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    TADEASplanetarita - 'making life planetary'
    TADEAS
    TADEAS --- ---
    modlit se za planetu

    Michael Jackson - Earth Song (Official Video)
    https://youtu.be/XAi3VTSdTxU
    YEETKA
    YEETKA --- ---
    TADEAS:
    yop v tom případě je ta robin kimmemer docela nosná..
    popisuje experimenty které dělala se studenty na rostlinách, polích a jak se to vyvíjelo, na co přišli..
    je to maximálně hyperpredátorský, vědecky kompetentní a ještě do toho vplétá native moudrost pro mě absolutně srdečním způsobem..
    hlavně její kniha braiding sweet grass

    kvalitních knih o native kosmologii je málo, mně oslovil mluví černý jelen
    a bílá bizoní žena

    třeba na to český pow wow táboření jezdí i indoši, kteří mají pozemky a farmaří, plus sem tam nějaké stádo..
    v podstatě praktikují to co ty, akorát k tomu mají tu native kosmologii, takže třeba využívají všechno do poslední kosti..
    ráda předám kontakt, nebo přijeď na podzimní pow wow..

    za sebe mám zkušenosti se zpěvem a tancem tradičních native rituálů.. v těch pár super autentických případech jsem skutečně zažila extatické propojení se Zemí, celé se to opírá (nečekaně) o respekt ke všemu živému i neživému.. třeba ten cherokee tanec deště má mnoho podob.. jiný tančí ženy, jiný muži, předchází očista a má to své přesné postupy, každé gesto má svůj význam a své místo, pracuje se se záměrem..

    když už nějaká delegace ze států přijede, tak nejsou moc sdílní.. říkají "chceš poznat naše věci, přijeď za námi" ale znám pár lidí kteří konkrétně u cherokee kmene v dakotě byli a ti jsou velká studnice inspirace a zdrojů..

    native kultura je pro planetaritu hodně zajímavá, mně teda trvalo roky než jsem zažila to o čem mluví vlastně všechny kmeny - že jeden přijde do bodu, kdy láska k Zemi není jen vděčnost za všechny dary, ale kdy se z toho stává skutečný, oboustranný vztah..
    TADEAS
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    YEETKA: ja nevim, snazim se pro sebe vykresat nejaky nosny motivy a premejslim jak by je bud planetarni nebo regeneratívni kultura vyuzivala, jak vypada refreshnuta ceremonialni verze vztahu k jwdnotlivym ekosystemum, a jejich bytostem, k elementum, biochemickym procesum a cyklum, atp. aby to nebylo strojeny, ale realny :)
    YEETKA
    YEETKA --- ---
    TADEAS:
    se připravuješ?

    ulali projekt docela válí už několik let, povedlo se díky nim zvednout ze židlí dost lidí..
    “Ulali Singing Idle No More” at the UN Chapel September 22, 2014
    https://youtu.be/roGK-tpSpK4
    TADEAS
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    tančit za klima

    Navajo Rain Dance
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gZd2Avpzgi8
    TADEAS
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    rapovat za klima

    IPCC – Baba Brinkman Music Video
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6OBM2tUKpKc
    TADEAS
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    The Treeline: The Last Forest and the Future of Life on Earth
    https://www.amazon.com/Treeline-Last-Forest-Future-Earth/dp/1250270235

    For the last fifty years, the trees of the boreal forest have been moving north. Ben Rawlence's The Treeline takes us along this critical frontier of our warming planet from Norway to Siberia, Alaska to Greenland, Canada to Sweden to meet the scientists, residents and trees confronting huge geological changes. Only the hardest species survive at these latitudes including the ice-loving Dahurian larch of Siberia, the antiseptic Spruce that purifies our atmosphere, the Downy birch conquering Scandinavia, the healing Balsam poplar that Native Americans use as a cure-all and the noble Scots Pine that lives longer when surrounded by its family.

