Wednesday, November 20, 2024

Exam 2 audio review, Part I

Here are the questions thru mid-November from which the December 3 exam may be drawn, stay tuned for Part II.

Questions NOV 21

MacA Part IV-Assessing the End of the World. McK Barbara Kingsolver, Michael Pollan


NOV 21 

  • MacA Part IV-Assessing the End of the World - Katherine Welch
  • McK Barbara Kingsolver, Michael Pollan - Jonathan Keith
  • ...Chelsie Gordon
McK
  1. What can't Barbara Kingsolver forget about the paper she writes on? 941
  2. About what does Kingsolver agree with Annie Dillard 943
  3. What's been our natural habitat since 1996? 945  What has our "exodus" taken from us? What does wildness do for us? 946-7
  4. What does Michael Pollan's Second Nature say about wildness? 948
  5.  The modern Concentrated Animal Feeding Operation (CAFO) depends on a "sea" of what? 949  What "logic" supports this? 951
  6. To what is the health of livestock inextricably linked?  How much E-coli bacteria is fatal to ingest? 957
  7. Why isn't corn as cheap as it seems? What does it do to a cow? 958-9

MacA

  1. What was MacA's mento Parfit's primary moral concern? What new area of moral philosophy did it inspire? What'ss Parfit's (and MacA's)  central claim? 168-9
  2. What is the intuition of neutrality? What observation does MacA say contradicts it? 171-2
  3. What do sci-fi time travel scenarios like Back to the Future often suppose, and what do they rarely consider? What's an example of how we radically change the course of history? 174-5
  4. What is the Repugnant Conclusion?  The Dominance Addition? 180-1 The Sadistic Conclusion? 185
  5. Why does MacA consider anti-natalism a mistake? 187f. What does he think we should hope about future civilization? 189
  6. COMMENT?: Schopenhauer's and Benatar's statements? 192
  7. Do you (would you) consider hypothetical supra-humans our descendants? 193
  8. How much of their day do survey respondents say they would prefer to skip? How many said their lives contain more happiness than suffering? 198-9  How about you?
  9. What US demographic has gotten less happy over time? 205  Why do you think that is?
  10. Would you take the deathbed option? 212, 216
  11. COMMENT?: "Although they are rare in the population as a whole, malevolent, sadistic, or psychopathic actors may be disproportionately likely to gain political power..." 219

More than 200 health professionals say Trump has ‘malignant narcissism’ in open letter

George Conway-led Pac questions Republican nominee’s mental fitness for office in full-page New York Times ad

An anti-Trump political group organized a letter signed by more than 200 mental health professionals, warning that Donald Trump is dangerous because of “his symptoms of severe, untreatable personality disorder – malignant narcissism”, which makes him “grossly unfit for leadership”.

Less than two weeks before the presidential election, the group bought a full-page ad styled as an open letter in the New York Times on Thursday, arguing that the Republican nominee for the White House is “an existential threat to democracy” in the US... (continues)

 The sixth great extinction is happening, conservation expert warns

Victoria Gill

Presenter, BBC Radio 4 Inside Science•@vic_gill

...This week, world leaders have gathered in Baku, Azerbaijan, for COP29 - the latest round of UN climate talks.

And Dr Goodall says taking action to slow down the warming of our planet is more urgent than ever.

“We still have a window of time to start slowing down climate change and loss of biodiversity,” Dr Goodall says. “But it's a window that's closing.”

Destruction of forests, and other wild places, she points out, is intrinsically linked to the climate crisis.

“So much has changed in my lifetime,” she says, recalling that in the forests of Tanzania where she began studying chimps more than 60 years ago, “you used to be able to set your calendar by the timing of the two rainy seasons”.

“Now, sometimes it rains in the dry season, and sometimes it's dry in the wet season. It means the trees are fruiting at the wrong time, which upsets the chimpanzees, and also the insects and the birds.”...

Whole article is here:  https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c93qvqx5y01o

An organism at war with itself

"We are one planet."

