quarta-feira, 6 de junho de 2012

David Graeber : Of Flying Cars and the Declining Rate of Profit

A secret question hovers over us, a sense of disappointment, a broken promise we were given as children about what our adult world was supposed to be like. I am referring not to the standard false promises that children are always given (about how the world is fair, or how those who work hard shall be rewarded), but to a particular generational promise—given to those who were children in the fifties, sixties, seventies, or eighties—one that was never quite articulated as a promise but rather as a set of assumptions about what our adult world would be like. And since it was never quite promised, now that it has failed to come true, we’re left confused: indignant, but at the same time, embarrassed at our own indignation, ashamed we were ever so silly to believe our elders to begin with.

Where, in short, are the flying cars? Where are the force fields, tractor beams, teleportation pods, antigravity sleds, tricorders, immortality drugs, colonies on Mars, and all the other technological wonders any child growing up in the mid-to-late twentieth century assumed would exist by now? Even those inventions that seemed ready to emerge—like cloning or cryogenics—ended up betraying their lofty promises. What happened to them?

We are well informed of the wonders of computers, as if this is some sort of unanticipated compensation, but, in fact, we haven’t moved even computing to the point of progress that people in the fifties expected we’d have reached by now. We don’t have computers we can have an interesting conversation with, or robots that can walk our dogs or take our clothes to the Laundromat.

As someone who was eight years old at the time of the Apollo moon landing, I remember calculating that I would be thirty-nine in the magic year 2000 and wondering what the world would be like. Did I expect I would be living in such a world of wonders? Of course. Everyone did. Do I feel cheated now? It seemed unlikely that I’d live to see all the things I was reading about in science fiction, but it never occurred to me that I wouldn’t see any of them.


 
 At the turn of the millennium, I was expecting an outpouring of reflections on why we had gotten the future of technology so wrong. Instead, just about all the authoritative voices—both Left and Right—began their reflections from the assumption that we do live in an unprecedented new technological utopia of one sort or another.


The common way of dealing with the uneasy sense that this might not be so is to brush it aside, to insist all the progress that could have happened has happened and to treat anything more as silly. “Oh, you mean all that Jetsons stuff?” I’m asked—as if to say, but that was just for children! Surely, as grown-ups, we understand The Jetsons offered as accurate a view of the future as The Flintstones offered of the Stone Age.

Even in the seventies and eighties, in fact, sober sources such as National Geographic and the Smithsonian were informing children of imminent space stations and expeditions to Mars. Creators of science fiction movies used to come up with concrete dates, often no more than a generation in the future, in which to place their futuristic fantasies. In 1968, Stanley Kubrick felt that a moviegoing audience would find it perfectly natural to assume that only thirty-three years later, in 2001, we would have commercial moon flights, city-like space stations, and computers with human personalities maintaining astronauts in suspended animation while traveling to Jupiter. Video telephony is just about the only new technology from that particular movie that has appeared—and it was technically possible when the movie was showing. 2001 can be seen as a curio, but what about Star Trek? The Star Trek mythos was set in the sixties, too, but the show kept getting revived, leaving audiences for Star Trek Voyager in, say, 2005, to try to figure out what to make of the fact that according to the logic of the program, the world was supposed to be recovering from fighting off the rule of genetically engineered supermen in the Eugenics Wars of the nineties.

By 1989, when the creators of Back to the Future II were dutifully placing flying cars and anti-gravity hoverboards in the hands of ordinary teenagers in the year 2015, it wasn’t clear if this was meant as a prediction or a joke.

The usual move in science fiction is to remain vague about the dates, so as to render “the future” a zone of pure fantasy, no different than Middle Earth or Narnia, or like Star Wars, “a long time ago in a galaxy far, far away.” As a result, our science fiction future is, most often, not a future at all, but more like an alternative dimension, a dream-time, a technological Elsewhere, existing in days to come in the same sense that elves and dragon-slayers existed in the past—another screen for the displacement of moral dramas and mythic fantasies into the dead ends of consumer pleasure.



Might the cultural sensibility that came to be referred to as postmodernism best be seen as a prolonged meditation on all the technological changes that never happened? The question struck me as I watched one of the recent Star Wars movies. The movie was terrible, but I couldn’t help but feel impressed by the quality of the special effects. Recalling the clumsy special effects typical of fifties sci-fi films, I kept thinking how impressed a fifties audience would have been if they’d known what we could do by now—only to realize, “Actually, no. They wouldn’t be impressed at all, would they? They thought we’d be doing this kind of thing by now. Not just figuring out more sophisticated ways to simulate it.”

