Favorite nursery customer:
Favorite wife:
Favorite E-mail assistant:
Favorite cat nose:
— — — —
– Yah. Now you get the drift of what we’re up to here…
– the conversation my previous post referred to has continued. Today, one of my correspondents posed a question to the group. He asked how can we have development and go forward if we are agonizing all the time (paralysis by analysis) about unintended consequences?
– Another correspondent answered that in the case of something like a new AIDS drug, the scientists involved would weigh the benefits predicted from the drug against the possible risks and if they found that the world’s population would benefit, they would proceed.
– I liked that formulation a lot and said so but I also thought that it missed the point of where most of our problems with unintended consequences derive from.
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I believe the optimal solution to these quandaries, regarding unintended consequences and development, doesn’t lie within our civilization or within human behavior and goals as they are currently configured.
So long as human beings are blindly acting out their biological imperatives and so long as our civilization is predicated on the idea that its future health depends on its continuing growth, and so long as we operate under systems which put profits and personal gains above the good of people en masse, then the kinds of problems posed here seem, to me, inevitable.
In a possible future world wherein mankind has transcended its biological imperatives and reoriented to living within a fixed footprint on the Earth which is small enough to allow it to live within the planet’s renewable resources and thus establish a steady-state balance with the biosphere and allow the rest of biological evolution here on Earth to continue its progress without our interference,   in *that* world many of our quandaries would be diminished.
In that world, all major decisions would be critiqued first with regard to how well they would augment or degrade mankind’s consciously chosen primary goals (fixed footprint, live within the renewables, maintain a steady-state balance, don’t interfere with biological evolution). And I think it would also be a given that once those core criteria had been satisfied, then the next critique, on something new that was proposed for implementation, would be to consider the health and happiness of the human population. No longer in the top rank of our criteria for implementation would be the vested interests of the powerful, the profit margins of the corporations, or whether or not investors could continue to make good profits.
As human beings, we might feel this order is backwards (the idea that we would consider the biosphere first) – but then, that is a good deal of what’s wrong with today’s world, isn’t it? People and the implementation of their desires (read biological imperatives) are ascendant over everything and thus all balance is lost.
In our current world, our choices (or the choices made for us) are frequently a function of how well those choices support the expansionist goals of individuals, states or corporations and this is very destructive.
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But, I have to stop and acknowledge here that this line of thought I’ve developed is truly distant and removed from the world as we now know it. And, while it may be interesting to think about, it isn’t likely to be manifested anytime soon and thus it is not immediately relevant to solving the kinds of questions M. and J. were discussing here.
M. wondered how science might deal with the kinds of concerns I raised about unintended consequences without stifling development of future products (“paralysis through analysis”).
J., discussing the development of a potential new AIDS related drug, replied that an analysis of the predicted benefits vs. the lack of any concrete information about potential adverse consequences, would probably lead scientists to conclude that developing the drug would be in the bests interest’s of the world’s population.
I couldn’t agree more with all of this. We have to go forward and solve the problems before us and the best analysis we can muster of risks vs. benefits to the world’s population is our best and only way to proceed.
But not all development decisions are driven by considerations of what’s best for human populations are they? Nor are they driven by long term concerns of what’s best for the biosphere (of which we are a part and a beneficiary).  No, many decisions we make are driven by profit and power motives; personal, state and corporate.
And this is where I think we need to look closely at the problem and drive the wedge.
All you said, J., is good. If only all decisions were actually made based on what’s best for the world’s population. But, sadly, it is not so.
So when I raise flags about unintended consequences, I am primarily referring to those consequences which derive from decisions focused on profit or power or other goals other than the good of the world’s population.
I know that in some drug trials, those primarily driven by science and compassion for people, there will still be unintended consequences occasionally – it’s unavoidable. But I trust that in these cases, we’ve done what we could to be careful and therefore the problems that do result, while regrettable, are unavoidable unless we want to simply stop all forward progress.