From COSMOS: A Personal Voyage, Episode 13 "Who Speaks for Earth"

https://www.threads.net/@carlsagandotcom/post/DCkia7IyLE0?xmt=AQGztz1gF_MNyatAyJadN-mMc1DfdbhUGjMDEELwbx7VAg

Tuesday, November 19, 2024

Shock therapy

"...On Sunday, speaking from the Amazon rainforest in Brazil, President Joe Biden said that it would not be possible to reverse America’s “clean energy revolution,” which has now provided jobs across the country, primarily in Republican-dominated states. Biden noted that the U.S. would spend $11 billion on financing international responses to climate change in 2024, an increase of six times from when he began his term.
 

But President-elect Trump has called climate change a hoax and has vowed to claw back money from the Inflation Reduction Act appropriated to mitigate it, and to turn the U.S. back to fossil fuels. What Trump will have a harder time disrupting, according to Nicolás Rivero of the Washington Post, is the new efficiency standards the Biden administration put in place for appliances. He can, though, refuse to advance those standards.

Meanwhile Trump and his team are announcing a complete reworking of the American government. They claim a mandate, although as final vote tallies are coming in, it turns out that Trump did not win 50% of the vote, and CNN statistician Harry Enten notes that his margin comes in at 44th out of the 51 elections that have been held since 1824. He also had very short coattails—four Democrats won in states Trump carried—and the Republicans have the smallest House majority since there have been 50 states, despite the help their numbers have had from the extreme gerrymandering in states like North Carolina.

More Americans voted for someone other than Trump than voted for him.

Although Trump ran on lowering the cost of consumer goods, Trump and his sidekick Elon Musk, along with pharmaceutical entrepreneur Vivek Ramaswamy, have vowed to slash the U.S. government, apparently taking their cue from Argentina’s self-described anarcho-capitalist president Javier Milei, who was the first foreign leader to visit Trump after the election. Milei’s “shock therapy” to his country threw the nation into a deep recession, just as Musk says his plans will create “hardship” for Americans before enabling the country to rebuild with security..." HCR

Monday, November 18, 2024

Saving Endangered Animals Will Help Save Us, Too

We were living in a cataclysmic age of mass extinction and climate instability even before the election. Now the climate denier in chief is poised to gut the environmental protections that do exist. Even so, conservation nonprofits are struggling to raise the funds they need to challenge his wrecking-ball agenda in court. The people who care are feeling defeated, and the fight has not yet begun.

I was already grieving, and the approach of Remembrance Day for Lost Species, which falls each year on Nov. 30, didn't help. Was this really the best time to pick up "Vanishing Treasures: A Bestiary of Extraordinary Endangered Creatures" by the dazzling British author and scholar Katherine Rundell? Did I really want to read another book about how so much of life on earth is close to ending?


As it turns out, this is the perfect book to read in the aftermath of a planet-threatening election. In times like these, terror and rage will carry us only so far. We will also need unstinting, unceasing love. For the hard work that lies ahead, Ms. Rundell writes, "Our competent and furious love will have to be what fuels us." This is a book to help you fall in love.

Among the 23 endangered creatures she celebrates in "Vanishing Treasures," the last on the list is humans. This is not a sly overstatement to make a point. How will we grow crops if we lose the pollinators? What medical advancements — like the GLP-1 drugs, derived from a study of Gila monsters, that now treat diabetes and obesity — will we miss if reptiles go extinct? Which diseases will run rampant in our communities if scavengers are poisoned out of existence?

Margaret Renkl

https://www.nytimes.com/2024/11/18/opinion/climate-endangered-animals-humans.html?smid=nytcore-ios-share&referringSource=articleShare

Friday, November 15, 2024

Questions NOV 19

MacA Part III-Safeguarding Civilisation. McK thru Sandra Steingraber

  • MacA Part III-Safeguarding Civilisation - Eli Kersey
  • McK thru Sandra Steingraber - Nathan Ruppel
  • ... - Chelsie Gordon
  • [Make-up] McK thru David Quammen - Audrey Lewis