    It is a journey of wonder and awe at the incredible creativity and resilience of these species and the mysterious workings of the forest upon which we rely for the air we breathe. Blending reportage with the latest science, The Treeline is a story of what might soon be the last forest left and what that means for the future of all life on earth.
    TADEAS
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    TUHO
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    TUHO: A tady jeste paper na kterej se odkazuje

    Published 2022 – As part of the Earth4All project, collaborators have submitted deep-dive papers to delve further into the issues and solutions needed to transform our economic system and provide an equitable future for all on a finite planet. This paper explores new possibilities that could empower humanity to solve some of its most intractable problems: energy scarcity and volatility, the persistence of food insecurity and malnutrition, global poverty, and widening inequality.

    The clean energy transformation: a new paradigm for social progress within planetary boundaries - Club of Rome
    https://www.clubofrome.org/publication/earth4all-ahmed/
    TUHO
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    Neco renewable technooptimismu od Nafeeze Ahmeda

    Oil, gas, and coal are becoming more inefficient and expensive. The value of the energy they produce relative to the energy they use has declined by more than half in the past two decades. But the opposite is true of SWB, for which energy return on investment (EROI) is increasing exponentially.
    As I explain in a recent Earth4All paper, the cheapest SWB combination involves supersizing solar and wind generating capacity to 3-5 times the level of existing demand. This “super power” capacity – producing more energy than incumbent fossil-fuel systems at zero marginal cost for most of the year – would dramatically reduce overall system costs by removing the need for weeks’ worth of seasonal battery storage.
    Swiss government scientists have shown that building such a system globally could generate up to ten times the amount of energy we use today. That will enable the electrification of a vast array of industries, from wastewater treatment and recycling to mining and manufacturing. And this system won’t need constant material inputs like the current fossil-fuel system; once built, it will last 50-80 years.
    Similar counterintuitive cascading effects will benefit the transport sector. EV and A-EV cost curves show that ride-hailing via Transport-as-a-Service (TaaS) will become up to ten times cheaper than owning and managing your own car by the 2030s. As a result, only a fraction of the number of vehicles we use now will be in service. And, because SWB and TaaS entail a tiny proportion of the battery storage demand anticipated by most conventional analysts, consumption of critical minerals needed to produce the batteries will be much lower than feared.


    Ending the Age of Scarcity by Nafeez Ahmed - Project Syndicate
    https://www.project-syndicate.org/commentary/disruptive-technologies-transforming-energy-transport-food-by-nafeez-m-ahmed-2022-08
    TADEAS
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    paliativni proces

    When Time Is Short by Timothy Beal: 9780807090008 | PenguinRandomHouse.com: Books
    https://www.penguinrandomhouse.com/books/567135/when-time-is-short-by-tim-beal/

    Is accepting the end of humanity the key to climate action? This scholar thinks so. | Grist
    https://grist.org/culture/when-time-is-short-review-timothy-beal-climate-doomer-religion/

    the scientific consensus is that it is still possible to mitigate the worst effects of climate change, assuming we take drastic and immediate action to reform our societies and economies. Wouldn’t convincing yourself that the world is ending lead people to do the opposite — to throw up their hands and go on with their lives as usual? 

    Beal argues the reverse. Reducing emissions and conserving natural resources are all things we should be doing anyway, he told Grist, but it’s hard to break out of the systems (say, capitalism) that got us into this mess in the first place. Accepting that human civilization is finite, he says, will challenge us to change our priorities, from worshiping extraction and growth to uplifting the most marginalized in society. 

    Beal’s thesis draws heavily on the works of scholars like cultural anthropologist Ernest Becker, whose book The Denial of Death made the case that humans survive by refusing to accept their own mortality. The human-centric mythology of many religions, Beal writes, has convinced people that society will persist forever, no matter what damage we do to our habitat. Some Christians, for example, have used a passage from the biblical book of Genesis that instructs humans to “subdue” the Earth and have “dominion” over other living beings as proof that natural resources like oil and trees were made to be mined with abandon, without fear of the consequences. 

