SUNDAY, JAN 8, 2023: NOTE TO FILE
Eric Lee, A-SOCIATED PRESS
TOPICS: SUSTAINABILITY, FROM THE WIRES, LANGUAGE GAMES
Abstract: As I have sustainability concerns and concerns for posterity's and the biosphere's future, I will start a course in Ecological Design tomorrow, which is one of four 'dimensions' of the offering. Subnotes to file will likely follow.
COOS BAY (A-P) — As homework (I'm an autodidact, so I assign myself homework), I found a video introduction to Gaia Education and turned Google's auto-transcript into a readable one for those who can read faster than narrators speak. As an autodidact, I've had an interest in sustainability studies for 8 years, but have no formal education in any relavant field included within 'sustainability studies', e.g. neo-classical economics or permaculture. For extra credit, I will submit this webpage for consideration after I've had enough education (schooling).
I have no specialty, but I am a generalist who doesn't know enough about anything to serve the monetary culture, i.e. the modern techno-industrial (MTI) form of civilization, aka the World Socioeconomic-political System (WSS). The other three dimensions are also 8-week courses. The course descriptions follow the transcript and include questions I will be able to answer after taking each course.
To compare with what my answers might be after taking one or more course, I answered all the questions to see how I might update them after the course. The four courses are sort of the undergraduate level 24 hour part leading to taking the 23 hour Design Studio course as a graduate school offering where you join teams to design putative solutions to humanity's problems.
We believe that the most promising and effective way to deal with all the crises our generation is facing is through education. Not a traditional education, but a new kind of global education specifically designed to meet the challenges and opportunities of the 21st century.
An education that is universal in scope, but local and application relevant to people of both industrialized and non industrialized countries in both rural and urban regions.
An education that empowers individuals and communities with the knowledge for shaping their worlds and becoming more self-reliant. An education that marries the academic and the experiential, providing students with the opportunity to combine intellectual exploration and personal development with hands-on projects. An education based on living systems and the interdependence that we need to make the transition to a sustainable culture.
In 2005, a group of experienced ecovillage educators in a wide range of disciplines from academic and professional backgrounds founded Gaia Education.
We call ourselves East Global Ecovillage Educators for Sustainable Earth to acknowledge the collaboration roving leadership that happens when the geese fly information.
Gaia education promotes a holistic approach to an education for sustainable development by developing curricula for sustainable community design. While drawing upon best practices within ecovillages worldwide high education also works in partnership with universities, governments, non-government agencies and the United Nations.
The major achievement of Gaia Education to date has been the development of the groundbreaking ecovillage design curriculum which draws from the experience and expertise of a network of some of the most successful ecovillages and community-based projects around the world.
The ecovillage design education curriculum focuses on fundamental principles, themes and aspects of sustainability design and development in general. It is systemically organized as a mandala of what is perceived to be the four primary dimensions of human experience: ecological, social, economic, and worldview.
Within the ecovillage design curriculum, each of these four dimensions in turn contains five modules. The EDE provides an education where a thorough and objective assessment of the state of the planet is followed by place-based solutions.
Ecovillages are laboratories for sustainability. As such they provide excellent classrooms of innovative life skills for EDE participants.
Gaia Education was born out of the ecovillage movement and in a short period of time it spread its wings. Today it teaches in various settings and in partnership with universities and many urban centers.
The urban courses, such as that pioneered in San Paulo, are spreading fast. A growing number of towns and cities are now hosting Gaia Education courses.
One of our international partner academic institutions may be offering a Gaia Education accredited course near you. In addition to being closer to where you live, some of these courses also allow you to work while you are learning, such as the virtual Gaia Education Design for Sustainability or GEDS. Offered in partnership with the renowned Open University of Catalonia in Barcelona. This nine-month online program can be followed in Spanish or English.
It is very much suited to people who live in remote areas and working people who can study in evenings and weekends.
GEDS will become a postgraduate course in 2011. As a first step to convert the program into a master's degree. Another key partner of Gaia Education is the innovative educational program Living Roots which works in partnership with the University of Massachusetts and offers accredited ecovillage based semesters on five continents.
Some of these collaborative courses are located within traditional villages in the Global South where indigenous values and practices join forces with modern sustainability approaches.
The EDE has been recognized as an official contribution to the United Nations Decade of Education for sustainable development 2005 to 14. It is available in English, Spanish, Portuguese, Finnish, German, and Japanese.
