Wednesday, December 16, 2009

Climategate - Rebuttal

Being a scientist myself and having been through the peer review process (on both sides, as an author and a reviewer), I was happy to find this concise video that explains the correspondence of 'climate-gate'. I'll admit that scientists, like everyone else, may overstate the importance or implication of their findings, be sloppy in their data analysis, etc. The peer review process (and often the 'peer' may be someone competing for funding in the same field) is done so that other scientist can review how the data was handled and if it is being given a sound interpretation. And although the peer reviewer is anonymous to the author, the editor knows the reviewers identity and ultimately decides the weight of the peer review recommendation (and usually at least two scientists review the paper).

Climate science is not perfect. Correlation does not always mean causation -- but it does provide a BIG RED WARNING FLAG which we would be fools (and maybe greedy fools) to ignore.




Since I've already posted something with holiday cheer (see Rebecca Kilgore - Holiday Swing posting), for the holidays I'll review three books on personal finance.

Friday, December 4, 2009

Happy Holidays! - More Rebecca Kilgore

In my previous post, I added a link to the Nov. 18th episode of Fresh Air which featured Rebecca Kilgore and Dave Frishberg singing Johnny Mercer songs, commemorating what would have been Mercer's 100th birthday.

Somewhere in the process I came across a previous visit by Rebecca on Fresh Air in December of 2005, in which she performs "swinging holiday music". Take a listen and enjoy!

Wednesday, November 11, 2009

Reading, Writing, and Music

Apparently, I can only do two of the three at a time as a “hobby” -- and for the last week we or so it has been reading and music.

So, if you’re curious, this is what is on my nightstand for reading:

Several books by R. Buckminster Fuller. Buckminster Fuller has been an icon for chemists since the carbon allotropes known as fullerenes, named after the inventor of geodesic dome architecture, were discovered in 1985. The Carbon-60 geodetically-shaped fullerene is commonly known (at least amongst us nerdy science types) as “buckyballs” -- again as a nod to Fuller. Perhaps more widely known of the fullerenes are carbon-nanotubes, which according to some scientific circles seem to hold the potential to do just about everything. While I knew about Fuller’s domes and love of using shape in structural design, I knew shockingly little of his writings about technology, humanity, and his view of our future as a species on the planet. Having studied chemistry in Boston, you’d think I would have known that he is buried in Cambridge, MA – but it seems that learning things about humanity has been stripped out of science education, particularly if one is getting a dual-science or engineering education. His books make very interesting (albeit sometimes esoteric) reading.

A Place of My Own by Michael Pollan. I picked up this book from the library after attending the natural building workshop. Although I didn’t have any immediate plans to build anything at the time of the workshop, once I left I started looking around for something to build. Michael Pollan, best know for his books about what we are eating and producing as food, wrote this book several years ago about his experience building a small building with his own efforts. This is Michael Pollan the story-teller, much like as in his first(?) book Second Nature. Unfortunately, I’m not making much progress on this one, but it is a lyrical and humorous read. I may take it back to the library for now and check it out again over the Christmas Holiday.

In my CD player (what can I say, I’m an old-fashioned gal and still have CDs):

I Wish You Love by Rebecca Kilgore with Lyle Ritz and Dave Captein. Rebecca Kilgore is a well known Portland jazz singer/musician. Her voice is simple and sweet … and yet combines with a maturity and wisdom I’m not sure I’ve come across before. She’s accompanied by Ukulele virtuoso Lyle Ritz and Portland star bassist Dave Captein. I can get obsessive when trying to figure out a simpler bass line on my bass guitar for songs, so I’ve listened to this CD a lot in the last week. Rebecca will be on NPR’s Fresh Air with Terry Gross on Nov. 18th. (Link to the Nov. 18th program has been added.)

The Best Party Ever by The Boy Least Likely To. Since I don’t have a TV, I’m blissfully unaware of most current commercials. But I was happily surprised to hear the instrumental portion of “Be Gentle with Me” on a Coca-Cola commercial preceding the movie “Men Who Stare at Goats”. I saw this quirky duo at live performances in Portland twice in 2006 and loved their techno-folk music. I haven’t kept up with what they’ve done since then, but I think I’ll look into their latest album.

Well, until I can put down my 4-string instruments or the library recalls my books, that’s it for this week.

Friday, October 30, 2009

Wednesday, October 28, 2009

Nine Days of Mud Huts



I’ve recently returned from a 9-day workshop on natural building. Or more specifically, an intensive course on building with cob at the Cob Cottage Company’s School of Natural Building in southwestern Oregon. For over nine days I lived in the woods in a two-man tent, used composting toilets, ate vegan communal meals, and had sparse access to electricity which came from the surplus solar power of the nearby intentional community.

Although I’ve travelled rather extensively in the United States, I’ve only been out of the U.S. once – and that was to England & Wales. For this sissy urban dweller, the natural building experience felt more like a visit to a third world country while remaining in the U.S. … but with cooked vegan meals included. My stomach thought it was a terrible shock and responded accordingly (not good with the woods/composting toilet arrangement).

