-caption-title-line-height:var(--h2_typography-line-height);--awb-caption-title-letter-spacing:var(--h2_typography-letter-spacing);"><span class=" fusion-imageframe imageframe-none imageframe-1 hover-type-none" style="border:1px solid #f6f6f6;"><img fetchpriority="high" decoding="async" width="1204" height="1800" title="01kvr_cover_BUBBLE_chinese" src="https://thackara.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/03/01kvr_cover_BUBBLE_chinese.jpg" alt class="img-responsive wp-image-13727" srcset="https://thackara.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/03/01kvr_cover_BUBBLE_chinese-200x299.jpg 200w, https://thackara.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/03/01kvr_cover_BUBBLE_chinese-400x598.jpg 400w, https://thackara.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/03/01kvr_cover_BUBBLE_chinese-600x897.jpg 600w, https://thackara.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/03/01kvr_cover_BUBBLE_chinese-800x1196.jpg 800w, https://thackara.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/03/01kvr_cover_BUBBLE_chinese-1200x1794.jpg 1200w, https://thackara.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/03/01kvr_cover_BUBBLE_chinese.jpg 1204w" sizes="(max-width: 1024px) 100vw, (max-width: 640px) 100vw, 400px" /></span></div></div></div><div class="fusion-layout-column fusion_builder_column fusion-builder-column-4 fusion_builder_column_1_2 1_2 fusion-flex-column" style="--awb-bg-size:cover;--awb-width-large:50%;--awb-margin-top-large:0px;--awb-spacing-right-large:3.84%;--awb-margin-bottom-large:10px;--awb-spacing-left-large:3.84%;--awb-width-medium:100%;--awb-order-medium:0;--awb-spacing-right-medium:1.92%;--awb-spacing-left-medium:1.92%;--awb-width-small:100%;--awb-order-small:0;--awb-spacing-right-small:1.92%;--awb-spacing-left-small:1.92%;"><div class="fusion-column-wrapper fusion-column-has-shadow fusion-flex-justify-content-flex-start fusion-content-layout-column"><div class="fusion-image-element " style="--awb-caption-title-font-family:var(--h2_typography-font-family);--awb-caption-title-font-weight:var(--h2_typography-font-weight);--awb-caption-title-font-style:var(--h2_typography-font-style);--awb-caption-title-size:var(--h2_typography-font-size);--awb-caption-title-transform:var(--h2_typography-text-transform);--awb-caption-title-line-height:var(--h2_typography-line-height);--awb-caption-title-letter-spacing:var(--h2_typography-letter-spacing);"><span class=" fusion-imageframe imageframe-none imageframe-2 hover-type-none" style="border:1px solid #f6f6f6;"><img decoding="async" width="1130" height="1691" title="01kvr_cover_THRIVE_chinese" src="https://thackara.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/03/01kvr_cover_THRIVE_chinese.jpg" alt class="img-responsive wp-image-13726" srcset="https://thackara.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/03/01kvr_cover_THRIVE_chinese-200x299.jpg 200w, https://thackara.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/03/01kvr_cover_THRIVE_chinese-400x599.jpg 400w, https://thackara.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/03/01kvr_cover_THRIVE_chinese-600x898.jpg 600w, https://thackara.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/03/01kvr_cover_THRIVE_chinese-800x1197.jpg 800w, https://thackara.