MacA

  1. Who conceived Spaceguard? Who imitated it? How effective is it? 106-7
  2. How uncommon are pathogen escapes? 109 Are they a serious concern? 112-3
  3. How is the Planet of the Apes scenario related to the Fermi Paradox? 117-19
  4. What question is more pertinent than why Rome fell? What good came out of that? 123-4
  5. What are some 20th century examples of human resilience? 126-7
  6. Is MacAskill pessimistic about the worst-case nuclear scenario? 129-131  How about climate change? 134-6
  7. In light of the election, do you share MacA's "best guess"? 141
  8. Why does progress become harder to achieve? 151 How might civilization avoid "stagnation"? How might it last a long time? 156-8  Under what conditions might stagnation trigger extinction? 162
McK
  1. Janisse Ray engages what culture long ignored by environmentalists? 898
  2. The absence of what practice has devastated gopher tortoises? 902
  3. How do junkyards resemble/illustrate ecosystems? 904-5
  4. How long did Julia Butterfly Hill occupy Luna? 907
  5. By what analogy does Hill describe her "movement"? 912  Why wouldn't she come down to escape the storm? 915  What did she learn from Luna's "voice"? 917
  6. What evangelical notion did Calvin DeWitt apply to environmentalism? 919 What are his three principles? 920f.
  7. What shouldn't you eat? 924
  8. What does abad mean? 926
  9. Sandra Steingraber has spent her career investigating what? 929
  10. What was Rachel Carson's big point? 930
  11. Who's at the top of the food chain? 931
  12. What are some effects of exposure to Dioxin? 938



Thursday, November 14, 2024

Questions NOV 14

MacA Part II-Trajectory Changes. McK thru David Quammen

  • MacA Part II-Trajectory Changes Christina Guest
  • McK thru David Quammen - Audrey Lewis
  • ... - Eli Miller

MacA

  1. Who are some classical and Enlightenment philosophers who accepted slavery?  What 18th century activist does MacAskill credit with challenging it most effectively? What else did he oppose? 49-50
  2. What is the dead-hand problem? What's an example? 54
  3. What evolutionary biologist famously denied the likelihood that a re-wound "tape of life" would support the emergence of human-level intelligence? What is the current consensus among biologists concerning evolutionary contingency? What principles govern cultural evolution? What happens to cultures that don't entrench themselves? 55-60
  4. What does 20th century history show about moral progress? 65 What do we need, to drive it forward? 72
  5. Who were the Mohists? What did they have in common with the British utilitarians? 76 What did the rise and millennial lock-in of Confucianism illustrate? 78
  6. What technology of our time is key to the prospects of future lock-in? 79  What will we have created, if research in this area proceeds to its ultimate achievement?  80
  7. What have tech moguls like Bezos, Thiel, and Altman invested in and/or patronized? 85
  8. What is the alignment problem? It it's solved, what might continue for billions of years to come? 87
  9. What countries does MacAskill expect to grow in power in the future? 93 What kind of world does he say we should want to build? 99-101

McK

  1. Annie Dillard compared Richard Nelson to who? 860
  2. What do the Koyukon elders teach? 873
  3. What is David Quammen's main subject? What is it good to remember about feathers (and paleontologists)? 874-5
  4. How many species will be lost, if current trends continue? 881
  5. What does anyone interested in biodivdersity need to think about? 884
A nice moment between Joel (Cicely Alaska's imported Columbia-trained physician) and Ed, the local Shaman-in-training and aspiring filmmaker, from the great TV series Northern Exposure:



 ZIllow just debuted a climate risk map. This East Tennessee town shows up as having a long-term air pollution risk

Allison Kiehl  Knoxville News Sentinel  Nov. 12, 2024

ZIllow's new climate risk maps show an East Tennessee city has an extreme air pollution risk.

In September 2024, the online real estate site partnered with First Street, a company specializing in climate risk mapping, to make climate data accessible to potential homeowners.

The First Street maps existed before the Zillow partnership. But now, the data is meant to be a tool for potential home buyers as they assess climate risk, insurance costs and long-term affordability of properties before putting in an offer.

The maps help buyers understand five major risks: Flood, fire, wind, heat and air.

“Climate risks are now a critical factor in home-buying decisions,” said Skylar Olsen, chief economist at Zillow in a recent press release. “Healthy markets are ones where buyers and sellers have access to all relevant data for their decisions."