It has been taught in 21 countries on five continents where more than 1,100 people have been trained over the last three years.
Our programs are of relevance to people of the most different backgrounds. Students and educators interested in sustainability design, NGO members, as well as ethical business leaders, professionals from engineering, architecture and renewable energies, to community builders and leaders everywhere. In short our programs are for all those who are concerned with the future of the planet.
Gaia Education's aim is to create a generation of leaders who can help facilitate the transition to a holistic sustainable culture. Its contribution is the gift of educational programs that help us understand the interconnected and interdependent nature of reality and how we can create a meaningful, dignified, and high-quality life for all the world's people.
'...for all the world's people' are the last words. From posterity's POV, they may be viewed as 'famous last words', words that fail to grasp the challenge of avoiding a ghastly future, i.e. not good news for 10 year olds.
Why is the current impact of humanity on the planet’s life support system degenerative and how can we change this through whole-systems design approaches? [Human enterprise, the modern monetary culture, is in overshoot. The condition that will come anyway is rapid contraction of the global economy and population whether by design or chaotic descent.]
How can we co-create elegant solutions carefully adapted to the biocultural uniqueness of place? [By agreeing to a social contract that limits community size to 50 humans and the number of communities within a management area to 50 settlements or bands of nomads seeking to renormalize expansionist modern techno-industrialized humans as adaptive K-strategists.]
What is the wide range of water collection, management and ecological treatment technologies that can support us in the design of watershed stewardship systems? [While I am familiar with Brad Lancaster's claims, toured his Tucson rainwater catchment showcase, and have taken classes offered by the Tucson Watershed Management Group and read numerous back issues of their newsletter, I have not observed any 'turning scarcity into abundance', so I focus on living within viable limits, e.g. by ending all groundwater pumping not powered by human power alone. The estimated agrarian population of the current Tucson Metro area (currently over 1 million population) was 2,000, which included several bands of Apache hunter-gatherers who preyed upon the settled communities. The river used to flow year around, but with 30' of cut down no longer does, nor can the floodplain be irrigated if it did, and maximum population supported by severely degraded land is less than 500, though no one currently living in the area would have the skills to live there.]
How can we use the best of permaculture systems, regenerative agriculture, agroforestry and ecosystems regeneration to co-create thriving regional food systems? [The San as nomadic foragers live in a thriving regional food system as adaptive and evolvable K-strategists, while all expansionist forms of humans do not, so we should first learn from them, then consider permaculture, regenerative, organic, agroforestry, swidden, three and four field systems and agroecosystems claims experimentally to assess what works and why it works with a focus on energy inputs and outputs with results that can scale up.]
Which clean renewable energy sources, energy efficiency and transport technologies can help us to create zero-carbon solutions while increasing community resilience and strengthening regional economies? [Transition to a nomadic forager biophysical economy with nomadic groups or settled agrarians managing an agroecosystem limited to one fifth of the ecoregion occupied by up to 50 settlements to leave room for Nature whose 4/5th is unoccupied and unused by humans or their livestock, e.g. no grazing, no hunting, no gathering, no removal of matter/energy, so renewable energy sources include food and biomass (e.g. wood) produced well within the carrying capacity of the human's 1/5th where soil building practices sequester carbon.]
What range of ecological architecture, sustainable building materials and methods are appropriate for which kind of local conditions? How can they support regenerative development at the local and regional scale? [Building materials include snow/ice blocks, thatched huts, wikiups, teepees, tents, yurts, stone, brick, log, bamboo, sod, adobe, geltaftan, rammed-earth, straw-bale, wattle and daub, red cedar split-plank homes, skin covered brush, underground excavated space or caves, bark/split-wood shingles, re-purposed tires, pit houses, etc., varying by region.]
The objective of the Design Studio is to practise the application of Gaia Education’s Design For Sustainability & Regenerative System principles. This is one of the best online courses out there where you will create an actual sustainable project plan in a group!
You will collaborate as part of a design team to develop skills in applying what you have learned to real-world design projects. The design project serves as an integrative exercise where participants explore the relationships between personal, social, ecological and economic sustainability. Design teams will be created around a number of design proposals at the beginning of the Design Studio. These may, but do not necessarily need to be, drawn from initiatives that participants are currently involved in.