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/03/01kvr_cover_THRIVE_chinese.jpg 1130w" sizes="(max-width: 1024px) 100vw, (max-width: 640px) 100vw, 400px" /></span></div></div></div></div></div><div class="fusion-fullwidth fullwidth-box fusion-builder-row-4 fusion-flex-container has-pattern-background has-mask-background nonhundred-percent-fullwidth non-hundred-percent-height-scrolling" style="--awb-border-radius-top-left:0px;--awb-border-radius-top-right:0px;--awb-border-radius-bottom-right:0px;--awb-border-radius-bottom-left:0px;--awb-flex-wrap:wrap;" ><div class="fusion-builder-row fusion-row fusion-flex-align-items-flex-start fusion-flex-content-wrap" style="max-width:1248px;margin-left: calc(-4% / 2 );margin-right: calc(-4% / 2 );"><div class="fusion-layout-column fusion_builder_column fusion-builder-column-5 fusion_builder_column_1_1 1_1 fusion-flex-column" style="--awb-bg-size:cover;--awb-width-large:100%;--awb-margin-top-large:0px;--awb-spacing-right-large:1.92%;--awb-margin-bottom-large:10px;--awb-spacing-left-large:1.92%;--awb-width-medium:100%;--awb-order-medium:0;--awb-spacing-right-medium:1.92%;--awb-spacing-left-medium:1.92%;--awb-width-small:100%;--awb-order-small:0;--awb-spacing-right-small:1.92%;--awb-spacing-left-small:1.92%;"><div class="fusion-column-wrapper fusion-column-has-shadow fusion-flex-justify-content-flex-start fusion-content-layout-column"><div class="fusion-text fusion-text-4"><p>Our attention to the real world may have been distracted, but it is not irreversible. <a href="https://thackara.com/about/publications/">My last two books</a> are about how design, art, and science, today, foster new ways of knowing and being in the world.</p>
<p>The examples I write about involve literally “vital” design activities that enable encounter and community. These activities are embodied, and situated. They involve new modes of thinking, perceiving, and being that align our thinking selves and our embodied selves.</p>
<p>Design, in particular, can enable new relationships with the many other beings of our world.</p>
<p>Connecting with nature is a journey, not an action. When Copernicus proved that the earth revolves around the sun, rather than vice versa, it took a further 100 years of argument before the news really sunk in.</p>
<p>The essence of ecological thinking is to see the pattern of life as a connected whole. This kind awareness can be recovered. It can be cultivated &#8211; but it will take time. On such a fundamental issue as our place within nature, learning to think and feel our way into an ecological world view is a lifelong journey.</p>
<p>I owe the last word to the philosopher Andreas Weber, to whom I am grateful for the title of this talk: “If we design well we design for shared aliveness” (See: <a href="https://mitpress.mit.edu/9780262536660/"><em>Enlivenment Toward a Poetics for the Anthropocene,</em></a> Andreas Weber, 2019 https://mitpress.mit.edu/9780262536660/</p>
<p>Thank you!</p>
<p><em>This text is based on my keynote talk at the Second Design Ethics Conference, Institute of Design Ethics, Guangdong University China 04 March 2023. My title at the event was “Designing for Shared Aliveness: Caring, Learning, Being”. The conference was curated by Professor Zhang Li, Director of the Design Ethics Research Institute, Guangdong University of Technology.<br />
<strong><br />
</strong></em><strong>+ Footnotes</strong></p>
</div></div></div></div></div></p>
<p>The post <a rel="nofollow" href="https://thackara.com/care/ethics-design-care/">Ethics, Design, Care</a> appeared first on <a rel="nofollow" href="https://thackara.com">John Thackara</a>.</p>
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		<title>Tools for Changemakers: Conversation with David Bollier</title>