Continues at:  https://www.knoxnews.com/story/money/2024/11/12/zillow-climate-risk-map-shows-air-p

Wednesday, November 13, 2024

We Study Climate Change. We Can’t Explain What We’re Seeing.

We need more timely updates in response to the rapid changes to the climate.

The earth has been exceptionally warm of late, with every month from June 2023 until this past September breaking records. It has been considerably hotter even than climate scientists expected. Average temperatures during the past 12 months have also been above the goal set by the Paris climate agreement: to keep global warming below 1.5 degrees Celsius over preindustrial levels.

We know human activities are largely responsible for the long-term temperature increases, as well as sea level rise, increases in extreme rainfall and other consequences of a rapidly changing climate. Yet the unusual jump in global temperatures starting in mid-2023 appears to be higher than our models predicted (even as they generally remain within the expected range)...

https://www.nytimes.com/2024/11/13/opinion/climate-change-heat-planet.html?smid=em-share

“If it kills me”

Clever dramatically-convergent portrayal of environmental activism & bioethics (long Covid, depression, mental illness), with a side of British humor…

https://www.bbc.co.uk/sounds/play/m0024w9s?partner=uk.co.bbc&origin=share-mobile

Samantha Harvey’s ‘beautiful and ambitious’ Orbital wins Booker prize | Books | The Guardian

"Our unanimity about Orbital recognises its beauty and ambition. It reflects Harvey's extraordinary intensity of attention to the precious and precarious world we share".

https://www.theguardian.com/books/2024/nov/12/orbital-by-samantha-harvey-wins-booker-prize-2024
==

...Harvey has said that while writing the novel she continually watched streaming video from the International Space Station showing Earth from space.

“To look at the Earth from space was a bit like a child looking into a mirror and realizing for the first time that the person in the mirror is herself,” she said during her acceptance speech. nyt

Sunrise from the ISS
"“With each sunrise nothing is diminished or lost and every single one staggers them. Every single time that blade of light cracks open and the sun explodes from it, a momentary immaculate star, then spills its light like a pail upended, and floods the earth, every time night becomes day in a matter of a minute, every time the earth dips through space like a creature diving and finds another day, day after day after day from the depth of space, a day every ninety minutes, every day brand new and of infinite supply, it staggers them.” Samantha Harvey, Orbital

Monday, November 11, 2024

Questions NOV 12

 MacA Part I-The Long View. McK thru Jack Turner

  • William MacAskill, What Do We Owe the Future? (MacA) Part I-The Long View - Aidan Haines
  • McK thru Jack Turner - Gray Fogo

McK

  1. Abandoned houses tell us what, says Linda Horgan? 812
  2. What does David Abram want us to honor and value? 815
  3.  What renders a healer worthless? 820 What do western anthropologists overlook in the shaman's craft? 821
  4. What is magic in its most primordial sense? 822 What experience led Abrams to rethink his conception of "spirits"? 826
  5. What emerging ecological perspective is similar to the animism of traditional cultures? 829 What power or presence did Abrams learn to perceive? What form of wisdom did he  begin to appreciate? 833-4
  6. What's another translation of the Japanese word for Enlightenment? 838
  7. What do we fail to appreciate about our descriptions and explanations of human behavior? 846


MacA
  1. What is MacAskill's book's worldview, and what is his preferred definition of it? ix What does he want us to be? xiii
  2. What was MacAskill's initial response to longtermism? What metaphors illustrate his current view? 5-6 What tyranny does he say we should abandon? 9 What is his aim in this book? 21-2
  3. COMMENT?" Do you see a connection between l'ism and John Dewey's continuous human community? (*below) Or Stewart Brand's Long Now Foundation?
  4. COMMENT:? "A chain is no stronger than its weakest link, and life is after all a chain." --William James
  5. COMMENT:? "Real generosity towards the future lies in giving all to the present." --Albert Camus
  6. How is humanity like a teenager? 19 What reckless behavior did MacAskill indulge in, as a teen? 34, 39
  7. Climate change highlights what? How is decarbonization a win-win-win...? 24-5 What's our outsized opportunity? 28
  8. What killed off the megafauna? 30
  9. What do Frank Capra and Bill McKibben have in common? What lesson about "plasticity" did McKibben learn? 42-3
 

Longtermism

https://www.williammacaskill.com/longtermism

Longtermism is the view that we should be doing much more to protect future generations.

