home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- From: alanm@hpindda.cup.hp.com (Alan McGowen)
- Date: Fri, 22 Jan 1993 23:36:31 GMT
- Subject: The Real Challenge
- Message-ID: <88290205@hpindda.cup.hp.com>
- Organization: HP Information Networks, Cupertino, CA
- Path: sparky!uunet!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!sdd.hp.com!hpscit.sc.hp.com!hplextra!hpcss01!hpindda!alanm
- Newsgroups: talk.environment
- Lines: 59
-
- John McCarthy writes:
-
- >Humanity had to find a substitute for whale oil. It will also need a
- >substitute for petroleum. Fortunately, we know more today about how
- >to substitute for petroleum than our ancestors knew about how to
- >substitute for whale oil. Further substitutions are required, but,
- >as I recall, the examples given by McGowen were peripheral to the
- >standard of living.
-
- The examples I gave were: high-quality wood, meat and fish.
-
- Let's never forget that these things are "peripheral to the standard
- of living."
-
- This tells us much about the sort of world certain technological "optimists"
- would irreversibly condemn us to live in if we were fool enough to let them.
- If they can't even care for *these* things, how much can they care for
- less economically important species?
-
- We would have a world with plenty of power, plenty of machines, plenty of
- people, and not a shred of grace, living beauty, or comfort for the human
- spirit. Not a civilization, but a technological barbarism. That is what
- McCarthy apparently means when he speaks of creating a "US standard of
- living" for a world of 30 billion. It's a political program, pure and
- simple, hiding behind a mask of false scientific objectivity. But the
- masquerade is over.
-
- No. We aren't going to let it happen. The first limiting resource to
- be encountered will be the limit of our tolerance for the continued
- degradation -- in every sense of that word -- of our beautiful planet.
- From here on, we will choose a different future for our children, one
- that they will be able to share with all of life, in all its myriad forms.
-
- * * * * * *
-
- That future is worth infinitely more than any "substitutes" for it. The
- technologies and technologists we need are those that will help us to
- reach that future, not those that will help to make it forever unreachable:
- technologies that serve life -- *all* life -- not destroy it. Ecologically
- sane technology, not technological substitution gone insane and become
- technological supremecism.
-
- The time of morally empty technology, driven by greed, limited only by
- derided threats of "doom", is over. The real challenge for technologists
- is whether they can overcome the counsels of greed and fear and find within
- themselves the moral purpose and strength to be able to just say "no" to
- technological changes that take us ever farther from where we should be, and
- to seek out with all their intelligence the changes that will bring us, day
- by day, year by year, sensibly closer to our heart's desire: our true home
- on earth, among our innumerable living kin, the tapestry of life rewoven.
-
- But can such technologists exist? Will they appear in the years ahead?
-
- Just watch!
-
- ------------
- Alan McGowen
-
- "Force the Spring." -- Bill Clinton
-