That last word—simulate—is key. The technologies that have advanced since the seventies are mainly either medical technologies or information technologies—largely, technologies of simulation. They are technologies of what Jean Baudrillard and Umberto Eco called the “hyper-real,” the ability to make imitations that are more realistic than originals. The postmodern sensibility, the feeling that we had somehow broken into an unprecedented new historical period in which we understood that there is nothing new; that grand historical narratives of progress and liberation were meaningless; that everything now was simulation, ironic repetition, fragmentation, and pastiche—all this makes sense in a technological environment in which the only breakthroughs were those that made it easier to create, transfer, and rearrange virtual projections of things that either already existed, or, we came to realize, never would. Surely, if we were vacationing in geodesic domes on Mars or toting about pocket-size nuclear fusion plants or telekinetic mind-reading devices no one would ever have been talking like this. The postmodern moment was a desperate way to take what could otherwise only be felt as a bitter disappointment and to dress it up as something epochal, exciting, and new.

In the earliest formulations, which largely came out of the Marxist tradition, a lot of this technological background was acknowledged. Fredric Jameson’s “Postmodernism, or the Cultural Logic of Late Capitalism” proposed the term “postmodernism” to refer to the cultural logic appropriate to a new, technological phase of capitalism, one that had been heralded by Marxist economist Ernest Mandel as early as 1972. Mandel had argued that humanity stood at the verge of a “third technological revolution,” as profound as the Agricultural or Industrial Revolution, in which computers, robots, new energy sources, and new information technologies would replace industrial labor—the “end of work” as it soon came to be called—reducing us all to designers and computer technicians coming up with crazy visions that cybernetic factories would produce.

End of work arguments were popular in the late seventies and early eighties as social thinkers pondered what would happen to the traditional working-class-led popular struggle once the working class no longer existed. (The answer: it would turn into identity politics.) Jameson thought of himself as exploring the forms of consciousness and historical sensibilities likely to emerge from this new age.

Source : http://www.thebaffler.com/past/of_flying_cars

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terça-feira, 5 de junho de 2012

The Price of Inequality : How Today's Divided Society Endangers Our Future

http://books.wwnorton.com/books/The-Price-of-Inequality/

A forceful argument against America's vicious circle of growing inequality by the Nobel Prize–winning economist http://www.josephstiglitz.com/.

The top 1 percent of Americans control 40 percent of the nation’s wealth. And, as Joseph E. Stiglitz explains, while those at the top enjoy the best health care, education, and benefits of wealth, they fail to realize that “their fate is bound up with how the other 99 percent live.”

Stiglitz draws on his deep understanding of economics to show that growing inequality is not inevitable: moneyed interests compound their wealth by stifling true, dynamic capitalism. They have made America the most unequal advanced industrial country while crippling growth, trampling on the rule of law, and undermining democracy. The result: a divided society that cannot tackle its most pressing problems. With characteristic insight, Stiglitz examines our current state, then teases out its implications for democracy, for monetary and budgetary policy, and for globalization. He closes with a plan for a more just and prosperous future.

sábado, 2 de junho de 2012

The Developing Mind : How Relationships and the Brain Interact to Shape Who We Are

http://drdansiegel.com/books/the_developing_mind/

This bestselling book put the field of interpersonal neurobiology on the map for many tens of thousands of readers. Daniel J. Siegel goes beyond the nature and nurture divisions that traditionally have constrained much of our thinking about development, exploring the role of interpersonal experiences in forging key connections in the brain. He presents a groundbreaking integrative framework for understanding the emergence of the growing, feeling, communicating mind. Reflecting significant scientific and technical advances, the second edition incorporates new discussions of cutting-edge topics, plus an epilogue describing specific pathways to well-being and therapeutic change.

Using a wealth of illustrative examples from clinical practice and everyday life, Siegel traces the interplay of human and neural connections in early childhood and beyond. The book reveals how difficulties with attachment to caregivers can result in problems with memory, self-organization, and emotional regulation. Implications for adult states of mind, emotional competence, and the ability to cope with stress are considered, as are links to such clinical problems as dissociation and depression. Siegel offers compelling insights into how therapeutic and personal relationships can promote healing and integration as the mind continues to develop throughout the lifespan. The second edition provides expanded discussions of neuroplasticity, epigenetics, mindfulness, the neural correlates of consciousness, and more. It also includes useful pedagogical features: pull-outs, diagrams, and an extensive glossary.