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[I have an ongoing design project for a viable transistional form of civilization. The goal would be to renormalize some modern techno-industrialized humans over an 8 to 20 generation period of transition to a viable enough form of civilization having a viable enough biophysical economy of enough to sustainabily support its population (estimated <35 million), viable as evidenced by its ability to persist as the centuries pass. Full renormalization, if possible, will likely take at least as long as the denormalization process, e.g. 60 generations on Malta. Hence the transition from the transitional form of civilization (CIV 4.x) to a viable form (CIV 5.x) will only be aparent some time after several millennia of sustainable living has passed.]
[The early ecolate came to be called the 'E.O. ones', mindless followers of the ecofascist
anti-human E.O. Wilson who advocated for merely a Half Earth for humanity.
The EOs came to accept the term but translated it as 'ecolate ones'.
Civ 4.x would be transitional, likely taking 8-20 generations by following the prime directive:
each generation must objectively become more functional than the last to become Civ 5.0
containing humans who can understand the planet and live with it properly (to persist).
It's been a long way up as it will be down, see full graph.]
[Those living in the generation that in hindsight is viewed as the transition generation will be utterly unaware of transitioning from an endeavor to renormalize as a viable, adaptive, evolvable form of human. Any humans who think they have transitioned will have not as evidenced by delusional storytelling. The beginning of a CIV 5 form of civilization will likely not be apparent until at least 2,500 years of sustainable living have passed as all prior complex societies failed within a range of a decade to three thousand years. The only form of viable civilization to persist to modern times is that of the San (CIV 1.x who were never denormalized as expansionists), as all other indigenous have been assimilated into CIV 2.x or CIV 3.x forms of civilization.]
The San are the only real people, the Kogi the only agrarian people proven by their persistence to have renormalized 1100 years ago.
The Tairona phase 1 civilization failed as did the reboot, the phase 2 version, but the phase 3 reboot may have incorporated information about what made the prior two forms non-viable. A remnant population of the Tairona phase 3 culture survived the Spanish genocide of 1650 by retreating to a remote region of the Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta in Northern Colombia. They risk their continued existence in 1990 by inviting a BBC crew to record their Elder Brothers' warning to Younger Brother.
One of three remnant populations of Tairona that survived the genocide in the remote areas of the Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta, aka Heart of the World, has not yet been assimilated, but following their 1990 warning and a second warning message in 2011, demands of tourists to interact with them has become an existential threat, and when the city of Santa Marta and regional economy collapses, there may be enough refugees seeking survival among the Kogi to destroy them as the only known example of a prior expansionist form of human to have renormalized as potentially evolvable K-strategists 1,100 years ago following the collapse of the Tairona phase 2 experiment in complex society.
SUBNOTE TO FILE 1/9/23
It begins: received email with access link to GEDS Ecological Design password protected course. At the top, the first thing I read is 'What an honor to get a visit from you today, Robert'. This could not possibly be true, so decidedly not a good start. I go by my middle name as my father was also a Robert and used PayPal which supplied my first name. Expressions of social approbation for clicking a link are inappropriate, but first impressions can be soon overlooked and perhaps should have been.
The Gaia Education offering is itself of interest as an example of a non-traditional education offering that may be a best use of the Internet while it is out there. As webmaster for the Union of Concerned Elders, I want to document my initial experience of this form of educational offering. Just below the fold of the above screen is:
Welcome to the Ecological Dimension of the GEDS certificate.
Recommended steps:
Buttons: Introduce Yourself - Lessons - Forum - Live Sessions
Please finish the Course Modules and submit your Final Report to access the Letter of Acknowledgement.
There is a Buddy List option: 'If you want to buddy up with colleagues or share things outside the course platform, feel free to share your personal information here in this spreadsheet.'
There is then a Gaia Education Team Welcome Video, The video is disabled, clicking anywhere does nothing. I'll guess it will work in a few days.
That's all folks. The course site page ends with an ad: Want to make your own course? Try Simplero
This page started with a 'Yo, Robert, what's your biggest intention for today?' It would be rude to answer if doing so were possible (so why ask?).
Here are some tips to make the best of your journey with us:
Welcome to the ecological dimension of the GEDS (Gaia Education Design for Sustainability), we are happy to see you all here and inspired to know you want to study with us.
To be present and engaged in this course you will need to:
Posts:
For each module (there are five) you are expected to post at least once. You can choose from:
Mini-design:
Your mini design can be done on your own or as part of a team. If you choose to do this as part of a team, teams may not be bigger than three individuals and all their names need to be present in the project. Each member will also need to link to the project when posting their final report.