		<link>https://thackara.com/commoning/conversation-with-david-bollier/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Kris]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Sat, 19 Mar 2022 09:30:34 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[care]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[civic ecology]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[commoning]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[green finance]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[most read]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://thackara.com/?p=13755</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>Mutual aid. Local money. Collaborative care. Alternative futures are being created around the world -. but not, for the most part, in plain sight. David Bollier’s new book - Commoner’s Catalog for Changemaking: Tools for the Transitions Ahead - brings dozens of social projects like these to the fore. Inspired by The Whole Earth Catalog   [continue ...]</p>
<p>The post <a rel="nofollow" href="https://thackara.com/commoning/conversation-with-david-bollier/">Tools for Changemakers: Conversation with David Bollier</a> appeared first on <a rel="nofollow" href="https://thackara.com">John Thackara</a>.</p>
]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class="fusion-fullwidth fullwidth-box fusion-builder-row-5 fusion-flex-container nonhundred-percent-fullwidth non-hundred-percent-height-scrolling" style="--awb-border-radius-top-left:0px;--awb-border-radius-top-right:0px;--awb-border-radius-bottom-right:0px;--awb-border-radius-bottom-left:0px;--awb-flex-wrap:wrap;" ><div class="fusion-builder-row fusion-row fusion-flex-align-items-flex-start fusion-flex-content-wrap" style="max-width:1248px;margin-left: calc(-4% / 2 );margin-right: calc(-4% / 2 );"><div class="fusion-layout-column fusion_builder_column fusion-builder-column-6 fusion_builder_column_1_1 1_1 fusion-flex-column" style="--awb-bg-size:cover;--awb-width-large:100%;--awb-margin-top-large:0px;--awb-spacing-right-large:1.92%;--awb-margin-bottom-large:0px;--awb-spacing-left-large:1.92%;--awb-width-medium:100%;--awb-spacing-right-medium:1.92%;--awb-spacing-left-medium:1.92%;--awb-width-small:100%;--awb-spacing-right-small:1.92%;--awb-spacing-left-small:1.92%;"><div class="fusion-column-wrapper fusion-flex-justify-content-flex-start fusion-content-layout-column"><div class="fusion-text fusion-text-5"><p><span class="style-scope yt-formatted-string" dir="auto">Mutual aid. Local money. Collaborative care. Alternative futures are being created around the world -. but not, for the most part, in plain sight. David Bollier’s new book &#8211; Commoner’s Catalog for Changemaking: Tools for the Transitions Ahead &#8211; brings dozens of social projects like these to the fore. Inspired by The Whole Earth Catalog of the early 1970s, Bollier’s premise is that “the next big thing will be a lot of small things” &#8211; (words he borrows from the Belgian designer Thomas Lommé). Our conversation here ranges from the history of mutual aid and commoning, to our respect for a pluriverse of cultures that respect all of life, not just human life.</span></p>
<p><span class="yt-core-attributed-string yt-core-attributed-string--white-space-pre-wrap"> <span class="yt-core-attributed-string--link-inherit-color"><span style="">00:00</span></span> &#8211; start <span class="yt-core-attributed-string--link-inherit-color"><a class="yt-core-attributed-string__link yt-core-attributed-string__link--display-type yt-core-attributed-string__link--call-to-action-color" tabindex="0" href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iiOLJgbCsO4&amp;t=30s" target="" rel="nofollow noopener"><br /></a><span style="">00:30</span></span> &#8211; From system critiques to real-world action <span class="yt-core-attributed-string--link-inherit-color"><a class="yt-core-attributed-string__link yt-core-attributed-string__link--display-type