Why We Will Succeed
at creating sustainable ways to live.
Creatures with far less capability than humans have lived on Earth for
tens of millions of years. We should expect no less.
This link looks at qualities that should enable our kind to live on
Earth until the sun burns out. It also identifies why
our prospects sometimes look bleak.
Why We Should Survive:
- Thumbs: our ability to hold, carry and otherwise manipulate objects enables
a vast array of actions.
- Observation: our senses of sight, hearing, touch, smell, and taste are
well developed. When aided by telescopes, microscopes, geiger-counters,
spectrometers, thermometers and other technical extensions, our ability
to notice what is going on around us is extraordinary.
- Pattern Recognition: we have a highly developed ability to recognize patterns
in the observations we make. This leads to understanding and makes it possible
to predict many consequences of events and actions.
- Memory: we have a well developed ability to remember past observations
which we can compare with present information for problem solving.
- Communication: not only can individuals share observations and understanding
directly with each other; through print and other recording media, information
can be passed to large numbers of people. Recorded information has the added
advantage of being able to pass knowledge forward through time.
- Creativity: we can take the extraordinary amount of information available
to us and use it to plan actions and to make things.
Humans have been around long enough to learn many things. We could provide
very well for ourselves a hundred years ago. Since then we have developed
countless new capabilities, many of which make it easier to survive. In
particular health care, psychology, communication advances, understanding
of ecological systems, physics, cybernetics and the knowledge of techniques
by which we can grow, design and manufacture useful items. Uncertainty about
the future is not due to lack of ability.
Life Strives to Survive.
It is the natural aim of creatures to launch their young into life
with as great a chance as possible for raising young of their own. The urge
to care for offspring and thereby continue the species predates awareness
of self and selfishness. It is at the core of every human being. All but
the most dedicated of those who seek salvation through making money recognize
the well-being of future generations as the ultimate good. This basic drive
in billions of people is more than capable of transforming civilization.
It awaits only the hope that we can shift our priorities for collective
action from the competitive economics model to sustainability.
Proponents of economic expansion still tell us that the best results
will come from everyone trying to make and spend more money. Economies are
growing everywhere, yet, prospects for the future are diminishing for many
people and many other living things. A review of the economic expansion
goal is surely in order.
Greed is often identified as the human quality that will bring about
our demise. There is no question that greed and competitiveness are components
of human nature, but so too are caring and cooperation. For several generations
we have been cultivating self-interest and competition as engines for economic
growth. (See "The Invisible Hand" linked below.) All around we
can see the consequences of these values becoming entrenched in our belief
system. The impact they are having on families and communities is sufficient
to question their encouragement.
What would life be like if our societies were to cultivate the qualities
of care and cooperation? Would they flower and penetrate every aspect of
society in the same way that self-centeredness and competition have?
Democracy:
For hundreds of years people have worked and organized to assert
their right to participate in decisions effecting society. Democracy is
established in principle. It is time to try it out on this question of basic
direction.
Why do our prospects sometimes look bleak?
BAD MANAGEMENT
Following the invisible hand may have worked
before mass persuasion technology and the appearance of ecological limits.
Today, however it is increasingly difficult to justify decisions on the
faith that if it makes money it is good.
The coexistence of people in need and people who have nothing to do
is evidence of bad management. The disappearance of fish stocks, destabilization
of the atmosphere, diminishing soil fertility and the expanding gap between
the rich and the desperate speaks of more than just misguided notions of
order. By threatening large portions of the human family, the management
practices that expand these problems are treasonous.
For civilization to be endowed with the extraordinary capabilities we
have and to face this wide range of potentially lethal problems is bad management.
The management principle of letting the market decide how society will unfold
can no longer go unquestioned. It is time to bring this principle forward
for public review. Please join us in asking the
Question of Direction.
"The marketplace has been constantly
evoked over the last quarter-century as the source of freedom and democracy
as well as the only possible force to lead us back to growth. But after
two decades of having their way, the exponents of this theory have no results
to show us. . . . they have held and continue to hold the levers of power,
and they have not produced. This is a very long trial period . . ."
John Ralston Saul
Questions and comments are welcome.
Back to: Green Party web site
Back to: The Challenge and the Goal
Back to: A Question of Direction
return to top: Why We Will Succeed.