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    TADEASplanetarita - 'making life planetary'
    TADEAS
    TADEAS --- ---
    SLL_QUY
    SLL_QUY --- ---
    TUHO:

    cela serie clanku +- na tema planetarity

    For Planetary Governance — Strelka Mag
    https://strelkamag.com/en?topic=for-planetary-governance
    YEETKA
    YEETKA --- ---
    plants and animals are our relatives.. we have to be here for them at the end as they were here for us at the beginning..

    pozor obsah je extrémně dojemný..

    ROBIN WALL KIMMERER on Indigenous Knowledge for Earth Healing — FOR THE WILD
    https://forthewild.world/listen/robin-wall-kimmerer-on-indigenous-knowledge-for-earth-healing
    TADEAS
    TADEAS --- ---
    planetarni perspektiva

    Carl Sagan testifying before Congress in 1985 on climate change
    https://youtube.com/watch?v=Wp-WiNXH6hI
    GOJATLA
    GOJATLA --- ---
    Can a planet have a mind of its own?
    https://phys.org/news/2022-02-planet-mind.html#comments

    Right now, our civilization is what the researchers call an "immature technosphere," a conglomeration of human-generated systems and technology that directly affects the planet but is not self-maintaining. For instance, the majority of our energy usage involves consuming fossil fuels that degrade Earth's oceans and atmosphere. The technology and energy we consume to survive are destroying our home planet, which will, in turn, destroy our species.

    To survive as a species, then, we need to collectively work in the best interest of the planet.

    But, Frank says, "we don't yet have the ability to communally respond in the best interests of the planet. There is intelligence on Earth, but there isn't planetary intelligence."

    "The million-dollar question is figuring out what planetary intelligence looks like and means for us in practice because we don't know how to move to a mature technosphere yet."

    "We're saying the only technological civilizations we may ever see—the ones we should expect to see—are the ones that didn't kill themselves, meaning they must have reached the stage of a true planetary intelligence,"
    GOJATLA
    GOJATLA --- ---
    Daniel Schmachtenberger “Bend Not Break Part 1: Energy Blindness” | The Great Simplification #05
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3bxzo79SjpE


    "We are turning billions of barrels of ancient sunlight into microliters of dopamine and calling that an economic success".
    TUHO
    TUHO --- ---
    TUHO: Planetary economics
    A book advocating for change, Planetary Economics provides a new perspective on how policy-makers and academics can overcome the most fundamental problems and environmental challenges. It brings together the fields of energy, environment, innovation, behavioural economics and macroeconomics, to outline the future agenda for climate policy. The book was accompanied by a series of lectures and workshops bringing together key actors.

    https://climatestrategies.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/03/Planetary-Economics-FULL-Complimentary-Version.pdf
    TUHO
    TUHO --- ---
    //reference na planetary economics v zaveru .]

    How does carbon pricing affect macroeconomic balance and ultimately CO2 emission? What about electric vehicles that are now being promoted by the Biden administration?
    Economists’ standard advice for controlling global warming is to impose a high price on emitting CO2, which is said to discourage carbon-intensive activities and induce carbon-saving technical change. In a recent review of the New Deal, William Janeway (2021) draws a distinction between efficient and effective policies. He comes close to economist-speak by describing efficiency as a low-cost means for moving toward a desired goal. Whether an efficient intervention will be effective in reaching the goal is another question altogether. In the short- to medium-run, raising carbon prices within a politically acceptable range may be efficient at inducing macroeconomically small changes in the structure of the economy and level of emission. But the move will not be effective, because the changes will remain small for at least three reasons.