But when we develop chemicals for profit and strew them throughout our environments so that companies can provide good investment returns to their stock holders, I am less accepting of it.
When we set up limits on things like lead in our water and we set the lower acceptable level based on industry testimony as to what they can ‘afford’ to deal with rather than on what’s best for the human populations involved, I am less accepting of it.
Does Craig Venter genuinely want to develop custom bacteria for the good of the world’s populations? Or is there the promise of huge profits involved in these decisions? Does he want to create these bacteria so that the world will be safer and saner place for its inhabitants in the future? Or because he and his backers want to create tools which will allow the run-away expansion of the biochemical industry to go even faster for even bigger profits?
We need to recognize that to the extend that our decisions are driven in favor of profits and corporations, in favor of vested interests and the wealthy and NOT in favor of the health and welfare of the world’s population, to this extend, we are just asking for a major harvest of unintended consequences.
I’m not suggesting that we stop development and progress, I am strongly suggesting that until they are driven by the good of the wold’s population rather than profits, the population will suffer. And this is, to me, really the point of all this.
A friend of mine wrote me the other day and objected to some comments of mine about an article from the New York Times entitled, “From a Few Genes, Life’s Myriad Shapes”. The article was about an entirely new way of looking at how evolution proceeds – not by codon mutations but by small changes in the degree to which genes are expressed.
Specifically, he questioned my statement that, “As human beings, we seem constitutionally unable to think well about what we don’t know.” I had been reacting to the fact that breakthroughs like this tend to point up just how very much we don’t yet know. An observation which is at odds with the observable fact that normally as human beings we are quite obsessed and pleased with ourselves over how much we do know – and don’t think much about what we don’t know.
Interestingly, just a day or so later, he sent along another article about some work Craig Venter‘s doing. He’s going to make a new bacteria from scratch. He’s going to create a new form of life never before seen on Earth.
I found it hard to think of anything my friend could have sent that would have provided me a better example of what I’m concerned about.
Molecular Biology is an area we only partially understand. In just the last five years, there have been two major revolutions in our understanding. The first was when we came to understand that much of what we previously thought of as ‘Junk DNA’ in our genomes was really part of a major system of RNA regulation running in parallel with the DNA mechanisms we’d previous understood. Then, much more recently, as described in the article about “From a Few Genes, Life’s Myriad Shapes” it was revealed that we’ve now suddenly understood that much of evolution doesn’t occur because of actual mutations in the codons but rather because of changes in the set-points of gene expressions.
Nature’s had over three billion years to work out ever more and more deeply intertwined and complex systems of molecular machinery and humanity is just embarking on understanding small parts of it. Every breakthrough we make reveals, in part, the depth of our previous lack of understanding.
Now Venter wants to make an artificial bacteria. He wants to make something completely new to biology. Has no one heard of the Law of Unintended Consequences? Has no one read “Cat’s Cradle” and the fictional saga of Ice-9?
But, back to my original thought that, “As human beings, we seem constitutionally unable to think well about what we don’t know.” I submit that we tend to focus the vast majority of our thoughts and considerations on what we know and only a small amount on what we don’t know. And, I also believe that we are largely incapable of doing it any other way. When we evolved, there were few survival payoffs for those who could think about what we didn’t yet know. Evolution didn’t create us to have clear perceptions – it created us to survive and it didn’t care if that played havoc with the fidelity of our perceptions or not.
But, to get a better grip on what true fidelity in thinking might look like (and I’m contending that our current manner of thinking most definitely lacks fidelity in the sense that it does not accurately represent reality as it can be shown to exist), consider the following:
Ever since the Enlightenment, mankind has been discovering new things that it did not previously know. The implication, by simple extrapolation, is that there is an enormous amount of stuff to still be discovered in the future. And, I’d contend further that this stuff we don’t yet know is probably far vaster than the small amount we have grasped to date.
