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#16
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#17
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Well all I know is that she doesn't like technology, but that's about it.
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#18
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I don't think it's that Aurora doesn't like technology, probably more that she has very specific ways she'd like to see it used
My guess, but Aurora should come set me straight if that's wrong.
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#19
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Just a question, but why can't something that has an explanation be magical, I mean if a magic has an explanation, it's still magic.
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"Pardon me, I wanna live in a fantasy" "I wish I was a sacrifice but somehow still lived on" It seems like everybody is moving forward. As if there is some final goal they can achieve and get to. I don't get it though. When I look around, it seems like I'm already there, and there is nothing left to do. "You think you're so clever and classless and free, but you're still ****ing peasants as far as I can see." I wish I could take just one hour of what I experience out in nature, wrap it in a box, put a bow on it, and start handing out to people Nature has its own religion; gospel from the land I know I was born and I know that I'll die; The in between is mine." |
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#20
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He hasn't insulted anyone in this thread.
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![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Misery Forever. |
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#21
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#22
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That topic is a bit more complicated indeed. Technology can include by definition many things from making fire all the way up to genetic modification. I think however that there are appropriate and sustainable technologies and those who are not, I think that the relationship to technology is vastly important and do not accept a blind faith in technology to solve every problem. and I think that a lot of especially modern technology when used to the extent it is done now is destroying too much of what I love - this planet and the living beings on it. As some of you know, I am a scientist - i am working with technology daily, do chemistry for a living and used to build electronics and program software back when I was young in the 1980ies. I am no stranger to technology - but over all these years of digging it, I also found out some things that led me to the conclusions that I write here.
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Know your idols: Who said "Hitler killed five million Jews. It is the greatest crime of our time. But the Jews should have offered themselves to the butcher's knife. They should have thrown themselves into the sea from cliffs.". (Solution: "Mahatma" Ghandi) Stop terraforming Earth (wordpress) "Humans are storytellers. These stories then can become our reality. Only when we loose ourselves in the stories they have the power to control us. Our culture got lost in the wrong story, a story of death and defeat, of opression and control, of separation and competition. We need a new story!" |
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#23
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We also may have a semantic issue on our hands when it comes to naivety. Perhaps I could use the word romantic, but that overlaps somewhat with idealism already, so I don't really know. Words in themselves are sometimes too rigid in their definitions and how they are used to relay information, but this is also something we can't go around. Quote:
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#24
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But still, even if something is objective, still the subjective considerations of people involved cannot be ignored. If people are afraid of lets say cellphone radiation and science finds only few evidence of it causeing cancer, people will still be afraid. You can try to convince them otherwise, show them studies and all that, but in the end I think one has to accept that these people do not want to have a transmitter installed across the road. At that point one can act in two ways - not build it because one respects the fear of these people and building it would cause them to be unhappy, fearful and maybe develop psychologically induced illness. Or one can - and sadly this is all too often the case - just ignore their concerns out of the reasoning that their subjectiveness is irrelevant in the face of the own (perceived or real) objectivity. And at that point objectivity can be used in the wrong way - and it does all the time. Another example for this is the inability to objectively determine the value of a species, the scent of a flower, the beautiy of a butterfly or the feeling of being at home. Thus for someone, a certain flower or a beloved tree can be extremely valuable while for someone else it is a temporary decoration or a couple of meters of 2x4s. Objectivity just does not have the ability to cover every aspect of human and nonhuman life. Quote:
- I think its the relationship between them, not some "flawed human nature" or a inherent "evilness of technology". However I think that a lot of modern technology is based on a lack of relationship or the wrong kind of relationship, hence it is destructive and that cannot easily be mitigated because if something is born out of a bad relationship it is extremely hard to set it right. From what I know for example about the Mayans (littele do I know yet), it seems they did have certain rituals involving respect, consideration, thankfulness and thoughfulness when they took something from the Earth, like a lump of metal to make objects. This technological act to use something from the Earth and make it into something useful or beautiful for humans was given proper consideration - it was thought of what it will do to the place that it is taken from, determined if something has to be done to heal it and there was of course also spiritual rituals involved that made such an act one that was only done when it is "worth it". In contrast at present day, the minerals are ripped off the Earth, considered to be free of charge, "undeveloped resources" and therelike. Little consideration is given to the place that it is taken from unless demanded by regulators and the materials gained are sold as cheaply as possible. I think there is a fundamental discrepancy here in the relationship and I think a positive relationship is possibly incompatible with the technologies of mining that we use today (with huge open pits, tailings, toxic chemicals and acidic mine drainage). I took mining just as an illustrative example here - please dont make this thread one about mining...