Illuminating how and why interpersonal neurobiology matters, this book is essential reading for clinicians, educators, researchers, and students interested in promoting healthy development and resilience. It has been widely adopted as a text in advanced undergraduate and graduate courses in developmental psychology, child development, and clinical practice.

Pocket Guide to Interpersonal Neurobiology : An Integrative Handbook of the Mind

http://drdansiegel.com/books/pocket_guide_to_interpersonal_neurobiology/

What is the mind? What makes a healthy mind? How do we become aware and come to know about life? And perhaps most importantly, what are the connections among the mind, brain, and relationships? From psychologists to linguists, neuroscientists to philosophers, people have explored the nature of mental life, yet no interdisciplinary framework has existed for wisely answering these fundamental questions or even offering a definition of what the mind is. Here, Siegel bridges domains of knowledge to offer a book that reveals the way the mind works via a format that reflects the brain’s natural mode of learning (flip the Pocket Guide open to any page and you will find an “entry point” that guides you to explore, in your own way, the web of integrated knowledge). Walking us through the intricate foundations of interpersonal neurobiology, Siegel allows us to see the personal and professional applications of this exciting new approach to developing a healthy mind, an integrated brain, and empathic relationships.

Rio+20 e a Economia Verde : À procura do Rio dos 99%

http://www.gaia.org.pt/node/16307

Nos próximos dias 20, 21 e 22 de Junho a Assembleia Geral das Nações Unidas vai realizar uma cimeira no Rio de Janeiro para assinalar o vigésimo aniversário da primeira Cimeira da Terra, a Conferência das Nações Unidas sobre Ambiente e Desenvolvimento (UNCED), que decorreu na mesma cidade em 1992.

Nesta cimeira foi estabelecida a primeira agenda global para o desenvolvimento sustentável, com a adopção da Convenção sobre a Diversidade Biológica (CDB), a Convenção das Nações Unidas sobre Mudanças Climáticas (UNFCC) e a Convenção de Combate à Desertificação. Foi também estabelecida a Comissão sobre Desenvolvimento Sustentável (CSD) para assegurar o efectivo acompanhamento da UNCED "Cimeira da Terra".

Vinte anos depois, a vida tornou-se mais difícil para a maioria dos habitantes do planeta. O número de pessoas famintas aumentou para quase um bilião, sendo as mulheres e os pequenos agricultores os mais afectados. Enquanto isso, o ambiente está a esgotar-se rapidamente, a biodiversidade está a ser destruída, os recursos hídricos estão a escassear e o clima está em crise. O nosso futuro na Terra está seriamente prejudicado e comprometido, enquanto a pobreza e as desigualdades continuam a aumentar.

A ideia de desenvolvimento sustentável apresentada em 1992, que fundiu as preocupações relacionadas com desenvolvimento e ambiente, não resolveu o problema porque não travou o sistema capitalista na sua corrida pelo lucro à custa dos recursos humanos e naturais. O sistema alimentar está cada vez mais nas mãos de grandes corporações que procuram apenas maximizar o seu lucro.

As Nações Unidas consideram que os últimos vinte anos foram de progresso e mudança, apesar dos contratempos da crise financeira e económica, aliadas à flutuação dos preços nos alimentos e na energia. A insegurança alimentar, as alterações climáticas e a perda da biodiversidade, prejudicaram os possíveis ganhos no desenvolvimento. Segundo a UNEP, o programa ambiental das Nações Unidas, a situação paradoxal em que nos encontramos deve-se principalmente à má alocação de capital. Durante as últimas décadas investiu-se em combustíveis fósseis, propriedade e activos financeiros em detrimento da energia renovável, eficiência energética, transporte público, agricultura sustentável, protecção da biodiversidade e conservação dos recursos hídricos. Mas no seu relatório “Towards a green economy”, a agência coíbe-se de fazer a ligação entre o modelo global de comércio e o agravamento das condições ecológicas e sociais.