So, an accurate fidelity-based, manner of thinking about reality would always ground itself in the fact that regardless of what we do know, we must consciously acknowledge that there’s always a vastly larger amount of stuff that we don’t know about and it is just as significant, if not more significant, as what we know.
Seen in this light, our inattention to what we don’t know combined with the Law of Unintended Consequences, implies huge risks to us. Especially in molecular biology where we are aborigines who’ve understood only a few things here and there out of the vast collection of machinery we are gazing at.
And now, Mr. Venter is going to cobble up some new ersatz bacteria and potentially turn them loose in the natural mix. It makes as much sense to me as dropping wrenches into a huge system of whirling gears to see if they’ll make things better or worse. Oh, I understand that they will take precautions and try to make the little bugs innocous. I’m sure they will – but the Law of Unintended Consequences has bit us over and over again. And we are messing with deadly serious stuff here.
I’ve written about this general idea here before.
When we send the Shuttle into orbit, the engineers try to work out every possible contingency and have a back up plan for everything. And, in spite of their best efforts, we’ve lost two shuttles over the years. I guarantee you that the shuttles and all of their systems are far far less complex that the biochemistry we depend on for life.
So why then do we think nothing of inventing chemicals that have never been seen before in the natural world and putting them into our fields and our water and even our foods (Tran fats). Bird shells are breaking, frogs are dying, human females are reaching menarche much earlier than before, the sex of fish are changing in the streams, many types of cancer are on the rise. God only knows how many ghosts we have loosed in the machine which have yet to reappear. We are messing badly with natural systems we don’t understand and we are mostly oblivious to the fact that we are pissing into our own (and our only) watering holes.
We have the ability to understand many of our foibles. Just look at this list of cognitive biases.
Given that we make these mistakes over and over again to the point where academics have defined them, wouldn’t it seem like we should try to educate ourselves to transcend these predictable and well understood sources of confusion?
Given that we understand the concept of fidelity in perception, wouldn’t it make sense that we should try to understand where our lack of such fidelity leads us astray?
E.O. Wilson, in “The Future of Life“, made much of the fact that our perceptions and our thinking were not evolved for fidelity but rather for survival.
We know that one’s best hope of dealing effectively and efficiently with the problems that confront one depends on having accurate (good fidelity) perceptions of how the things that are causing us problems work.
We really need to start putting some of these ideas together for our own benefit.
So, yes, I stand by my assertion that, “As human beings, we seem constitutionally unable to think well about what we don’t know.” And, I don’t think it is just an interesting question for philosophers who like to ponder obscure stuff.
I think it is a critical problem for our species right now in our evolution and particularly now as we’re about to go into what E.O. Wilson calls “The Bottleneck” and what I’ve been calling “The Perfect Storm“.
We don’t understand ourselves and what motivates us. We don’t understand the natural world around us but we have no apparent fear of messing with it inordinately. And we don’t understand or acknowledge our limitations. Frankly, we are a mess and our world shows it.
In short, there is a huge amount that we don’t understand – including the fact that there’s a huge amount that we don’t understand that is directly relevant to our survival in the near future. And we go on, most of us, convinced that we understand most of what’s important and the small bits that are left can’t be that important.
Can you say Hubris?
“The very word secrecy is repugnant in a free and open society. And we are as a people inherently and historically opposed to secret societies, the secret oaths, and secret proceedings. We are opposed around the world by a monolithic and ruthless conspiracy that relies primarily on covet means for expanding its fear of influence. On infiltration instead of invasion, on subversion instead of election, on intimidation instead of free choice. It is a system which has conscripted vast human and material resources into the building of a tightly knit highly efficient machine that combines military, diplomatic, intelligence, economic, scientific, and political operations. Its preparations are concealed, not published. Its mistakes are buried, not headlined. Its dissenters are silenced, not praised. No expenditure is questioned, no secret is revealed. The Athenian lawmaker Solon decreed ‘it is a crime for any citizen to shrink from controversy’. I am asking your help in the tremendous task of informing and alerting the American people. Confident that with your help, man will be what he was born to be, free and independent.”
