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The2ndWheel Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jul-30-07 08:43 PM
Original message
Diesel-Driven Bee Slums and Impotent Turkeys
http://www.tomdispatch.com/post/174826/chip_ward_how_efficiency_maximizes_catastrophe

Resilience. You may not have heard much about it, but brace yourself. You're going to hear that word a lot in the future. It is what we have too little of as our world slips into unpredictable climate chaos. "Resilience thinking," the cutting edge of environmental science, may someday replace "efficiency" as the organizing principle of our economy.

Our current economic system is designed to maximize outputs and minimize costs. (That's what we call efficiency.) Efficiency eliminates redundancy, which is abundant in nature, in favor of finding the one "best" way of doing something -- usually "best" means most profitable over the short run -- and then doing it that way and that way only. And we aim for control, too, because it is more efficient to command than just let things happen the way they will. Most of our knowledge about how natural systems work is focused on how to get what we want out of them as quickly and cheaply as possible -- things like timber, minerals, water, grain, fish, and so on. We're skilled at breaking systems apart and manipulating the pieces for short-term gain.

Think of resiliency, on the other hand, as the ability of a system to recover from a disturbance. Recovery requires options to that one "best" way of doing things in case that way is blocked or disturbed. A resilient system is adaptable and diverse. It has some redundancy built in. A resilient perspective acknowledges that change is constant and prediction difficult in a world that is complex and dynamic. It understands that when you manipulate the individual pieces of a system, you change that system in unintended ways. Resilience thinking is a new lens for looking at the natural world we are embedded in and the manmade world we have imposed upon it.
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Dogmudgeon Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jul-30-07 09:10 PM
Response to Original message
1. GliderGuider (Paul Chefurka) writes about this topic
You ought to check out his blog. His essays are some of the best I've read. Not easy reading, but well worth the time.

Paul Chefurka`s Peak Oil and the World Problematique

--p!
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The2ndWheel Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jul-31-07 08:47 AM
Response to Reply #1
2. Yeah, I know
I posted the article for his ego.

Just joking :evilgrin:
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