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RDM's avatar

I think I see a ("the"?) problem here.

Short preface - every process (sandpile, road system, human city) faces scale issues. Usually we see this in terms of 'space' ("Oh my, where DO i put all this stuff?") and things like landslides, congestion, and ecosystem exhaustion. ("Move West, young man, and find that sweet, sweet, topsoil!")

But scale can be in terms of time, too - and as our lovely Screen Kultcha drags us ever-closer to a 5 second dopamine-soaked attention span (median American barely reads a book a year, but "I luv me some good TikTube and FaceGram!"), the solutions to our challenges require longer-term thinking. Like Permaculture, for one.

Upshot: I can't see these *great* solutions being successfully and broadly implemented until we break through the 5 second, high time preference, short horizon "singularity" we are "accelerating" towards...

(I agree w/ Pirsig -- a partial collapse, racheting down a level...or two...(cf. "Lila") followed by a long dormant period, and rebuilding. "Paging Dr. Hari Seldon, Trantor courtesy phone...paging Dr. Seldon...")

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Allen Frantzen's avatar

I loved reading your essay on soil health and will make sure my farmer brother and his son both see it. Back in the 1950s my father was among the first Iowa farmers to experiment with contour planting and plowing--planting and plowing in curves around hills rather than in straight rows that allowed soil erosion. At the time nobody thought about conservation, but soil conversation became a big thing through country groups called "extension" offices--extending, I believe now, ideas from universities to farmers and farms. Farming has moved on, of course, satellites, chemicals, and so on. My father never finished high school, which not unusual in rural areas then (he was born in 1910), but we were proud to know that he was on the front lines, so to speak, of new farming methods.

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