
Previous discussions on this are currently scattered in multiple places, but I'd like to gather them here.
That is what I intend. However, I think that assumption is way too wide to cover all humans. Only a fraction (<20%?) of humans act in their long-term self-interest. As such a complete "why"-carrot must also provide a "why" for those who sacrifice health for other gains, e.g. having a cigarette to relax, a snack for the taste or sugar rush, avoiding sweat, avoiding cognitive dissonance or tribal ejection, ...J_ wrote: ↑Mon Sep 13, 2021 9:13 amI have formulated some "carrot vectors" from the starting point that most individuals prefer health to illness, and that most of them prefer a state of well-being over personal misery. I assume that every person want to be fully human rather than that he wants to be sick, pained or dead.
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Is it this what you intend Jacob?
Topics need to at least be at the post-conventional meaning making stage. That means taking the interaction with and within the whole into account. Any kind of *gress is fine. Thus, for example, talking about "promising technology" is fine if it also considers the interaction with the economy, culture, scalable adaption, etc. in terms of resource, producer, consumer, recovery. It would quickly become yet another PopSci article if it's just about how shiny the gadget is.
The short answer would be that ERE1 and ERE2 are but two perspectives (egocentric and worldcentric) on the same [Jain] elephant.
For the more religiously minded, Rod Dreher already wrote a book about this, called The Benedict Option, which is a community-minded attempt at preservation. He was of course talking culturally/religiously; but I see it all linked. And it's not necessarily forming a commune out in the sticks (assuming you can find some "sticks"); it's really more about defining your "tribe," even if that tribe is living in a heavily populated urban environment surrounded by lots of non-tribe members.jacob wrote: ↑Mon Oct 04, 2021 1:45 pmTL;DR - There are limits to self-reliance. Even highly skilled individually venturing into the wilderness are only good for maybe 6-12 months. That's why ostracization was considered such a big deal historically, whereas today skilled individuals would just go "pffft whatever". This danger is currently dismissed due to a strong belief that "insofar that those who know the trick can just move elsewhere", like https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ee2VtoYYQis ... but humanity has already run out of elsewhere... it's just not universally apparent.
Perfect, this is what I was trying to say about "tribe." In CS Lewis's 4 Loves he explains pretty clearly (it's not rocket science) how "love" in the abstract, global sense just doesn't work. It's the familial bonds that matter, and then extend those out to cousins, second cousins, "blood of my blood" and so forth.Jin+Guice wrote: ↑Mon Oct 04, 2021 2:39 pmSomething else to consider is that moving from the individual to the global ignores the familial, social, neighborhood, city, region, and national (grouping somewhat arbitrary, but I think you know what I mean, nested model thing I'm pretty sure is used in 'Limits to Growth'). What are the solutions at each of these levels and are some of them the same?
Indeed, this is why humankind's ethnocentric/tribal days are almost over whether by natural or moral means. With humanity comprising 30% of mammalian biomass and our food habits constituting 60% more, we're almost out of room and life-support. (30+60 is very close to 100). Everything we do as individuals is now at the expense of other humans or the food habits of other humans.Hristo Botev wrote: ↑Mon Oct 04, 2021 2:33 pmBut . . . , there's got to be something more serving as the glue to hold that ERE2 tribe together other than sheer survival, when at some level that survival is going to be at the expense of someone else.
Ha! I was about to respond to this with a "you've got to be kidding me!".
Yeah, I tend to agree. I'm someone who believes that God literally came to Earth and took on human form to bring about this "far reaching empathy" end; 2,000 years out it looks like we still have a LOT of work to do.
I think that's a fair assessment. I'm still [in the process of] constructing the/that ERE2 framework. Figuring out the right questions to ask. WL8.5. I don't have actionable tips or tricks or prescriptions to present yet. I'm still exploring the territory, figuring out how to map it before it's too late.Jin+Guice wrote: ↑Mon Oct 04, 2021 2:39 pmOk, correct me if I'm wrong, but it seems like you're still in the formulation stage of ERE2? I've watched both stoa talks but I'm still unclear on what ERE2 actually is in terms actionable personal/ collective practice. This might be bc you are still figuring it out or maybe bc it does not have actionable practice?
In retrospect, ERE1 was mainly about reducing the personal and societal damage from personal actions. ERE2 is about adding actual value and solutions. There's a difference between "not being part of the problem" and "being part of the solution".Jin+Guice wrote: ↑Mon Oct 04, 2021 2:39 pmMy summary of salient points of ERE1 to this discussion are:
(1) ERE1 was constructed to reduce personal impact on the environment.
(2) ERE1 accomplished this by encouraging followers to reduce personal consumption, which almost perfectly correlates to environmental impact.
(3) ERE1 encouraged followers to reduce personal consumption by pointing out how hollow/ shallow an existence based on consumption of manufactured goods is. It then provided detailed yet simple instructions on how to remove oneself from the work->consume cycle that any modern day consumer was sure to be familiar with and able (if not willing) to execute.
No... the standard vernacular is something like mitigation, adaption, and survival. That presumes decline, attempts to slowing it down, failing to do so, and making do. I think ERE1 already does that. ERE2 is an adaptive attempt to avoid survival-mode.
Getting humanity out of Kegan3 is THE problem due to physical space-limitations. Currently throwing mud at the wall ...Jin+Guice wrote: ↑Mon Oct 04, 2021 2:39 pmSomething else to consider is that moving from the individual to the global ignores the familial, social, neighborhood, city, region, and national (grouping somewhat arbitrary, but I think you know what I mean, nested model thing I'm pretty sure is used in 'Limits to Growth'). What are the solutions at each of these levels and are some of them the same?
Hopefully such a point exists ... so once it's found ...
In a post-liberal world, I for one am banking on/hoping for (praying for) a Catholic monarchy who will enforce a distributist/localist model along the lines of GK Chesterton/Rerum Novarum/Wendell Berry. Because it seems to me that, short of that, the only way we avoid "survival-mode" is with all of our brains "safely" sucked up to the Machine.*
So is it:
Thanks for clarifying, I didn't think of it that way. Is there any example of a person or small movement that existed at the personal/ family level that was then extrapolated to change thinking and social organization on this scale? It seems to me that the human thinking and social organization we see today happened by evolution, not design, so it will be impossible/ very difficult to change by design.