    But just as religion has helped get us into this mess, Beal believes it can get us out of it. He points out that other parts of the Bible put animals on equal footing with humans, and assign inherent value to the land itself, rather than just as a tool for humanity to exploit — an interpretation shared by some evangelical Christians who view “creation care” as a sacred duty. Beal also argues that spiritually minded people should embrace “dark green religion,” belief systems that emphasize the ways humans are interconnected with all other living things. 

    Again, this philosophical shift is intended to foster mercy, not hope. Beal envisions humanity adopting a “palliative” approach to the future, one modeled on end-of-life care administered to terminally ill patients. By positing that the end is coming (as a result of our consumerist ideals, no less), this palliative approach neatly shuts down policies that promise prosperity through infinite growth. Even climate solutions touted by Biden and the Democratic Party miss the mark in this case; he argues they frame climate action in the language of job creation and benefits to the economy. 

    ...

    When Time Is Short is the latest addition to a rich body of work on what eco-theologian Michael Dowd termed a “post-doom mentality” or sustainability scholar Jem Bendell calls “deep adaptation” — the idea that if you accept what is inevitable, you can develop a true sense of empathy and a plan for how to respond positively. Pagan environmental activist John Halstead argued in his 2019 book, Another End of the World is Possible, that we need to abandon the obsessive focus on growth and capitalism that has driven us to the brink of collapse. (A 2021 book by the same name, written by a trio of Belgian ecologists and environmental advocates, calls this approach “collapsing well”). 

    ...

    For better or for worse, Beal’s message comes at a critical time. Climate anxiety is rising; as reports of droughts, fires, and floods dominate the news, climate change is no longer an abstract concept for many people, but a very real and present threat. At the same time, politicians and corporations don’t seem seriously interested in either stopping the crisis from worsening or mitigating its effects; the chances of actually limiting warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius (about 2.7 degrees Fahrenheit), as outlined in the Paris Agreement, are now essentially nil. In one study from last year, 56 percent of teens and young adults said they believed that “humanity is doomed.”

    Once we’ve grieved for what we will lose, Beal writes, we can begin the work of doing something with the short time we have left. Given that reality, though, he acknowledges that not everyone may grieve the same way. Beal’s book was written before Don’t Look Up came out, but it references another disaster movie — Lars von Trier’s 2011 film “Melancholia,” about two sisters who struggle to cope in the days before a rogue planet collides with the Earth. While one sister is “paralyzed by depression and anxiety,” the other “gains a new sense of clear-minded peace and composure.” Religion, he argues, can provide a framework for action to alleviate unnecessary suffering as the world collapses around us. 
    TADEAS
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    integrativní funkce v rovine planety

    2022 Applying the Prigogine view of dissipative systems to the major transitions in evolution
    https://www.researchgate.net/publication/359771425_Applying_the_Prigogine_view_of_dissipative_systems_to_the_major_transitions_in_evolution

    Ilya Prigogine's trinomial concept is, he argued, applicable to many complex dissipative systems, from physics to biology and even to social systems. For Prigogine, this trinomial— functions , structure , fluctuations —was intended to capture the feedback-rich relations between upper and lower levels in these systems. The main novelty of his vision was his view of causation, in which the causal arrow runs downward from dissipative structures to their components or functions. Following this insight, some physicists and biophysicists are beginning to apply terms formerly used mainly in biology, such as evolution , adaptation , learning , and life-like behavior , to physical and chemical nonequilibrium systems.

    Here, we apply Prigogine's view to biology, in particular to evolution, and especially the major transitions in evolution (MTE), arguing that at least the hierarchical transitions—the transitions in individuality—follow a trajectory anticipated by the trinomial. In this trajectory, formerly free-living organisms are transformed into “functions” within a larger organic “structure.” The Prigogine view also predicts that, consistent with available data, the increase in number of hierarchical levels in organisms should accelerate over time. Finally, it predicts that, on geological timescales, ecosystems and Gaia in particular will tend to “de-Darwinize” or “machinify” their component organisms.
    TADEAS
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    2012 How does the Earth system generate and maintain thermodynamic disequilibrium and what does it imply for the future of the planet?
    https://www.researchgate.net/publication/221792620_How_does_the_Earth_system_generate_and_maintain_thermodynamic_disequilibrium_and_what_does_it_imply_for_the_future_of_the_planet

    The chemical composition of the earths atmosphere far from equilibrium is unique in the solar system and has been attributed to the presence of widespread life.