– JFK
– JFK may have thought he was talking about the Communists and their methods. But I think we can view his words in quite a different light these days.
– thx to Lisa G. for this quote.
I’ve not been posting lately. I’m in a deep rethink on several subjects:
– idealism vs. pragmatism
– focusing on the dark side vs. the light
I’ve not come to the bottom of it yet but I think they’ll be some changes to samadhisoft’s focus in the future.
Great doubt, great awakening.
Little doubt, little awakening.
No doubt, no awakening.– Zen Koan
– Our beloved cat, Pythia, passed away today. She was a very special and loving cat and she’ll be missed around here. May we meet again, my sweet and beloved cat.
Alright – another day. Let’s see what’s happening out there; let’s try to be upbeat.
Well, Bush has successfully frustrated any momentum at the G8 meeting to craft anything with definite edges on it. Bush’s actions (can we call them successes?) at the G8 meeting expand farther than that august body and its pontifications because he has also, within the last week, probably put the final nails in the Kyoto coffin and left Kyoto II stillborn.
So, nothing’s going to be done but what can be done without interfering with ongoing consumption patterns and economic growth – that’s was a central part of China’s pledge to try to do better environmentally. Jeez – that made me feel better. Australia has also begun to think environmentally but only if the economy is not damaged. Oh, that’s good – we certainly wouldn’t want to put a crimp in anyone’s consumption obsessions.
The US feels so strongly about the rightness of this “Consume, Grow the Economy and Ignore the Nay Sayers” mantra that they’ve decided that even the military’s concerns are probably just tree-hugger deceptions.
Meanwhile, the UN is warning that millions of livelihoods will be affected by declining snow and ice cover as a result of global warming.
Well, that environmental stuff is such a downer – let’s find some better news. Ah, here’s a breaking news item via Email from CNN. “Preacher’s wife Mary Winkler, who killed her husband with a shotgun blast to the back as he lay in bed, is sentenced to three years — 210 days in prison and the rest on probation.” Well that’s not too bad. We’ll just have to overlook the fact that there are currently folks in Texas serving hard time for possessing a few joints of marijuana. And that there are other folks who’ve robbed God know how many folks of their life savings and retirements with savings and loan scandals who served a few years in plush country-club prisons and then walked free. Equal justice under the law? Teach the up and coming generations to respect our institutions? If we can just ignore a few small inconsistencies and ruined lives, we should be able to smooth this over, eh? No problem.
Well, speaking of crime and punishment, heard the other day that 33% of the entire world’s prisoner population is incarcerated here in the US. That’s pretty amazing considering that we have only 5% of the world’s population. The latest FBI report shows that violent crime is up again. Maybe if we make the punishments even tougher for being poor, everyone will shape up? Does it sound to anyone else like maybe the wealth here in the US is not being distributed sufficiently and that those who are being ground up at the bottom of the pile and who have the audacity to complain or rebel are being humored with prison time so they can better learn their places? Naw, I didn’t really think that! Some one in this FBI report called the new statistics a “wakeup call”. Seems like I’ve been hearing that bell and it’s been ringing for awhile.
It would be nice if the people who think they are trying to make the world a better place would do some regression analysis and see if they could work their way back to the original causative problems rather than nailing bigger and bigger band-aids over the effects. But no. Here’s an interesting report that comes to us from New Zealand. Seems that Scotland Yard is scanning the world looking for “bad people” and they’ve determined that Internet users in the New Zealand cities of New Plymouth and Auckland are the keenest in the world to find recipes for making bombs. Well, I’m certainly not supporting folks making bombs but it strikes me as odd that Scotland Yard’s got it’s nose in New Zealand’s underwear. Maybe the British government has decided that it is easier to locate and suppress problems than to regress back to why such problems occur and attack the problems at their root. Ah, but they are an entire government and a former world empire while I am just a tiny blogger.