yt-core-attributed-string__link--call-to-action-color" tabindex="0" href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iiOLJgbCsO4&amp;t=135s" target="" rel="nofollow noopener"><br /></a><span style="">02:15</span></span> &#8211; The long pre-history of mutual aid <br /><span class="yt-core-attributed-string--link-inherit-color"><span style="">07:48</span></span> &#8211; Knowledge based on practice <span class="yt-core-attributed-string--link-inherit-color"><a class="yt-core-attributed-string__link yt-core-attributed-string__link--display-type yt-core-attributed-string__link--call-to-action-color" tabindex="0" href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iiOLJgbCsO4&amp;t=716s" target="" rel="nofollow noopener"><br /></a><span style="">11:56</span></span> &#8211; The Commons and commoning <br /><span class="yt-core-attributed-string--link-inherit-color"><span style="">13:15</span></span> &#8211; Reimagining value <span class="yt-core-attributed-string--link-inherit-color"><a class="yt-core-attributed-string__link yt-core-attributed-string__link--display-type yt-core-attributed-string__link--call-to-action-color" tabindex="0" href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iiOLJgbCsO4&amp;t=1255s" target="" rel="nofollow noopener"><br /></a><span style="">20:55</span></span> &#8211; The Commoner’s Catalogue <br /><span class="yt-core-attributed-string--link-inherit-color"><span style="">29:42</span></span> &#8211; Ways of being &#8211; a pluriverse <br /><span class="yt-core-attributed-string--link-inherit-color"><span style="">30:43</span></span> &#8211; Animate Earth <br /><span class="yt-core-attributed-string--link-inherit-color"><span style="">36:14</span></span> &#8211; Microbes and social equity <br /><span class="yt-core-attributed-string--link-inherit-color"><span style="">38:48</span></span> &#8211; In this for the long haul <br /><span class="yt-core-attributed-string--link-inherit-color"><span style="">45:32</span></span> &#8211; How do mindsets change? <br /><span class="yt-core-attributed-string--link-inherit-color"><span style="">48:55</span></span> &#8211; The next big thing </span></p>
<h3><span class="yt-core-attributed-string yt-core-attributed-string--white-space-pre-wrap"><b>SOURCES </b><br /></span></h3>
<p><span class="yt-core-attributed-string yt-core-attributed-string--white-space-pre-wrap">David Bollier website (and his other books) <span class="yt-core-attributed-string--link-inherit-color"><a class="yt-core-attributed-string__link yt-core-attributed-string__link--display-type yt-core-attributed-string__link--call-to-action-color" tabindex="0" href="https://www.youtube.com/redirect?event=video_description&amp;redir_token=QUFFLUhqa3ljZ2hIWlRNSUdSU1FObFlSbGpxakZkVDBaZ3xBQ3Jtc0tucngyWnd0VEFFU0hjZmxINlk0Qm95Zk8wQk5Sd3gxZlpCU0FYM0d1MENMOGdVQXhhOVdiV2RQMmlwTW5INDZvWUxxYzAtNUV4RnkwNE5RYjB6V2c5YThBTUJXem9lV085cUdFUXo2UHRzM1pmUUU3TQ&amp;q=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.bollier.org%2F&amp;v=iiOLJgbCsO4" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">http://www.bollier.org/</a></span> <br />David Bollier podcasts <span class="yt-core-attributed-string--link-inherit-color"><a class="yt-core-attributed-string__link yt-core-attributed-string__link--display-type yt-core-attributed-string__link--call-to-action-color" tabindex="0" href="https://www.youtube.com/redirect?event=video_description&amp;redir_token=QUFFLUhqbHpyWWRQT0NfU0JBSGxDdGVlSGc5NUdVUWw5Z3xBQ3Jtc0tsaVJIY0x1dTZWLVl5YUlhTkQyd2Q0TnpFaEZldG1fUzAxYWdPTUgzYU43LWpZY0ptZEVpam9VcjhOMjQ4NlNMSm1kZjNEX0hzRVQ2MS1KX2pWbGRqU2tpQ3V4QXRvaTdweVlGd29sWnh0UkJIUGpBYw&amp;q=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.bollier.org%2Fpodcasts&amp;v=iiOLJgbCsO4" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">http://www.bollier.org/podcasts</a></span> <br />Reimagining Value : Insights from the Care Economy, Commons, Cyberspace and Nature Commons Strategies Group, David Graeber, Heinrich Böll Foundation (book/pdf, 2016) <span class="yt-core-attributed-string--link-inherit-color"><a class="yt-core-attributed-string__link yt-core-attributed-string__link--display-type yt-core-attributed-string__link--call-to-action-color" tabindex="0" href="https://www.youtube.com/redirect?event=video_description&amp;redir_token=QUFFLUhqbkpRRmRjdmVSOENqSzQ4Y1BqRjBNdWozYUJ6Z3xBQ3Jtc0tuZTZqdy1NbzBON2pxZ1dnNHNXZXcwSmlUbm1wYUZtcGR2S3pYODl2SHdFcHJpNDNzU3NnOG4tdElaanZEOE9EcDVwNnlKQTJkTXM5elF4ZGNWUkdmUHktSzlQOVVNdnFXSG96dHBDNVlxby1GTXhYSQ&amp;q=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.boell.de%2Fsites%2Fdefault%2Ffiles%2Fre-imagining-value-report.pdf&amp;v=iiOLJgbCsO4" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">https://www.boell.de/sites/default/fi&#8230;</a></span> </p>
<p>The Commoner’s Catalogue for Changemaking, David Bollier (book/flipbook 2022) David Bollier has posted The Commoner’s Catalog online as a free “flipbook,” licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike license. You can read it, and find weblinks for buying it, at commonerscatalog.org. <br /></span></p>
<p><span class="yt-core-attributed-string yt-core-attributed-string--white-space-pre-wrap">Mutual Aid: A Factor of Evolution, Pëtr Kropotkin (book, 1902/1932) The Russian naturalist and anarchist philosopher Peter Kropotkin explores the role of mutually-beneficial cooperation and reciprocity (or &#8220;mutual aid&#8221;) in the animal kingdom and human societies both past and present. <span class="yt-core-attributed-string--link-inherit-color"><a class="yt-core-attributed-string__link yt-core-attributed-string__link--display-type yt-core-attributed-string__link--call-to-action-color" tabindex="0" href="https://www.youtube.com/redirect?event=video_description&amp;redir_token=QUFFLUhqbC15NGxLS0JYcmtVYXptVEJ3ZkY1NTduSF9BZ3xBQ3Jtc0trTWUtdDBFVWd5VjRSS3dxdWZVcTYzZE1ZN04zVWxEWnlEcG9NdWNheTJFRHZwV041aGJDeFc3dmtoU2FZZklBRkZiWEZtZi11QUh3VmJ3RTJOZjBrRTBxalNENU1CX3pCTDY5NE82cWYzZFdSVG05RQ&amp;q=https%3A%2F%2Ftheanarchistlibrary.org%2Flibrary%2Fpetr-kropotkin-mutual-aid-a-factor-of-evolution&amp;v=iiOLJgbCsO4" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">https://theanarchistlibrary.org/libra&#8230;</a></span> </span></p>
<p><span class="yt-core-attributed-string yt-core-attributed-string--white-space-pre-wrap"></span></p>
<p><span class="yt-core-attributed-string yt-core-attributed-string--white-space-pre-wrap">Animate Earth: Science, Intuition and Gaia, Stephan Harding (book, 2014) How Gaian science can help us to develop a sense of connectedness with the &#8216;more-than-human&#8217; world &#8211; a careful integration of rational scientific analysis with our intuition, sensing and feeling. <span class="yt-core-attributed-string--link-inherit-color"><a class="yt-core-attributed-string__link yt-core-attributed-string__link--display-type yt-core-attributed-string__link--call-to-action-color" tabindex="0" href="https://www.youtube.com/redirect?event=video_description&amp;redir_token=QUFFLUhqbW5hd2tXWGtOZXhsUUNjbXJySWhXSzRhTkpjQXxBQ3Jtc0ttTlBVQTB4NFpBVFA2SlBzcmpsVHZ6NUV3U2lrM1c1eUpUbE5TblBobWRaZk1yT0xzbkFkRkM2SG9kNWthNHFpUnA5YTZsM3E5QlhwbnlPSmZDWXBhM210dUlyRWx1VXJBZnlQYmVLSVE4RzJLU1hJQQ&amp;q=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.greenbooks.co.uk%2Fanimate-earth&amp;v=iiOLJgbCsO4" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">https://www.greenbooks.co.uk/animate-&#8230;</a></span> </span></p>
