Title: COLLAPSE
1- COLLAPSE
- How Societies Chooseto Fail or SucceedJARED
DIAMOND - author of the Pulitzer Prize-winningGUNS, GERMS,
and STEEL - Jim DeLeo
- NIH BCIG Book Club
- June 22, 2005
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6Collapse
- a drastic decrease in
- human population size
- and/or
- political/economic/social complexity,
- over a considerable area,
- for an extended time.
7Signs of Collapse
- Floods
- Glacier Melt Downs
- Heavy Deforestation
- Grossly Corrupted Leadership
- Totalitarianism
- Slaughtering Neighbors
- Cannibalism
8What about U.S.?
- More likely than a doomsday scenario or an
apocalyptic collapse of industrial civilization
would be a future of significantly lower living
standards. - Jared Diamond Collapse
- Either we go into a depression which will
help save the ecology or we go into a boom which
will momentarily makes us happy but will
eventually ruin the ecology. - David Bohm Thought as A System
- We have a 10 year window to do something about
global warming. - Al Gore An Inconvenient Truth
9What about U.S.?
- More likely than a doomsday scenario or an
apocalyptic collapse of industrial civilization
would be a future of significantly lower living
standards. - Jared Diamond Collapse
- Either we go into a depression which will
help save the ecology or we go into a boom which
will momentarily makes us happy but will
eventually ruin the ecology. - David Bohm Thought as A System
- We have a 10 year window to do something about
global warming. - Al Gore An Inconvenient Truth
10What about U.S.?
- More likely than a doomsday scenario or an
apocalyptic collapse of industrial civilization
would be a future of significantly lower living
standards. - Jared Diamond Collapse
- Either we go into a depression which will
help save the ecology or we go into a boom which
will momentarily makes us happy but will
eventually ruin the ecology. - David Bohm Thought as A System
- We have a 10 year window to do something about
global warming. - Al Gore An Inconvenient Truth
11Who is Jared Diamond?
- Jared Diamond is a professor of geography at
- the University of California, L.A. He began his
- scientific career in physiology and expanded
- into evolutionary biology and biography. He
- has published at least four books and
- more than two hundred articles in
- Discovery, Natural History, Nature, and
- Geo magazines.
-
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14Evolution of Man
15Evolution of Jared Diamond
16Evolution of Jared Diamond
Me like write books.
172005
1997
1992
1997
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20Who is Jared Diamond?
- He does write well.
- He credits his mother, a teacher and musician for
the clear language that has made his books so
popular.
21Who is Jared Diamond?
- He does write well.
- He credits his mother, a teacher and musician for
the clear language that has made his books so
popular. - (If it ain't one thing its a mother.)
22Who is Jared Diamond?
- trained as a physiologist
- former world's foremost expert on salt
re-absorption by the gall bladder - a working conservationist
- an authority on the birds of New Guinea
- ability to write about geopolitical and
environmental systems in ways that educate,
provoke, and entertain
23December 2005
24Hi, Jared. Im your cousin Jim from Philadelphia
and Id like you to come to the NIH to review
your new book at a BCIG meeting.
25Hi, Jared. Im your cousin Jim from Philadelphia
and Id like you to come to the NIH to review
your new book at a BCIG meeting.
Im traveling too much. I need to spend more
time with my family in Los Angeles.
26I have no cousin Jim from Philadelphia. This
guys an imposter!
Hi, Jared. Im your cousin Jim from Philadelphia
and Id like you to come to the NIH to review
your new book at a BCIG meeting.
27Security!
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29Collapse How Societies Choose to Fail or Succeed
- Factors for success or failure of societies
- climate change
- hostile neighbors
- alternative sources of essential goods
- environmental problems
- response to environmental problems
-
30Collapse How Societies Choose to Fail or Succeed
- Ancient societies examined
- Maya,
- Anasazi
- Norse Greenland
- Easter Island
- Modern societies examined
- Rwanda
- Haiti
- China
- Australia
31Collapse How Societies Choose to Fail or Succeed
- The following perspectives are challenged
- Technology will solve our problems.
- We can always switch to some other
- resource.
- The First World has no business telling
- the Third World what to do.
-
32Collapse How Societies Choose to Fail or Succeed
- Two big Conclusions
- (1) Responses to environmental changes
- has proven to be most critical
factor. - (2) Globalization has made everyone more
- interdependent and now the First
World - and Third World are all a part of the
- chain.
-
-
33David Bohm
- Advanced weaponry, ecology and economy are
sources of problems. - Either we go into a depression which will help
save the ecology or we go into a boom which will
momentarily makes us happy but will eventually
ruin the ecology. - The faster we go into prosperity, the faster we
create other problems.
34You cant have everything where would you put
it? - Steven Wright
Dont you think we are a little too
materialistic? Isnt this an important factor In
what were talking about here?
35David Bohm
- People have been dealing with global problems
piecemeal treating symptoms. - But there is something deeper which is not being
considered that is constantly generating these
problems. - We can use the analogy of a stream where people
are pouring pollution in upstream at the same
time they are trying to remove it downstream.
But as they remove it they may be adding more
pollution of a different kind.
36insert pollutants here
remove pollutants here
insert pollutants here
37David Bohm
- The source of this trouble is basically
-
38David Bohm
- The source of this trouble is basically
- THOUGHT!