Perhaps, if we had a free and idealistic press to debate the issues before mankind fairly, we could better educate ourselves and then elect leaders to represent our concerns and try to get this mess sorted out. But, I read here that the ownership of the world’s media is becoming more and more concentrated in the hand of the rich and elite. And some folks suspect that what they think is in their best interests (globalization, anyone?) may not be in ours?
Gosh, I’m sure I can take anymore cheering up today. I think I’m going to go do some accounting and see if that adds up.
I am, by nature, an upbeat person. I’m rarely depressed and when I am, it only lasts a day or so. I have to admit though that blogging on our coming future wears at me at times.
If we were facing a future that we couldn’t do anything about, then I could accept that stoically. And if we were facing a future with enormous problems but we were dealing with them, however slowly, then I could accept that as well. But, we’re facing a terrible future which we could avoid, and which we are not. Knowing that and knowing what’s at stake wears at my heart.
Today, I posted three more briefings from Stratfor on samadhisoft here: ➡, here: ➡ and here: ➡.
The first is reporting on chaos in the Ukraine where the Rule of Law, weak at best, is rapidly fading and giving way to might-is-right strategies. Not a good sign for Central Asia.
The second discusses the huge mess swirling around the US, Iran and Iraq. There are many players in this game and no one seems to hold a winning hand. And, in the mean time, some of our best, idealistic and naive young people are giving up their lives – but for exactly what it’s hard to say.
It’s the third one, however, that is the most discouraging to me. Global climate change is a problem that simply doesn’t care if we understand, doesn’t care if we are preoccupied over questions of who should do what first and who’s responsible for things. It doesn’t care if it is an election year or if corporate profits are going to rise or fall.
The mismatch between the magnitude of the threat and our dithering responses to it are going to make for amazing reading in future history … if we have a future.
So, the US has now effectively killed the Kyoto Treaty, if we are to believe Stratfor’s analysis in favor of setting up a Pacific alignment group with China, India, Australia and Canada. In terms of possobly being effective, this is a powerhouse group because between themselves, they are responsible for emitting half the world’s greenhouse gases. But the promise of this group is really slim. The US has always avoided caps on greenhouse emmissions on favor of voluntary measures and China, just last week, announced its plans for dealing with global climate change and made it quite clear that while it wants to do better, it will do nothing that slows its economic growth or dampens the aspirations of its huge population for greater wealth and consumption.
Kyoto previously had the hope of evolving into Kyoto II with all the incremental improvements that accrue through experience and the hope of bringing major players on board who had until now been slacking. But, now the US administration’s refusal to comprehend the seriousness of the threat combined with some deft political footwork has essentially gutted the one semi-effective international protocol focused on mounting a response to global climate change.
Unless there’s another sea-change among the world’s nations concerning how to deal with global climate change, then from here out we will have gestures, hand-waving, flag-waving, promises and every type of political compromise required to ensure that our consumption patterns as a species go on unabated until the consequences of our inattention are painted in technicolor strokes of death and environmental destruction which we can no longer ignore.
One of my readers sent me a link to a discussion thread in which folks were discussing New Zealand and other places where one might consider moving if they are worried about the world’s future over the next few decades. The link he sent leads to a fun read: ➡ I recommend it.
In reading the thread, I picked up a new term, CrashBlogger. It refers to any blogsite that focuses on future global calamities.
Needless to say, Samadhisoft would be considered a CrashBlogger site given its central theme which is the Perfect Storm Hypothesis. I liked the term so I’ve created a new chiclet button:
which I added to the right sidebar of this site under General Plugs. I’ve created a category here on samadhisoft for CrashBlogging and anything I write that bears on the Perfect Storm Hypothesis will be so tagged in the future.