<p><span class="yt-core-attributed-string yt-core-attributed-string--white-space-pre-wrap"></span></p>
<p><span class="yt-core-attributed-string yt-core-attributed-string--white-space-pre-wrap">Gaia Alchemy: The Reuniting of Science, Psyche, and Soul (book, 2022) A bold exploration of the reintegration of rationality and intuition, science and soul, to foster individual and planetary healing. <span class="yt-core-attributed-string--link-inherit-color"><a class="yt-core-attributed-string__link yt-core-attributed-string__link--display-type yt-core-attributed-string__link--call-to-action-color" tabindex="0" href="https://www.youtube.com/redirect?event=video_description&amp;redir_token=QUFFLUhqbDRCNGtsb0VIeVFpbFdpSFdRLVJWUGVxTGkzZ3xBQ3Jtc0tsUVU2NlpRUXh2ZkZYd1Ryd3RYU0xSV1JZaWVxMVBfSko2T0paNmFkdGlVSnk5QXVITWxmdU1kbjJ6dlFWeUg3MHpKQlZkNnVGMnBMel9HWTQ5VW41eEVZZTE0M0g3M0NlM2xrOUdGa01Sc3V2V3dvMA&amp;q=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.goodreads.com%2Fbook%2Fshow%2F57335884-gaia-alchemy&amp;v=iiOLJgbCsO4" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/5&#8230;</a></span> <br />Debt: The First 5.000 Years, by David Graeber (book, 2014) <span class="yt-core-attributed-string--link-inherit-color"><a class="yt-core-attributed-string__link yt-core-attributed-string__link--display-type yt-core-attributed-string__link--call-to-action-color" tabindex="0" href="https://www.youtube.com/redirect?event=video_description&amp;redir_token=QUFFLUhqbG1hSHNzOTJaOVVibjdyVmxLZHdBZGJ4M0ZId3xBQ3Jtc0tueFE5a1VfS3RVTXJGVXZ5VmJNNG5XYjd0N3U5UElVZk5zTmxpNEVfazRVZkNFd2w1cW1pMElJNmpLSVFmM19sQlljQ2JTakpDOWRYRktkSHJBd2VTOTItdUZUQ2xhN2dLb0hNQnFEMzBucjJodzliVQ&amp;q=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.goodreads.com%2Fbook%2Fshow%2F6617037-debt&amp;v=iiOLJgbCsO4" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/6&#8230;</a></span> <br />Enlivenment : Toward a Poetics for the Anthropocene, by Andreas Weber (book, 2019) <span class="yt-core-attributed-string--link-inherit-color"><a class="yt-core-attributed-string__link yt-core-attributed-string__link--display-type yt-core-attributed-string__link--call-to-action-color" tabindex="0" href="https://www.youtube.com/redirect?event=video_description&amp;redir_token=QUFFLUhqbnpVTHI3eFFQeXpLN2xEWFU5WmNlekw1dm5GZ3xBQ3Jtc0tseHVDZzhnQjhHdGFLQXlsRHFyVUd0UEhUT2lMX1VaWlM5VGZYWmxncUFrVzhyRWtYRE9mMEhYQ3NGWEUzelZQOW1UeW43cUNBdl9rTzQ2cE9PdXhkNG9oVlF2eTh5Vk9HSlFObHR0SEZMZWEzUXV5QQ&amp;q=https%3A%2F%2Fmitpress.mit.edu%2Fbooks%2Fenlivenment&amp;v=iiOLJgbCsO4" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">https://mitpress.mit.edu/books/enlive&#8230;</a></span> <br />Microbes and Social Equity, Interview with Dr Susan Ishaq (video) <span class="yt-core-attributed-string--link-inherit-color"><span class="yt-core-attributed-string--highlight-text-decorator"><a class="yt-core-attributed-string__link yt-core-attributed-string__link--display-type yt-core-attributed-string__link--call-to-action-color fusion-no-lightbox" tabindex="0" href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cdFaJLt89ck&amp;t=0s" target="" rel="noopener">  <span class="yt-core-attributed-string--inline-flex-mod"><img decoding="async" class="yt-core-attributed-string__image-element yt-core-attributed-string__image-element--image-alignment-vertical-center yt-core-image yt-core-image--content-mode-scale-to-fill yt-core-image--loaded" src="https://www.gstatic.com/youtube/img/watch/yt_favicon.png" alt=""></span> • Microbes and Soci&#8230;  </a></span></span> <br />The Great Transformation, by Karl Polanyi (book, 1944) <span class="yt-core-attributed-string--link-inherit-color"><a