A Global Alliance for Rights of Nature, admite que a comunidade internacional tem tentado nas últimas décadas parar e reverter as alterações prejudiciais para o ambiente, particularmente desde a Cimeira da Terra. Durante este período, um volume sem precedentes de tratados e leis ambientais foram aprovados e implementados a nível nacional e internacional. No entanto, estes têm sido quase universalmente ineficazes na prevenção da degradação dos sistemas ecológicos de que os seres humanos e outras espécies dependem. Na realidade muitas tendências negativas continuam a aumentar, apesar dos esforços dos governos e ONGs em todos os países, o desenvolvimento sustentável continua a ser um objectivo distante e permanecem as principais barreiras e falhas sistémicas na implementação dos compromissos acordados internacionalmente.

Actualmente, novas evidências apontam para a gravidade das ameaças que enfrentamos. Para além dos novos desafios, a intensificação dos problemas anteriores exige respostas mais urgentes. As Nações Unidas dizem-se profundamente preocupadas com os cerca de 1,4 biliões de pessoas que ainda vivem na pobreza extrema e o sexto da população mundial subnutrida, à mercê da ameaça das epidemias e pandemias.

Segundo dados da UNEP, a crescente escassez ecológica é uma indicação de que estamos a esgotar os ecossistemas muito rapidamente e irreparavelmente, com consequências para o bem-estar actual e futuro. Um indicador importante do aumento mundial de escassez ecológica foi fornecido pelo Millennium Ecosystem Assessment (MEA), em 2005, que constatou que mais de 60 por cento dos bens e serviços dos principais ecossistemas mundiais foram degradados ou utilizados de forma insustentável.

Uma das razões pelas quais os sistemas legais e de governança contemporâneos fracassaram é porque foram projectados para facilitar e legitimar a exploração insustentável da natureza. A visão da natureza como propriedade tem vindo a fortalecer as relações de exploração entre os seres humanos e a natureza. Em vez disso, os governos devem reconhecer que a pressão humana sobre a capacidade da Terra já está acima dos níveis sustentáveis, afectando principalmente as populações pobres e vulneráveis e pondo em perigo o bem-estar de todas as formas de vida.

A UNEP define a economia verde como aquela que resulta em "melhoria do bem-estar humano e da igualdade social, que simultaneamente reduz os riscos ambientais e a escassez ecológica "(UNEP 2011). Na sua expressão mais simples, uma economia verde tem reduzidas emissões de carbono, é eficiente na utilização dos recursos e é socialmente inclusiva.

No entanto, um dos primeiros estudos económicos a investigar esta abordagem capitalista do desenvolvimento sustentável concluiu que, uma vez que as economias actuais estão continuamente a esgotar o capital natural para garantir o seu crescimento, o desenvolvimento sustentável é inatingível (Pearce et al., 1989).

A economia capitalista, baseada na sobre-exploração dos recursos naturais e dos seres humanos, nunca poderá ser "verde" porque se baseia no crescimento ilimitado num planeta que atingiu os seus limites e na mercantilização dos recursos naturais remanescentes que até agora se mantiveram sem valor nos mercados e controlados pelo sector público.

Não basta “pintar” o sistema actual de verde, é necessária uma verdadeira mudança de paradigma. O “greening” da economia baseia-se na mesma lógica e mecanismos que estão a destruir o planeta. Por exemplo, procura incorporar os aspectos da falhada "revolução verde" duma forma mais ampla, a fim de garantir as necessidades dos sectores industriais de produção, tais como promover as patentes sobre plantas e animais e os organismos geneticamente modificados.

Neste período de crise financeira, o capitalismo global procura novas formas de acumulação, a “economia verde” não é mais do que a sua máscara enquanto procura novos mercados baseados no “capital natural”, para se apropriar dos recursos naturais do mundo como matéria-prima para a produção industrial, como sumidouro de carbono ou mesmo para especulação. Esta tendência é visível através do aumento do land grabbing por todo o mundo, para a produção de culturas para exportação e agro-combustíveis. Novas propostas como a "intensificação sustentável" da agricultura, também cumprem o objectivo das corporações e do agro-negócio de sobre-explorar a Terra, colocando o rótulo de "verde" e forçando os camponeses a depender de sementes e insumos de alto custo.

A economia verde procura garantir que os sistemas biológicos e ecológicos do nosso planeta permaneçam ao serviço do capitalismo, pela intensa utilização de várias formas proprietárias de geo-engenharia, tecnologias sintéticas e biotecnologias, como a engenharia genética, peças-chave da agricultura industrial promovidas no âmbito da "economia verde".