    Institute for New Economic Thinking
    https://www.ineteconomics.org/perspectives/blog/carbon-pricing-isnt-effective-at-reducing-co2-emissions
    GOJATLA
    GOJATLA --- ---
    Jeremy Lent: současné paradigma kapitalismu, že příroda i společnost funguje na základě sobectví jednotlivců je omyl.
    The Future of Meaning - with Jeremy Lent
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QGHm5Qi2ww4
    GOJATLA
    GOJATLA --- ---
    Toby Ord odhaduje šanci, že klimatická změna způsobí běhěm dalších 100 let vyhynutí lidstva, na cca 1/6.
    The Future of Existence - With Toby Ord
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UDZeSmGKIoc&list=PLb7OJzL--LPWP1B_fg8SG9c5mq3pvMv54&index=8
    KERRAY
    KERRAY --- ---
    The International Flag of Planet Earth (IFOPE)
    https://www.flagofplanetearth.com/
    TUHO
    TUHO --- ---
    Nová studie popisuje, jak odpadky, které pokrývají přibližně 1, 5 milionu kilometrů čtverečných, osídlili živočichové a rostliny, kteří se normálně vyskytují na pobřeží. Mezi tyto vetřelce patří krabi, asijské sasanky, mořští červi, hvězdice a houby. Skutečnost, že se jim daří tisíce kilometrů od jejich obvyklých stanovišť, vyvrátila dlouhotrvající předpoklad, že otevřený oceán je v podstatě neprůchodná mořská poušť.

    „Otevřený oceán byl dlouho považován za fyzickou a biologickou bariéru pro šíření většiny pobřežních mořských druhů. Zdá se, že tomu tak již není, protože v současnosti existují vhodná stanoviště v otevřeném oceánu. Pobřežní organismy mohou přežívat na moři po mnoho let a rozmnožovat se, což vede k vytvoření soběstačných pobřežních společenství na volném oceánu,“ uvedli vědci v časopise Nature Communications.

    Tichomořská odpadková skvrna se stala novým ekosystémem. Kolonizují ji zvířata i rostliny — ČT24 — Česká televize
    https://ct24.ceskatelevize.cz/veda/3413534-velka-tichomorska-odpadkova-skvrna-se-stala-novym-ekosystemem-kolonizuji-ji-zvirata-i
    TUHO
    TUHO --- ---
    Neco o "zelene infrastrukture" ve stredni Evrope

    Green infrastructure is a strategically planned network that broadens traditional biodiversity conservation methods to also encompass the concept of ecosystem services (ES). This study aims to identify the network of green infrastructure in Central Europe. An analysis of ecological connectivity is based on ES supply quantified for CORINE land cover classes. Corridors between core areas, which are represented by Natura 2000 sites, are based on the capacity of ecosystems to supply maintenance and regulating ES. The delineated network of corridors of green infrastructure covers approximately 15% of the landscape of Central Europe that provides high levels of various ES. Ecological corridors create linkages between Natura 2000 sites and support the migration and dispersal of species. Central Europe is an important transitional region where coordinated improvement of ecological connectivity is fundamental. Moreover, promotion of the green infrastructure network and full implementation of the EU Birds and Habitats Directives are targets of two important documents at the European level, the EU Biodiversity Strategy 2030 and the EU Strategy on Green Infrastructure. View Full-Text

    Land | Free Full-Text | The Network of Green Infrastructure Based on Ecosystem Services Supply in Central Europe
    https://www.mdpi.com/2073-445X/10/6/592
    TADEAS
    TADEAS --- ---
    myšlení půdního / myšlení suchozemského

    Open Call: Soils as Sites of Emergency and Transformation, NESS Conference, Gothenburg, Sweden. Abstract deadline 15 Dec! – The Posthumanities Hub
    https://posthumanitieshub.net/2021/11/18/open-call-soils-as-sites-of-emergency-and-transformation-ness-conference-gothenburg-sweden-abstract-deadline-15-dec/

    The Covid-19 pandemic is seen by some as the latest warning against the intensity of intervention of human worlds into non-human processes and spaces. This latest emergency unfolds, however, against the background of the long and accelerating process of human-induced, global planetary and ecosystem change variously debated as the Anthropocene, the Capitalocene, or the Plantationcene.

    The most lasting, the most fundamental, and the least address aspect of this ‘slow emergency’ and ongoing transformation relates to soils. When (rarely) discussed in the public sphere, soils are framed as an object of concern, and their degrading state is seen as a cause for alarm (as exemplified e.g. by the creation of the EU Mission for Soil Health and Food). In the Nordic context, soil emergencies are particularly noticeable as global heating-related changes in soil functions and states are having sudden and profound effects on lives, livelihoods, and land-use and inhabitation futures.