class="yt-core-attributed-string__link yt-core-attributed-string__link--display-type yt-core-attributed-string__link--call-to-action-color" tabindex="0" href="https://www.youtube.com/redirect?event=video_description&amp;redir_token=QUFFLUhqa0doOHdDaUtFUzhrR0R0SXplVnZZaVJwbXIwd3xBQ3Jtc0tubWlDT3BhYVFWaFhGTTRpc0Y3eE81M0dCa2ozR2VyZmFwLTB3MV9pV21Lc3FOaGxfYnZqLWw5OGFvR2ZISTE4SmliR1ZrbFN2S0huQV9ESkxUcHJVOWFYQmwweFpJWEpvMkppbEMzY05kQ0t5NmVRUQ&amp;q=https%3A%2F%2Fen.wikipedia.org%2Fwiki%2FThe_Great_Transformation_%28book&amp;v=iiOLJgbCsO4" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Gre&#8230;</a></span>) <br /></span></p>
<p><span class="yt-core-attributed-string yt-core-attributed-string--white-space-pre-wrap">Is GDP a doomsday machine? (blog post, 2009) &#8220;Beyond GDP” discussion at Forum d’Avignon Pluriverse: A Post-Development Dictionary, ed. Ashish Kothari et al (book, 2019) <span class="yt-core-attributed-string--link-inherit-color"><a class="yt-core-attributed-string__link yt-core-attributed-string__link--display-type yt-core-attributed-string__link--call-to-action-color" tabindex="0" href="https://www.youtube.com/redirect?event=video_description&amp;redir_token=QUFFLUhqbFFIRVp0dnFDUVlzNWJnSGd4b0YtVTVJa1FBZ3xBQ3Jtc0ttWUN4aVpRS19FVkpibGdMNWpYaE4tTmlYMDRxdnlzOHUxdWVROU9iSVFIWTNUNlBOdW9MVTVRekxQaExDcUl3WTFvc0tsZGticTZLbFBURTY5TGtoX1FOSnJQRmpFTWFVS2dSU2NYUkJ4ZjExQ0pqNA&amp;q=https%3A%2F%2Fdegrowth.org%2F2018%2F04%2F14%2Fnew-book-pluriverse-a-post-development-dictionary%2F&amp;v=iiOLJgbCsO4" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">https://degrowth.org/2018/04/14/new-b&#8230;</a></span> </span></p>
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<p><span class="yt-core-attributed-string yt-core-attributed-string--white-space-pre-wrap">Systems of mutual assistance in Africa, Interview with Mugendi M’Rithaa (2011) <span class="yt-core-attributed-string--link-inherit-color"><a class="yt-core-attributed-string__link yt-core-attributed-string__link--display-type yt-core-attributed-string__link--call-to-action-color" tabindex="0" href="https://www.youtube.com/redirect?event=video_description&amp;redir_token=QUFFLUhqbHVBWVZBYldXOGpfNFJ4cEdhdi1nVXBkM3NVd3xBQ3Jtc0trOTdhaE9jVmRYTGhIZ3JJOEdaWTc3TF84VGJvQkN6ZmhycmZOejV5TEJvTmRNa1dvWndWWU1YdEF5UW1uWjNnSUszMDdjWURpQ3FFOVYxR0lwTlVZT3lNdXYxRmhWUHF4aXJrTWVfcEctUFU3UExTbw&amp;q=http%3A%2F%2Fthackara.com%2Flearning-design%2Fafrica-where-events-are-king-john-thackara-talks-to-mugendi-mrithaa%2F&amp;v=iiOLJgbCsO4" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">http://thackara.com/learning-design/a&#8230;</a></span> </span></p>
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<p><span class="yt-core-attributed-string yt-core-attributed-string--white-space-pre-wrap">Interrupting the dominant narrative, Amador Fernández-Savater (blog post, 2013) <span class="yt-core-attributed-string--link-inherit-color"><a class="yt-core-attributed-string__link yt-core-attributed-string__link--display-type yt-core-attributed-string__link--call-to-action-color" tabindex="0" href="https://www.youtube.com/redirect?event=video_description&amp;redir_token=QUFFLUhqbk5TTEpsUnFaMmgtOFpHV00xQl9fV0JuMzJSUXxBQ3Jtc0ttVTJ4RlpSMC1VSTh1ZnR4TkpmYjh5clN1TTZNRkRxWGY5ck16bVg1S1djcHZwY0hDM0FvTFFtbXNfYURiaEFKLVBzN0dNTGNGTXpObF8tWUdER1ZhSXM5VXNKWVJHdHFnM2VXaERTRHRmZjZtU3B4WQ&amp;q=https%3A%2F%2Fguerrillatranslation.wordpress.com%2Famador-fernandez-savater%2F&amp;v=iiOLJgbCsO4" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">https://guerrillatranslation.wordpres&#8230;</a></span></span></p>