- from
- Thought as a System
- David Bohm
39Tragedy of Commons
40Tragedy of Commons
The Fifth Discipline
41Closer to Home
- At my condo a tree near the swimming pool was
removed. The following reasons were given by our
management - (1) pine needles in the water
- (2) sap on the cars
- (3) structural damage
- to the pool deck
42Closer to Home
- At my condo a tree near the swimming pool was
removed. The following reasons were given by our
management - (1) pine needles in the water
- (2) sap on the cars
- (3) structural damage
- to the pool deck
All total B.S.!
43- It is difficult to get a man to
- understand something
- when his salary depends on
- his not understanding it.
- Upton Sinclair
-
as quoted in the Al Gore movie and -
book An Inconvenient Truth.
44Closer to Home
- Pros for the trees ltneeds workgt
- Shade,
- Deforestation of pool
- Benefits/loss
- Global warming
- System (thought
- as a system
- tie together)
45My Appeal to You
- I hope we will take our review and dialogue on
the this book seriously. - I hope we will think of instances in our own
personal lives like I just did to consider - where some of what Jared says might be
affecting our lives and therefore the lives of
all. - Look for connections with Al Gore's An
Inconvenient Truth.
46Definition of Collapse
- Collapse a drastic decrease in human
population size and/or political/economic/ social
complexity, over a considerable area, for an
extended time. - Collapse is an extreme form of several milder
types of decline. -
- It becomes arbitrary to decide how drastic the
decline of a society must be before it qualifies
to be labeled as a collapse.
47LINKS
- http//www.climateark.org/articles/reader.asp?link
id38332 - http//seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/artsentertai
nment/2002159510_jared25.html - http//healthandenergy.com/collapse_of_societies.h
tm - http//www.newyorker.com/critics/books/?050103crbo
_books - http//us.penguingrou
- p.com/nf/Book/BookDisplay/0,,9780670033379,00.htm
- http//www.mediatimesreview.com/blog/2005/08/15/bi
ology-doesnE28099t-explain-why-societies-collap
se/
48PROLOGUE
- Diamond visited two farms similar in strengths
and vulnerabilities. - Vulnerabilities
- economic marginal districts
- short growing season
- harm by climate change
- far from population centers
- changing affluence and tastes of customers and
neighbors
49PROLOGUE
- On a larger scale economies of their countries
rose and fell with the waxing and waning of enemy
societies. - Hulls Farm in Montana is prospering today.
- Garder Farm in Greenland collapsed over 500 years
ago because Greenland Morse society collapsed
completely. - Collapse seems incomprehensible in both.
50PROLOGUE
- He is not saying Hulls Farm and American society
are doomed to decline, but that we face growing
environmental problems that should not be
underestimated.
51- 5-point framework of factors for
- success or failure of societies
- climate change
- hostile neighbors
- alternative sources of essential goods
- environmental problems
- response to environmental problems
-
52- 5-point framework of factors for
- success or failure of societies
- climate change
- hostile neighbors
- alternative sources of essential goods
- environmental problems
- response to environmental problems
-
Most important!
53PROLOGUE
- Our problems today are similar to those of past
societies. - Five-point framework of factors as working
definition of collapse. - How could a mighty society collapse?
- What happened to the individual citizens?
- Might such a fate befall the U.S.?
- Human ecological damage has been a causal agent
in collapses.
54PROLOGUE
- Eight categories of environmental concerns
- Deforestation and habitat destruction
- Soil problems
- Water management problems
- Over hunting
- Over fishing
- Effects of introduced species on native species
- Human population growth
- Increased per capita impact of people
55PROLOGUE
- The risk of such collapses today is now of
increasing concer n. - Collapses have already materialized for Somalia,
Rwanda and some other third world countries.
56PROLOGUE
- Today there are four more categories of
environmental concerns - Human caused climate change
- Buildup of toxic chemicals in the environment
- Energy shortages
- and full human utilization of the earths
photosynthetic capacity
57PROLOGUE
- Most of these 12 categories of threats will
become globally critical within the next few
decades. - Either we solve the problems by then or they will
undermine first world societies - More likely than a doomsday scenario or an
apocalyptic collapse of industrial civilization
would be a future of significantly lower living
standards. - What we do today can make a difference.
58PROLOGUE
- If we study past collapses it might give us
insights about the future. - Early people did not necessarily do bad things.
- They were like us facing similar problems and
they did the best they could. - What distinguished those that collapses from
those that didnt.
59PROLOGUE
- Seriousness of these problems is vigorously
debated exaggeration or underestimated? - Is todays world population of 7 billion people
with potent modern technology causing our
environment to crumble globally and rapidly? - Will modern technology solve our problems or is
it creating new problems faster than it solves
old ones. - In the past people have caused local collapses
because of these factors.
60- 5-point framework of factors for
- success or failure of societies
- climate change
- hostile neighbors
- alternative sources of essential goods
- environmental problems
- response to environmental problems
-
61PROLOGUE
- 5-point framework of factors derived.
- The fifth set of factors always proves
significant. - A society's responses always depends on its
political, economic and social institutions and
on its cultural values. - In the book he considers this 5-point framework
whose collapse or persistence is discussed.
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