    Here I show that this perspective can be quantified using non-equilibrium thermodynamics. Generating disequilibrium in a thermodynamic variable requires the extraction of power from another thermodynamic gradient, and the second law of thermodynamics imposes fundamental limits on how much power can be extracted. When applied to complex earth system processes, where several irreversible processes compete to deplete the same gradients, it is easily shown that the maximum thermodynamic efficiency is much less than the classic Carnot limit, so that the ability of the earth system to generate power and disequilibrium is limited.

    This approach is used to quantify how much free energy is generated by various earth system processes to generate chemical disequilibrium. It is shown that surface life generates orders of magnitude more chemical free energy than any abiotic surface process, therefore being the primary driving force for shaping the geochemical environment at the planetary scale.

    To apply this perspective to the possible future of the planet, we first note that the free energy consumption by human activity is a considerable term in the free energy budget of the planet, and that global changes are closely related to this consumption of free energy. Since human activity and demands for free energy is going to increase in the future, the central question is how human free energy demands can increase sustainably without negatively impacting the ability of the earth system to generate free energy. I illustrate the implications of this thermodynamic perspective by discussing the forms of renewable energy and planetary engineering that would enhance overall free energy generation and thereby "empower" the future of the planet
    TADEAS
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    pokud ma pojem inteligence byt jednoticim, musi byt vypracovan jako nezavisly na skale/vrstve, kde inteligence operuje


    2021 Minimal physicalism as a scale-free substrate for cognition and consciousness | Neuroscience of Consciousness
    https://academic.oup.com/nc/article/2021/2/niab013/6334115

    Theories of consciousness and cognition that assume a neural substrate automatically regard phylogenetically basal, nonneural systems as nonconscious and noncognitive. Here, we advance a scale-free characterization of consciousness and cognition that regards basal systems, including synthetic constructs, as not only informative about the structure and function of experience in more complex systems but also as offering distinct advantages for experimental manipulation. Our “minimal physicalist” approach makes no assumptions beyond those of quantum information theory, and hence is applicable from the molecular scale upwards.We show that standard concepts including integrated information, state broadcasting via small-world networks, and hierarchical Bayesian inference emerge naturally in this setting, and that common phenomena including stigmergic memory, perceptual coarse-graining, and attention switching follow directly from the thermodynamic requirements of classical computation. We show that the self-representation that lies at the heart of human autonoetic awareness can be traced as far back as, and serves the same basic functions as, the stress response in bacteria and other basal systems

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    Light of the Stars: Alien Worlds and the Fate of the Earth | Adam Frank | Talks at Google
    https://youtu.be/rPY6N_qqAaE


    Joe Rogan And Adam Frank "Alien Life"
    https://youtu.be/ZkDVEqS6fIY


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    2016 A New Empirical Constraint on the Prevalence of Technological Species in the Universe
    https://www.liebertpub.com/doi/10.1089/ast.2015.1418

    Recent advances in exoplanet studies provide strong constraints on all astrophysical terms in the Drake equation. Using these and modifying the form and intent of the Drake equation, we set a firm lower bound on the probability that one or more technological species have evolved anywhere and at any time in the history of the observable Universe. We find that as long as the probability that a habitable zone planet develops a technological species is larger than ∼10−24, humanity is not the only time technological intelligence has evolved. This constraint has important scientific and philosophical consequences
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    2016 At Land's End: Novel Spaces and the Limits of Planetarity
    https://read.dukeupress.edu/novel/article-abstract/49/1/115/49600/At-Land-s-End-Novel-Spaces-and-the-Limits-of