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<p>The post <a rel="nofollow" href="https://thackara.com/commoning/conversation-with-david-bollier/">Tools for Changemakers: Conversation with David Bollier</a> appeared first on <a rel="nofollow" href="https://thackara.com">John Thackara</a>.</p>
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		<title>Microbes and Social Equity &#8211; conversation with Dr Sue Ishaq</title>
		<link>https://thackara.com/knowing/9645/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[John Thackara]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 15 Feb 2022 11:45:33 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[knowing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[most read]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[nature-connection]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://new.thackara.com/?p=9645</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>Ninety nine percent of life, it turns out, is invisible - so how do we design for that? My guest in this conversation is microbiome researcher Dr. Suzanne Ishaq, founder of the Microbes and Social Equity working group</p>
<p>The post <a rel="nofollow" href="https://thackara.com/knowing/9645/">Microbes and Social Equity &#8211; conversation with Dr Sue Ishaq</a> appeared first on <a rel="nofollow" href="https://thackara.com">John Thackara</a>.</p>
]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class="fusion-fullwidth fullwidth-box fusion-builder-row-6 fusion-flex-container nonhundred-percent-fullwidth non-hundred-percent-height-scrolling" style="--awb-border-radius-top-left:0px;--awb-border-radius-top-right:0px;--awb-border-radius-bottom-right:0px;--awb-border-radius-bottom-left:0px;--awb-flex-wrap:wrap;" ><div class="fusion-builder-row fusion-row fusion-flex-align-items-stretch fusion-flex-content-wrap" style="max-width:1248px;margin-left: calc(-4% / 2 );margin-right: calc(-4% / 2 );"><div class="fusion-layout-column fusion_builder_column fusion-builder-column-7 fusion_builder_column_1_1 1_1 fusion-flex-column" style="--awb-bg-blend:overlay;--awb-bg-size:cover;--awb-width-large:100%;--awb-margin-top-large:0px;--awb-spacing-right-large:1.92%;--awb-margin-bottom-large:0px;--awb-spacing-left-large:1.92%;--awb-width-medium:100%;--awb-spacing-right-medium:1.92%;--awb-spacing-left-medium:1.92%;--awb-width-small:100%;--awb-spacing-right-small:1.92%;--awb-spacing-left-small:1.92%;"><div class="fusion-column-wrapper fusion-flex-justify-content-flex-start fusion-content-layout-column"><div class="fusion-text fusion-text-6"><p>The more we learn about life on earth, the clearer it becomes that the well-being of humans, and of non-humans, is inter-connected. They are a single story. Sustainable design, in this context, means designing for all of life &#8211; not just human life. That’s a big step! Not so long ago, human-centered design was considered progressive in itself &#8211; and now we have to design for all of life? All of life is not just large, visible lifeforms &#8211; like trees, or bears. It also includes microbes that are all around us, and inside us &#8211; but invisibly. Ninety nine percent of life, it turns out, is invisible &#8211; so how do we design for that? To begin that conversation, my guest in this conversation is Dr. Suzanne Ishaq &#8211; a microbiome researcher and founder of the Microbes and Social Equity working group</p>
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<p>The post <a rel="nofollow" href="https://thackara.com/knowing/9645/">Microbes and Social Equity &#8211; conversation with Dr Sue Ishaq</a> appeared first on <a rel="nofollow" href="https://thackara.com">John Thackara</a>.</p>
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