You can choose any system for your project: water, energy, food, housing, waste, transportation or any other ecologically sound system. You will then choose a challenge. Examples of challenges:
Once you have chosen your system, you will design a pathway to get to your goal.
What is expected in the mini-design:
You can add links to sources, pictures, drawings, tables or videos but keep it simple. This is your practice for the bigger project you will embark in the Design Studio, so have fun!
Final Report
The final report is based on your experience with the course and is independent from the design. You can post your final report in the forum to enrich the experience for everyone. The report is usually short (half a page to a full page) and responds to questions such as:
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And I read the 8 (so far) introductions and as required introduced myself in kind: I live in the Pacific Northwest bioregion, Pacific Northwest Coast Range ecoregion of North America near Coos Bay. I don't drive, but my wife does and if she says to get in the car I do. I bicycle only if there a time constraint as I prefer to walk. I can walk my kayak on its trailer to the bay and paddle out into the Pacific Ocean or far inland (up to 50 km), going with the tidal flow, of course.
I have had an interest in sustainability issues for 8 years as I have existential concerns for posterity and the biosphere. Prior to today, I have been an autodidact with no formal education that relates to sustainability studies. I am not an expert in any field as time is limited and I am spread thin as a generalist. I do have a focused interest in science, specifically the systems science of H.T. Odum, George Mobus, Charles Hall, and Donella Meadows, though it is also true that I have never met a silo science I didn't like as I have no issues with holism or reductionism as two sides of the same coin.
My interests have focused somewhat in recent years to 'real solutions', as in viable solutions that might actually work to realize James Lovelock's vision that 'eventually we'll have a human on the planet that really does understand it and can live with it properly. That's the source of my optimism.'
For the last two years I've been working on designs for a viable form of civilization. The premise is that the current form of civilization is not remotely sustainable.
SUBNOTE TO FILE 1/10/23
Fortunately I had checked a box to be notified if anyone replied to a forum post. I received an email stating someone, by name, had 'reacted' to my post. My forum post indicates '1 comment' but not who made it as the comment was an icon of a thumbs up only with no indication of source. I imediately checked the other introductions and they also had one or two comments in the form of an icon (none being a down thumb). There are two 'facilitators' whose CV is not provided, but both have a professional level of interest and experteese in permaculture design. Several students indicated interest in permaculture as foundational to any real solutions.
The assigned content is a list of 95 links to lessons with only the first clickable. After reading/viewing the first lesson and indicating completion, the link closes and the second link becomes clickable. Previous content can be revisited. The first lesson is an introduction that adds to the above that:
This course is part of the GEDS: Gaia Education Design for Sustainability and Resilience, a 14-month program that includes four dimensions and a final design studio.
The course is organized into five modules and during the eight weeks of the course you will be learning about:
The material is presented through text and videos and external links to a bibliography, projects and examples. In each module, you may find one or two "bring it to life", which are invitations for you to engage deeper by either reflecting, exploring further or applying some of the concepts and skills you are learning. You are encouraged to engage with these invitations and post about them in the module's reflections forum. We know that learning happens in different ways and one of the most powerful ones happens when you apply. So you are invited to reflect and share or discuss what you are learning with others in the learning community.
I will pay attention to the second lesson, the first presentation of the foundational ideas and sources for the Gaia Education worldview. The sources of the cognitive framework and narratives appear to be the intellectual bedrock all other concepts are built upon. The first offering is quote/paraphrasing 'With acknowledgement to Dr John Todd and Dr David Orr for their paper on Ecological Design Arts'. Several other quotes follow from Wolfgang Sachs, Wuppertal Institute for Climate, Environment and Energy, Germany, Charles Eisenstein, Climate: A New Story, followed by a 3.5 minute video 'Welcome to the Anthropocene' without a transcript provided, but I previously made one with a point by point commentary, so I may post the transcript for consideration without my comments/disputations. The video is a 2016 offering of a special interest group I looked into a couple of years ago and will have to review as I don't recall details.
The next source is Johan Rockström's nine planetary boundaries as they form the outter doughnut boundry of the next concept cluster, Kate Raworth's added intercircle of social boundaries that make for Doughnut Economics. Her views are summarized by her in a four-minute video which I found incomprehensibe since conventional economics with social issues added is not my Wittgensteinian language game any more that John Cobb's process theology is. I will have to make a transcript for consideration/parcing into the avalalange of concepts offered for consideration. If this lesson is foundational, I will have to devote more hours to looking into the claims, and so will start with a copy of lesson two and add comments.
Another graphic: