Title: Engineering Principles For a Living Planet
1Engineering Principles For a Living Planet
- Bill Vitek
- Clarkson University
- June 14, 2007
2The End of the World As We Know It
- Vital Signs
- Up Carbon Creek With a Paddle
- The Task of Philosophy/Ethics in Times of
Transition - A Necessary Revolution In Engineering, Education
and Beyond - High Stakes and a Long Shot
3The Paddle A Failed Mental Model Applied
Correctly
- Nature as Boundless Source and Sink
- Human Mind/Knowledge as Sufficient
- Human Concerns First and Foremost
- Transgression of Limits
- Science
- Engineering
- Economics
- Ethical
4Vital Signs
- Doomsday clock two minutes closer to midnight,
reflecting global failures to solve the problems
posed by nuclear weapons and the climate crisis. - Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change states
that there is a 90 chance humans are
responsible for climate change."
5Vital Signs
- Peak Oil first trillion barrels consumed in last
100 years last trillion barrels in next 30
years. (A 22 year old today has lived through a
time in which 540 billion barrels of oil has been
consumed? 437 trillion lbs of new CO2 in the
atmosphere). - The current rate of species loss is being
compared to the five known mass extinction waves.
This sixth wave is anthrogenic. - One billion people lack access to fresh water.
- Soil destruction now claims 24 million acres a
year world-wide, about half the size of Kansas, a
quarter the size of California or 3.5 Marylands.
6Vital Signs
- Two of the most populous nations are becoming two
of the largest economies. - Human population growth continues to follow an
exponential curve. - There are currently 27 million slaves in the
world, more than at any other time in human
history. - Eight nations possess nuclear weapons, and two
are working to acquire them.
7Problems in Carbon Creek
- Interconnected
- Technology often makes matters worse
- Early daylight savings increased energy use
- The recipe for success is broken
- Unleash human ingenuity
- Harness and commodify natures immense and
complex forces (90 million acres of US corn in
07) - Enjoy the new and improved world that results
- Repeat
8A Trip To Exponentialville
http//wolf.readinglitho.co.uk/mainpages/consumpti
on.html
9http//www.oilcrisis.com/midpoint.htm
10http//www.cru.uea.ac.uk/cru/info/warming/
11http//www.susps.org/overview/numbers.html
12http//www.whole-systems.org/extinctions.html
13(No Transcript)
14Beyond the Rock is a Hard Place
- We are nearly at the end of a line of thinking
that is no longer supportable by the material and
energy conditions upon which it rests. - We need to dismantle the worldview that is
dismantling the world. - Ethics Across the Curriculum is one way to
describe it. - Engineering Education is a great place to start.
15Changing Our Minds/et
- New Conceptual Models
- New/Old Standards
- Renewed Respect for Boundaries
- Ethical
- Epistemological
- Ecosystemic
16What is Engineering?
- Engineeringis the direction of the sources of
the power of nature for the use and convenience
of man. It is the link, the bridge between man
and nature a bridge over which man passes into
nature to control it, guide it, understand it,
and the bridge over which nature and its forces
pass to get into mans field of interest and
service - Nicholas Murray Butler, Nobel Laureate and
President of Columbia University, 1901-1945
17What is Engineering?
- Engineering is the art of modeling materials we
do not wholly understand, into shapes we cannot
precisely analyze so as to withstand forces we
cannot properly assess, in such a way that the
public has no reason to suspect the extent of our
ignorance. - A.R. Dyes, British Institution of Structural
Engineers, 1976
18Assumptions
- Mind-Reality Interface
- Knowledge is Possible
- Knowledge is Power
- Divide and Conquer
- Nature is Passive
- The Whole is Equal to the Sum of its Parts
19Assumptions Continued
- Technical and Scientific Knowledge are Value Free
- All Mistakes are Fixable
- Cross that bridge when we come to it
- Knowledge accumulates and drives out ignorance
20Assumptions Challenged
- Nature is not passive
- Whole not equal to the sum of the parts
- Knowledge is not value free
- Ignorance increases with increased knowledge
- Some mistakes are less fixable than others
- Greater KnowledgeGreater Responsibility
21Engineering and Environmentalism
- Sources 1880s-1940s
- Conservation
- Sinks 1950s-1980s
- Pollution Control
- Systems 1990s-Present
- Sustainability
- Life Cycle Analysis
- Industrial Ecology
22Ethics and Environmentalism
- Sources
- Conservation
- Utilitarianism
- Anthropocentrism
- Sinks
- Rights
- Individualism
- Systems
- Species
- Ecosystems
23An Ecospheric Ethos
- Engineering is a tool for living well in the
world. - This world is alive, interconnected and crowded.
- The tool is limited by ethics, ignorance, and the
net primary production of ecosystems. - Or science, politics, economics, etc.
24Proposition One No Harm
- Thoughtlessly and/or willingly destroying life or
limiting the diversity and co-evolution of life,
especially at the level of species, is a moral
wrong. - Aldo Leopolds injunction to keep all the parts.
25Proposition Two No Hubris
- Human beings are the unintended offspring of
evolutionary biology, and as such lack any
special or pre-ordained tools for divining the
worlds inner workings. - We should behave as if our ignorance will always
exceed our knowledge. It will. - (Dyes definition of engineering)
26Proposition Three No Hurry
- All life depends on sunlight and the complex and
integrated chemical and thermodynamic processes
it powers. - Net Primary Production (NPP) is the term that
describes the energic and organic material
production of these ecosystem processes.
27Proposition Three No Hurry
- NPP is constrained by many factors and cannot be
substantially improved, increased or sped up over
time without the addition of inputs from outside
the system. (Haber-Bosch Process) - The Wells are more important than the Pumps.
28Proposition Three No Hurry
- Across the board this drawdown is increasingly
noticeable in the exploitation of soils,
aquifers, oil and natural gas. - These are one-time draw downs.
- We cant speed up natural processes.
- Our only option is to slow ourselves down.
29Engineering 21st Century Curricula
- Acknowledge 19th Century Discoveries
- 2nd Law of Thermodynamics
- Evolutionary Biology
- Ecosystem Complexity
30Engineering 21st Century Curricula
- Five Years
- Biology-Ecology Sequence
- Precautionary Principle
- Engineering Forensics Course
- History of Engineering
31Engineering 21st Century Curricula
- More Liberal Arts
- Public Service Requirement
- Public Orientation of Graduate Education
- Limits Credo No Harm, No Hubris, No Hurry
32Engineering 21st Century Curricula
- Integrate Green Engineering Principles
- http//pubs.acs.org/cgi-bin/article.cgi/esthag-a/2
003/37/i05/pdf/303anastas.pdf - http//www.epa.gov/oppt/greenengineering/pubs/what
s_ge.html
33Why This is So Difficult
- Flashy Brains
- Genesis
- Prometheus
- The Enlightenment
- Manifest Destiny
- Geological Inheritance
- Crediting the Brains (the Pumps) rather than the
Inheritance (the Well) - Bacteria in a Petri Dish and the Evolutionary
Disposition to Live to Excess - http//www.cartoonstock.com/directory/u/up_the_cre
ek_without_a_paddle.asp
34A Necessary Revolution
- A New Founding
- Revolutionary Thinkingand Action
- At the Outer/Inner Most Boundaries
- The Ecosphere
- The Human Mind
- Using the Tree of Knowledge to Protect the Tree
of Life - A True Test and Testament of a Well-Developed
Neo-Cortex - Theres Still Time
- Revolutionary Thinking is in Our Heritage
35The most meaningful work that we can do is
to Build receptivity into the still unlovely
human mind. Beginning with our own.. Aldo
Leopold, A Sand County Almanac
36The Precautionary Principle
- History
- Hippocrates (5th Century BCE) Do No Harm
- Public Health
- Germany in 1970s Vorsorgenprinzip or
Foresight Principle
37The Precautionary Principle
- Definition from 1992 Rio Conference
- "In order to protect the environment, the
precautionary approach shall be widely applied by
States according to their capabilities. Where
there are threats of serious or irreversible
damage, full scientific certainty shall not be
used as a reason for postponing cost-effective
measures to prevent environmental degradation." - Ref http//habitat.igc.org/agenda21/rio-dec.html
38The Precautionary Principle
- Principles
- People have a duty to take anticipatory action to
prevent harm. "If you have a reasonable
suspicion that something bad might be going to
happen, you have an obligation to try to stop
it. - The burden of proof of harmlessness of a new
technology, process, activity, or chemical lies
with the proponents, not with the general public.
- Source http//www.sdearthtimes.com/et0398/et0398s
4.html
39The Precautionary Principle
- Principles
- Before using a new technology, process, or
chemical, or starting a new activity, people have
an obligation to examine "a full range of
alternatives" including the alternative of doing
nothing. - Decisions applying the precautionary principle
must be "open, informed, and democratic" and
"must include affected parties." - Source http//www.sdearthtimes.com/et0398/et0398s
4.html
40The Precautionary Principle
- In action
- EPA and OSHA in 1970s
- Canada Federal Policy (2003)
- Quebec Pesticide Laws (2002)
- American Public Health Association endorsement
(2000)