
A Biological Revolution
SamfunnGlobal Warming and mass extinction are all one problem. A path to amelioration and adaptation. Cover art photo: Abe the donkey in light working harness, by Jeff McFadden
Siste episoder av A Biological Revolution podcast
- Living the Dream (00:48:21)
How are people going to be induced to accept a biologically powered life? Some thoughts.
- The Scientific Case (00:57:35)
An assembling of known scientific facts from disparate specialties to generate a more accurate picture of the present situation.
- Population (00:52:13)
Discussing whether human population numbers are already fatally high. I believe we can support over 7 billion people in health on a properly managed Earth.
- Stick It To The Man (01:01:16)
He who owns petroleum owns the world. Set yourself free.
- Rejoining Life (00:32:39)
I don't understand the idea that we must accept mass extinction and destruction in order to be civilized humans. A discussion.
- Revelation (01:03:56)
I had a revelation, and epiphany. I was introduced to the ideas of Mark Shepard, Permanent Agriculture designer / operator. It was the missing piece of my system.
- Water management 1 (01:08:45)
Discussing affordable biological practices available starting today to ameliorate flash flooding and drought.
- Is it realistic? (00:52:13)
A mixed bag, rambling discussion of whether a biology-based society is "realistic."
- Property (00:43:24)
An exploration of property in society and the intersection of property rights and a survivable planet.
- Considering Hard Science (01:04:27)
In which I consider the current state of scientific knowledge as regards global warming, and explain how it supports my conclusions.
- Adapt or Ameliorate (00:56:32)
Should we make a higher priority of ameliorating global warming, or of adapting to the inevitable? What if I told you the workable, biological solution does both at once?
- From Here To There (00:27:43)
Some housekeeping, followed by a discussion of steps toward creating a biologically powered city.
- How we got here (00:43:59)
The three past revolutions, cognitive, agricultural, industrial, and a proposed one: biological.