São necessárias políticas de base para atender às necessidades da humanidade. Precisamos de iniciativas políticas práticas que fortaleçam a soberania alimentar, reduzam os danos ambientais e apoiem o trabalho inovador de pequenos agricultores e camponeses. Os movimentos sociais de base ecológica e camponesa exigem que o mundo dê três passos cruciais na Cimeira RIO+20:
  1. estabelecer um mecanismo participado de avaliação das tecnologias; 
  2.  proibir tecnologias que não oferecem garantias de segurança nem equidade como a geo-engenharia e a engenharia genética;
  3. apostar na via da pequena agricultura camponesa para alimentar o mundo.
A governança dos nossos recursos naturais deve ser invertida de “top-down” para “bottom-up”, assegurando a autonomia dos povos e comunidades em determinar as suas próprias políticas de produção alimentar, cultivando para além de comida e outros bens essenciais, um profundo respeito pela diversidade da Natureza e da Cultura.

Fonte : http://www.gaia.org.pt/node/16307

Site da Cimeira RIO+20 : http://www.uncsd2012.org/rio20/

New Report : Who Will Control the Green Economy?

http://www.etcgroup.org/en/node/5296

New report on Corporate Concentration in the Life Industries

[download entire report - PDF]

[download news release - PDF]

[download info "What you will find in WWCTGE" - PDF]

Jump below: What you will find in the 'Who Will Control the Green Economy?' Report – Dec 2011

From the UN Rio+20 preparatory meetings in New York, ETC Group today launches Who Will Control the Green Economy? The 60-page report connects the dots between the climate and oil crises, new technologies and corporate power. The report warns that the world’s largest companies are riding the coattails of the “Green Economy” while gearing up for their boldest coup to-date – not just by making strategic acquisitions and tapping new markets, but also by penetrating new industrial sectors.

DuPont, for example, already the world’s second largest seed company and sixth largest company in both pesticides and chemicals, is now a powerhouse in plant-based materials, energy and food ingredients. DuPont’s business plan is not unique. Other major players in seeds, pesticides, chemicals and food – including Monsanto, Syngenta, Dow, BASF and Unilever – are also making strategic investments in risky technologies and forming R&D collaborations in hopes of turning plant biomass into all kinds of high value products – and profit.

Since the turn of the millennium, the vision of a bio-based economy has been taking shape; with its promise to solve the problems of Peak Oil and climate change and to usher in an era of sustainable development, it quickly acquired a patina of ‘green.’ New technologies, primarily synthetic biology or extreme genetic engineering, enabled by advanced bioinformatics and genomics, are the bioeconomy’s engine while agricultural feedstock is its fuel.

While seductive, the new green techno-fixes are dangerous because they will spur even greater convergence and concentration of corporate power and unleash privately owned technologies into communities that have not been consulted about – or prepared for – their impacts. If the “Green Economy” is imposed without full intergovernmental debate and extensive involvement from peoples’ organizations and civil society, the Earth Summit to take place in Rio de Janeiro 20-22 June 2012 risks becoming the biggest Earth Grab in more than 500 years.

ETC Group’s Kathy Jo Wetter explains: “The goal is not to reject the green economy or technologies, but these are tools that must be guided by strong social policies. Agenda 21 called for technology assessment back in 1992 and the need for such a precautionary tool, that includes strict oversight of corporate concentration, is now more urgent than ever before.”

Alberto Gomez, of La Via Campesina, adds: “Corporate control over our food system threatens peasant farmers around the world. We already produce 70% of the world’s food, but our ability to do so in an agro-ecological way is being undermined by the kind of corporate control this report documents.”

Who Will Control the Green Economy?
will be launched at the Rio+20 Intersessional meeting taking place in New York on December 15-16. Kathy Jo Wetter, one of the report’s researchers, will present the findings on Thursday, 15 December 2012, at 7 pm at a side-event on Agriculture at Rio+20, in Conference Room 6, North Lawn Building at the UN Headquarters. Alberto Gomez will also speak at this event.

Who will control the Green Economy? is available in English (http://www.etcgroup.org/en/node/5296), Spanish (http://www.etcgroup.org/es/node/5298) and will soon be available in French.

sexta-feira, 1 de junho de 2012