    Such emergency framings which underpin policy and expert concern around soil change can, however, lack historical and ontological reflexivity around the desired human-soil relations. Beyond this emergency framing, soils are also a site of and a source of transformation. Both historically and today, soils are active participants in the making of human societies and of ecologies. Whereas loss of soils has been linked with societal collapse, reciprocal relations of care can transform societies and ecosystems. Moreover, in contemporary thinking in political and social theory (e.g. Bruno Latour’s Down to Earth, Donna Haraway’s thinking on composting), arts (e.g. the Humus economicus project), and in debates about sustainable farming (e.g. regenerative agriculture), relations with soils are a source of inspiration for new models of human-environmental interaction and for conceptualising more-than-human health. This new wave of ‘thinking with soils’ works across disciplinary boundaries to reconceptualise people, environments, and their interactions by acknowledging and interrogating human entanglement with soils.
    TADEAS
    TADEAS --- ---
    interplanetarita


    2021 Accelerating Martian and Lunar Science through SpaceX Starship Missions
    http://surveygizmoresponseuploads.s3.amazonaws.com/fileuploads/623127/5489366/111-381503be1c5764e533d2e1e923e21477_HeldmannJenniferL.pdf


    SpaceX details plan to build Mars Base Alpha with reusable Starship rockets
    https://www.teslarati.com/spacex-starship-mars-base-alpha-construction-plan/

    With the help of coauthors from NASA Ames, SETI, and half a dozen prestigious US universities and institutes, SpaceX has begun to answer exactly that question in a 2021 whitepaper [PDF] submitted for the National Academies’ next Planetary Science and Astrobiology Decadal Survey. While that survey alone could influence NASA as the agency prepares to outline its next decade of space science and determine the ultimate destination of tens of billions of federal dollars, the consequences of which could be immense, SpaceX also used the paper to describe its plans for early missions to Mars in unprecedented detail.

    As has always been the plan, SpaceX will begin the process of constructing sustainable cities on Mars with a few (relatively) simple steps. Likely as soon as the mid-2020s, SpaceX will begin launching uncrewed Starships to Mars to both verify the system’s maturity and readiness and “deliver significant quantities of cargo to the surface in advance of human arrival.” Likely leaning on a wide range of robotics, those early missions will help SpaceX characterize local resources, stage supplies, test technologies for long-duration Martian surface ops, and begin developing infrastructure – with a propellant plant likely the most pressing need. None of that is surprising. However, there’s more.

    According to the authors, which include several current and former SpaceX engineers, “current SpaceX mission planning [tasks those early uncrewed Starships with delivering] equipment for increased power production, water extraction, LOX/methane production, pre-prepared landing pads, radiation shielding, dust control equipment, exterior shelters for humans and equipment, [and more – all hardware needed to support the first human base.]”

    Further, confirming what’s been assumed to be the plan for years, “humans will likely live on [Starships] for the first few years until additional habitats are constructed” and “the first wave of uncrewed Starships can also be relocated and/or repurposed as needed to support the humans on the surface,” serving as “valuable assets for storage, habitation, [scientific laboratories], and a source of refined metal structures and resources.” The paper also states that “SpaceX is aggressively developing Starship to…conduct initial test flights to Mars…as soon as 2022 [or 2024]” and even raises the possibility of SpaceX launching the first Starship(s) to Mars before the rocket’s first lunar mission but then launching a separate lunar mission and landing a different Starship on the Moon while the Marsbound ship or ships are still in transit.

    ...

    SpaceX appears to intend to pack even the very first Mars-bound ships with supplies. But even if they don’t bring much, the first Martian immigrants – launched in batches of “10-20 people” alongside “100+ metric tons” (~220,000+ lb) of cargo – will reuse all surviving Starships as pre-emplaced habitats, storage tanks, and raw material feedstock. Early cargo will focus on power, water, and propellant production, as well as shelters, radiation shielding, and the construction of prepared landing pads
    R_U_SIRIOUS
    R_U_SIRIOUS --- ---
    TADEAS: Super doména. ;)
    TADEAS
    TADEAS --- ---
    tady https://planet.is/ bych chtel zacit delat nejakou mapu tech planetarnich smeru, kdybyste mel nekdo chut se podilet .]
    TADEAS
    TADEAS --- ---
    Paul Maidowski - planetarni temata