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Know your idols: Who said "Hitler killed five million Jews. It is the greatest crime of our time. But the Jews should have offered themselves to the butcher's knife. They should have thrown themselves into the sea from cliffs.". (Solution: "Mahatma" Ghandi) Stop terraforming Earth (wordpress) "Humans are storytellers. These stories then can become our reality. Only when we loose ourselves in the stories they have the power to control us. Our culture got lost in the wrong story, a story of death and defeat, of opression and control, of separation and competition. We need a new story!" |
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#25
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In summation, I want to advocate such technology that can allow us to stop abusing nature as we do, while still retaining most of modern comforts we enjoy today. Technology is a tool to solve problems, and while the people in the mining industry don't see their destructive behaviour as a problem, and thus aren't interested investing in developing technologies that are more resource efficient, or don't require physical materials to begin with. I think I need lots of sugar or something to wake my brain up, because I feel like zombie or something... |
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#26
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I think it's more incompatible with industrialisation. I also think it would be naive to think that industrialisation can be put back into it's genie-lamp; the only way you could do that would be to make material processing economically irrelevant, and that's not happening any time soon.
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#27
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For once the mentioned abuse of objectivity. Because some people claim to have objective proof that something does no harm gives them the perceived right to do it because the others wont be affected. So the cellphone lovers would say that studies show that cellphone towers do not harm people, so they can build it even if the neighbors do not want it, because it does not harm them according to the perceived objectivity. But that ignores the problem of subjectivity because for those neighbors who do not think the studies are conclusive or even for those who are just "supersitious" it is still a violation. The only possible way out would be to build cellphone towers only in places where no one in the vicinity has any objections and if they have objections to educate and convince them. But in many cases the shortcut is taken, the cellphone tower is built and if someone complains they are slapped in the face with some studies or data that "prove" that there is no harm done. I think this is elitist, arrogant and undemocratic. The other thing is that with the present technologies, or at least most of them, the repercussions of using them are carried by someone else. The cars we drive create global warming in Africa, oil spills in the Niger delta, displace indigenous in the Amazon and create acid mine drainage in Chile. The cellphones we use create toxic lakes in REE mining in China, impacts of copper and gold mining in South America and end up polluting the air and soil and people in crude attempts of recycling in Africa. In most cases the people living there profit a lot less of these technologies than the burden they carry (often they dont have a car and one usually has no more than one cellphone). This also happens on a more local scale. And it happens massively with nonhumans. I would not mind zip if some people want to have all kinds of technologies if they would themselves bear all the impacts and consequences of it. If they want, they can also have death camps and wars. But the confinement of the impacts is impossible with present technologies, so in most cases some people suffer and some other people endulge in the benefits. Quote:
The auto industry will become economically irrelevant when oil runs out, so will oil and gas driven industrial agriculture. In some cases, new technologies can replace the ones that hit limits, but in some cases it simply is not feasible economically. For example it is simply impossible to drive all the cars with bioethanol and if it would be possible it would be way more expensive, so that it would be madness to keep up the highway system for the remaining cars. Many times these new technologies run into new limits again and the cycle seems to go faster and faster as technological development goes faster and faster. A new technology might hit limits within a few years after its boom and maybe even before it managed to replace the old technology completely. I mean few people would have thought that rare Earth mining would become a limiting factor to the transition to renewable energy in such a short time. Or that Uranium production actually will peak within a few decades. To stick with your analogy of the Djinn and the bottle - if we cannot bring him back into the bottle but find that with every wish that we are granted he distorts it in a way that causes massive damage elsewhere or to ourselves or our children - what do we do? In the story the Djinn is either tricked back into the bottle or he is somehow defeated. If he was always only doing good things he might also be freed. But I dont think we deal with a Djinn that only does good - we are dealing with one of Chaos that gives you a beautiful flower and kills a forest to make it....
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Know your idols: Who said "Hitler killed five million Jews. It is the greatest crime of our time. But the Jews should have offered themselves to the butcher's knife. They should have thrown themselves into the sea from cliffs.". (Solution: "Mahatma" Ghandi) Stop terraforming Earth (wordpress) "Humans are storytellers. These stories then can become our reality. Only when we loose ourselves in the stories they have the power to control us. Our culture got lost in the wrong story, a story of death and defeat, of opression and control, of separation and competition. We need a new story!" |
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#28
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However, those studies are actually referring to cell phones themselves, and we aren't making neighbours get cell phones. We're just building cell towers. And according to the World Health Organization, there's absolutely no risk, other than a clinically insignificant rise in core temperature. Quote:
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#29
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To chip in here, wealth and money are not synonymous. The Na'vi do not have a system of money, but it's nigh-impossible for them not to have a concept of wealth. I'm sure that leaders' family (I can't remember the exact titles) will be one of the wealthier members of the tribe.
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#30
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In what way? What would the leaders have that other Na'vi wouldn't?
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