Longtermism is based on the ideas that future people have moral worth, there could be very large numbers of future people, and that what we do today can affect how well or poorly their lives go. Let’s take these points one at a time. 

First, future people have moral worth. Just because people are born in the future does not make their experiences any less real or important. To illustrate this, we can put ourselves in our ancestors’ shoes and ask whether they would have been right to consider people today morally irrelevant by mere fact of not having yet been born. Another way to look at this is through considering our ability to harm future people. For instance, consider how we store nuclear waste. We do not simply set it out in the desert without further precautions, because it will start to leak in several centuries. Instead, we carefully store it and mark it for future generations, because we recognize that it would be wrong to cause future people foreseeable harm.

Second, there could be very large numbers of future people. Humanity might last for a very long time. If we last as long as the typical mammalian species, it would mean there are hundreds of thousands of years ahead of us. If history were a novel, we may be living on its very first page. Barring catastrophe, the vast majority of people who will ever live have not been born yet. These people could have stunningly good lives, or incredibly bad ones. 

Third, what we do today can affect the lives of future people in the long run. Some might argue that it is hard or impossible to predict the future, so that even if future people are morally important and even if there will be many of them, we cannot predictably benefit them beyond a hundred years time. However, while it is difficult to foresee the long-run effects of many actions, there are some things that we can predict. For example, if humanity suffered some catastrophe that caused it to go extinct we can predict how that would affect future people: there wouldn’t be any. This is why a particular focus of longtermism has been on existential risks: risks that threaten the destruction of humanity’s long-term potential. Risks that have been highlighted by longtermist researchers include those from advanced artificial intelligence, engineered pathogens, nuclear war, extreme climate change, and global totalitarianism. Besides mitigating existential risks, we can also predictably shape the longterm future by changing the trajectory of humanity in a persistent way, like through changing what it values. 

William has a book on longtermism called What We Owe The Future which was published in August and September 2022.

Learn more about longtermism in an excerpt of What We Owe The Future in The New York Times, an introductory article in BBC, and a long-form piece in Foreign Affairs. The links below are also helpful:

==

The Case for Longtermism

By William MacAskill

A professor of philosophy at Oxford University and the author of “What We Owe the Future,” from which this essay has been adapted

Imagine living the life of every human being who has ever existed — in order of birth.

Your first life begins about 300,000 years ago in Africa. After living that life and dying, you travel back in time to be reincarnated as the second-ever person, born slightly later than the first, then the third-ever person, and so on.

One hundred billion (or so) lives later, you are the youngest person alive today. Your life has lasted somewhere in the ballpark of four trillion years. You have spent approximately 10 percent of it as a hunter-gatherer and 60 percent as a farmer, a full 20 percent raising children, and over 1 percent suffering from malaria or smallpox. You spent 1.5 billion years having sex and 250 million giving birth.

That’s your life so far — from the birth of Homo sapiens until the present.

But now imagine that you live all future lives, too. Your life, we hope, would be just beginning. Even if humanity lasts only as long as the typical mammal species (about one million years), and even if the world population falls to a tenth of its current size, 99.5 percent of your life would still be ahead of you. On the scale of a typical human life, you in the present would be just a few months old. The future is big.

I offer this thought experiment because morality, at its core, is about putting ourselves in others’ shoes and treating their interests as we do our own. When we do this at the full scale of human history, the future — where almost everyone lives and where almost all potential for joy and misery lies — comes to the fore...  (continues)
==
* "The things in civilization we most prize are not of ourselves. They exist by grace of the doings and sufferings of the continuous human community in which we are a link. Ours is the responsibility of conserving, transmitting, rectifying and expanding the heritage of values we received that those who come after us may receive it more solid and secure, more widely accessible and more generously shared than we have received it. Here are all the elements for a religious faith that shall not be confined to sect, class, or race. Such a faith has always been implicitly the common faith of humanity. It remains to make it explicit and militant." —From A Common Faith by John Dewey