    https://twitter.com/_ppmv
    TADEAS
    TADEAS --- ---
    (PDF) Planetary Futures, Planetary History | Zoltán Boldizsár Simon - Academia.edu
    https://www.academia.edu/42626908/Planetary_Futures_Planetary_History

    the notion of the Anthropocene (Crutzen and Stoermer 2000) started its career as an ESS effort to name the systemic collision of the human and the natural worlds by referring to anthropogenic changes in the Earth system as testified by stratigraphic evidence. Yet it quickly became clear that the social components of the Anthropocene may not be as profoundly addressed by ESS as by scholars of the human world. No wonder that Eva Lövbrand and her co-authors (2015) asked the question ‘Who speaks for the future of Earth?’ and argued for a more prominent role for social scientific knowledge in coping with planetary futures. A distribution of work may indeed yield important results, while there is an equally compelling extent to which the systemic entanglement of physical and social processes is actually no one’s expertise in the modern disciplinary distribution of knowledge, which demands a new knowledge regime yet to be developed (Simon 2020).

    What does all this mean for historical understanding? The answer I attempt to sketch in this essay is that as the futures ahead gain a planetary character, our historical understanding cannot escape to be planetary too. For historical understanding is not merely a question of what to make out of the past. It is a question of what to make out of the past, the present, and the future as seen together. Or, to use the category of François Hartog (2015), it is a question of what to make out of our reigning ‘regime of historicity’, the current configuration of the relation of past, present, and future. Drawing on Hartog, Dipesh Chakrabarty (2019: 1) suggests that ‘planetary or Anthropocenic regime of historicity’ may be the term that best captures our current condition. In transferring Hartog’s notion from the framework of referring to inner relations of temporal dimensions (past, present, future) into the framework of referring to timescales (the history of the planet, of life on the planet, of the globe), Chakrabarty suggests that ESS has already begun to write a new kind of history in a planetary regime of historicity.

    ...

    The best way to think about a planetary history is to conceive of it as response to facing manifold planetary futures, including not explicitly Anthropocene-related ones too (at least not in the ESS meaning of the term), such as the aforementioned colonization of other planets. While this arguably expands what we mean by planetary, the second qualification rather narrows the category by stating that linking the planetary with the new historical condition does not mean that the planetary is the new historical condition itself. It is rather one of the central conceptual tenets of a renewed historical understanding through which we understand the world and ourselves historically in times of unprecedented change (Simon 2019). The first of the above aspects is a matter of planetary futures, while the second one is a matter of planetary history that planetary futures demand.
    TUHO
    TUHO --- ---
    The planetary is a concept Spivak has worked and reworked, with her initial discussion of the planetary presented as a lecture on migration in Switzerland in 1997 as Imperatives to Re-Imagine the Planet. She expanded and developed her notions of the planetary and planetarity in numerous contexts, including her Death of the Discipline study of comparative literature written in 2003, where she takes a more psychoanalytic approach to the notion of planetarity. She subsequently extends this concept in multiple places, including in a planetarity contribution to the Welt (or World) entry in the Dictionary of Untranslatables. This is a concept that Spivak has written and rewritten, forged and revised. It is in her earlier 1997 discussion though that she draws attention to the planetary as a way of figuring the subject and “collective responsibility.”

    The imperative that Spivak sets out in her 1997 text is one of re-imagining the planet. This re-imagining might be read as a speculative condition that encounters the planetary beyond the abstractions of the globe and globalism. It also refigures what humans are through considering how subjects form through conditions and even rights to collective responsibility. Spivak’s articulation of this concept was formed specifically within the context of considering how to “think the migrant” in Switzerland, when immigration was occurring from beyond Europe. The planetary in this sense is not proposed as an abstract figure of earth science, nor is it a unifying globe that would make uniform and universal conditions for all humans. Instead, the planetary is in many ways irresolvable, and yet it is a way to figure, de-figure, and re-figure collective responsibility to the other in postcolonial and decolonial circumstances.

    Becoming Planetary - Architecture - e-flux
    https://www.e-flux.com/architecture/accumulation/217051/becoming-planetary/
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