    This essay contends that planetarity may be insufficiently divorced from globalization—its putative opposite—to provide a critical lens for understanding and countering its effects: specifically, anthropogenic climate change and global economic inequality. The argument begins by documenting the affinities between planetarity's redemptive, world-building ambitions, on one hand, and both Kantian cosmopolitanism and turn-of-the-twentieth-century articulations of “planetary consciousness” (as particularly evident in speculative fiction) on the other. The common denominator of these discourses (explicit in the earlier texts, oblique in the later ones) is a logic of global improvement, control, and growth precipitated by an existential threat. In both H. G. Wells's The War of the Worlds and Dipesh Chakrabarty's seminal “The Climate of History: Four Theses,” for instance, a suddenly changed Earth galvanizes humanity into collective existence, converting discrete individuals into a species aligned, paradoxically, both with and against the planet. The essay then considers the violent histories associated with such attempts to meet global problems with global solutions, asserting that the difficulty inheres in the planetary scale itself. Concluding that all contemporary planetarities—like their early twentieth-century equivalents—are at least partly attempts to remake the world in our preferred image, the argument closes by considering a humbler alternative inspired by fleeting moments in Jack London's socialist fiction: a general strike that would withdraw our maintenance of the world in favor of more plural and livable affiliations; a nonapocalyptic end to the world that might offer a means of surviving the Anthropocene.
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    Bringing Culture to Cosmos: Cultural Evolution, the Postbiological Universe, and SETI | SpringerLink
    https://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/978-3-030-41614-0_12

    The Biological Universe (Dick, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1996) analyzed the history of the extraterrestrial life debate, documenting how scientists have assessed the chance of life beyond Earth during the twentieth century. Here I propose another option—that we may in fact live in a postbiological universe, one that has evolved beyond flesh and blood intelligence to artificial intelligence (AI) and that is a product of cultural rather than biological evolution. Davies (Basic Books, New York: 51–55, 1995) and others have broached the subject, but the argument has not been given the attention it is due, nor has it been carried to its logical conclusion. This paper argues for the necessity of long-term thinking when contemplating the problem of intelligence in the universe. It provides arguments for a postbiological universe based on the likely age and lifetimes of technological civilizations and the overriding importance of cultural evolution as an element of cosmic evolution. Additionally, it describes the general nature of a postbiological universe and its implications for SETI.
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    2018 The Anthropocene generalized: evolution of exo-civilizations and their planetary feedback
    https://www.liebertpub.com/doi/10.1089/ast.2017.1671

    We present a framework for studying generic behaviors possible in the interaction between a resource-harvesting technological civilization (an exo-civilization) and the planetary environment in which it evolves. Using methods from dynamical systems theory, we introduce and analyze a suite of simple equations modeling a population which consumes resources for the purpose of running a technological civilization and the feedback those resources drive on the state of the host planet. The feedbacks can drive the planet away from the initial state the civilization originated in and into domains that are detrimental to its sustainability.

    Our models conceptualize the problem primarily in terms of feedbacks from the resource use onto the coupled planetary systems. In addition, we also model the population growth advantages gained via the harvesting of these resources.

    We present three models of increasing complexity:
    (1) Civilization-planetary interaction with a single resource;
    (2) Civilization-planetary interaction with two resources each of which has a different level of planetary system feedback;
    (3) Civilization-planetary interaction with two resources and nonlinear planetary feedback (i.e., runaways).

    All three models show distinct classes of exo-civilization trajectories. We find smooth entries into long-term, “sustainable” steady states. We also find population booms followed by various levels of “die-off.” Finally, we also observe rapid “collapse” trajectories for which the population approaches n = 0.

    Our results are part of a program for developing an “Astrobiology of the Anthropocene” in which questions of sustainability, centered on the coupled Earth-system, can be seen in their proper astronomical/planetary context. We conclude by discussing the implications of our results for both the coupled Earth system and for the consideration of exo-civilizations across cosmic history
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