Anyone who wants a copy of this chiclet for their own use can find it here: ➡
And, if you want to make chiclets of your own, I highly recommend this site: ➡
And, finally, if you want to find ready made chiclets, try this site: ➡
I also went to Technorati and checked for the terms CrashBlogger and CrashBlogging. There was nothing there- but I think there will be.
– thx again to Brian C. for input on this piece.
The other day, a reader wrote me about a piece I’d written entitled, Why New Zealand? He thought that I was a bit over the top with my praises of New Zealand as a destination.
Indeed, he had some good cautionary points about New Zealand as follows:
New Zealand owns a heap of public, external debt; all summed, this debt aggregates to 41% of the national GDP. I do not like reflecting on that percentage. Let’s reflect, anyway. National revenue now exceeds national expenditures, by $100 million. National expenditures budgets for payment of debt interest but not debt repayment. $100 million in public profits for a nation of 4 million: not sound.
New Zealand has a population growth rate of 1.12%. America, by due compare, only has a population growth rate of 0.89%. Which of these is healthy, and which of these is not? (Neither is healthy – of course. But one is in better accord with reality and one is not.)
New Zealand currently suffers from deforestation, soil erosion, top-soil depletion, and catabolic agricultural collapse. So does America. To quote a recently published academic paper which I tripped across, “A significant consequence of agricultural development has been the loss of native vegetation, including forests, wetlands and tussock grasslands, and biodiversity. Farming in New Zealand ranges from intensive to extensive practices. Intensive farming has higher concentrations of animal waste, fertilisers and pesticides and is implicated in the contamination of soil, groundwater and streams. Extensive farming of hill country has resulted in mass erosion, due to the loss of vegetation, resulting in the loss of topsoil and increased sedimentation of waterways. Agricultural development has been driven largely by economics, fluctuating with export prices and past government subsidies. There is currently increasing pressure for farmers to intensify due in particular to the global market for dairy products and niche market products, and improved technology.” Sound familiar? It sure does.
New Zealand is predominantly mountainous. Current estimates of arable land have you at only 6% of your land-mass. Current estimates of arable land in America, on the other hand, extend from 18% to 28% – and I am more inclined to believe 28%, given the still-tremendous fertility of California, the Great Plains, and the Empty Quarter. How will you feed 4 million, on only 16 thousand square kilometers of arable land? The isolation, which you value, also isolates your people from the protective value of emigration: if events on either island “go south,” you won’t have a South to emigrate to.
80% of the population lives in cities. That may be a good thing, for those sequestering themselves into the hills. I’m more inclined, however, to believe that city dependency breeds abstraction and alienation from the land, and ignorance of base necessities. It won’t be good, when ignorant city-hordes unravel across your terrain.
These all seem like good points – though I can’t comment on them as being true or false without doing some research.
I’ve spent a fair amount of time now in New Zealand and I’d still hold, even in the face of these negative points all being true, that New Zealand is arguably the best place in the world to run away to if you fear the coming Perfect Storm.
If you doubt this assertion, just lay a map of the world out and begin to go over every place you can think of that might provide a safe haven in a world of chaos. And for each place you consider, look at the points I’ve made in favor of New Zealand and the ones my correspondent has asserted against it.
I have other correspondents in New Zealand who wish I’d just shut up on this subject <smile>.
They like that New Zealand is one of the world’s best kept secrets. And they don’t want to see paradise over run with refugees from the rest of the world’s insanities. And the truth is that for the most part, I agree with them. Fortunately, this Blog has a fairly small readership and immigration to New Zealand isn’t a subject I’m going to spend much time on from here on out.
If I can help alert people to the coming Perfect Storm, then that’s enough. Each of you will have to work out what you want to do about it on your own. I’d just caution you not to wait to bolt until the signs are unmistakable.
One final note. My correspondent is immigrating to New Zealand from the US. Apparently, the negative points he’s cited, while worrisome, are not sufficient to dissuade him from recognizing a good thing <smile>.
Cheers!
– thx to Brian C. for his input on this piece
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