After a couple of days to adjust, my stomach and I settled in. The idea of a hand-built house made from unprocessed earthen materials has a broad appeal to those who seek out such workshops: it represents the possibility of being free from an expensive mortgage and the consumer/industrial society it finances, as well as being free from ever growing levels of personal consumption (a hand-built house tends to be highly customized but extremely small by usual standards). Free from gray cubicle walls, flashing screens, and carpel-tunnel-mousing syndrome, we can once again interact with the earth as provider … as respite … as wonder.

Freed from the burden of a mortgage and high levels of consumption, life can be determined by one’s passions and morals rather than dictated by economics. How many times have you heard someone say: “If it was up to me I’d [fill in the blank], but I’m paid to [fill in the blank]”? This excuse is all too often used to justify going against our personal moral judgment and yield to someone else’s (usually a corporation or government entity). True freedom means regaining the right to exercise the personal judgment that we abdicate to the economic machine that feeds on conspicuous consumption and material rather than moral comfort.

Over the nine days of mixing clay, sand, and straw with my bare feet, sculpting a house with my bare hands, and listening to the stories and music of others to fill the time in between, I was just starting to fully grasp how one can live fully by living simply.

More on natural building to come!

Thursday, October 22, 2009

MSN Money Article - Wall Street Run Amok?

Hmm. The MSN Money article by Charles H. Green places the blame with Harvard Business School ... and the "structural analyses" now used in teaching at business schools in general, resulting in a lack of context due to no longer personalizing or cross-referencing case study concepts and a lack of ethics due to no longer focusing on business relationships (see my last post concerning context and ethics).

Excerpt:
"In this worldview, 'business ethics' is an oxymoron, not because of bad behavior but because ethics can't even exist apart from some notion of a 'relationship' to something or someone else. Subordinating everything to shareholder value is, literally, anti-ethical."

As a 1976 HBS graduate himself, he concludes by recommending some changes for business schools.
Click here for full article.

My next post will be about my recent experience at a Natural Building workshop!

Thursday, October 8, 2009

The Prime Directive

No, not THAT prime directive (sorry Trekkies!). I’m referring to the Prime Directive of Permaculture, which is stated in Bill Mollison’s Permaculture Design Manual on page one as:


The only ethical decision is to take responsibility for our own existence and that of our children. Make it now. (Emphasis is Mollison’s)


The prime directive advocates personal responsibility (and personal responsibility for those we bring into this world), and that all other decisions will align to this … like a compass to magnetic north. And I’ve seen this happen in my own life. Once I decided to live more sustainably (complete sustainability is a long ways off!), I almost automatically started doing many things differently:



  • I started composting.

  • I began avidly recycling (beyond the curbside pick-up, there is a recycling center nearby that collects much more that what can be put in the neighborhood municipal recycling bins).

  • I drastically reduced packaging waste and recycling by being conscientious of my purchases.

  • “Disposable” became a dirty word – as a consequence I now rarely have garbage to put out for collection.

  • I vote with my dollar: if I have a choice between a less and a more sustainable option, I choose the more sustainable … even if it costs more.

Between consuming less and buying longer-lived items, I find that I’m still saving more money than in my less sustainable days.


In case you’re new to the concept, permaculture refers to the design principles developed by Bill Mollison and David Holmgren in the 1970s. “Permament culture” or “permament agriculture” (agriculture being a key component to our current culture) creates the contraction “permaculture.” Permanent – or in today’s lingo “sustainable” – agriculture is at the heart of the permaculture movement, but permaculture goes way beyond food production to holistic ecosystem and community design.


After the prime directive, Mollison’s design manual goes on to explain the ethics of Permaculture Design, an intriguing contrast to today's engineering mindset and highlights how context is often missing from our endeavors as human – context that requires us first to fully comprehend what our ethical values are and then to contemplate before commencing if such actions meet our own criteria of being ethical. In other words, to think not just if or how can something be done, but should it be done at all?


Permaculture has three equally important ethics: 1) Care for the Earth. 2) Care for People. 3) Reinvest the surplus to further the first two ethics – also referred to as ‘fair share,’ as it suggests that abundance is meant to be distributed. The wording and interpretation of “reinvest” varies across permaculturalists, so I have used the combination that expresses its meaning to me. However, it is the idea of “reinvesting” that is a key to one of the most important attributes of permaculture: the creation of abundance.


Before finding permaculture, my view of human interaction with nature was negative (for nature anyway … or possibly neutral for nature at best [neutral as in “take nothing but pictures, leave nothing but footprints”]). I believed that nature in its natural state void of mankind was a kind of perfection. Permaculture radically altered my perspective. By viewing the human species as a member of the ecosystem who, like the beaver, can create things that cause change in his environment, I realized for the first time that the human species has the choice to either design for depletion or design for abundance.


We choose to invest in or design for increasing abundance … or not. We choose to create eco-friendly habitats, organic gardens that provide nourishment for wildlife as well as for people and their cultural traditions, or we can create water-consuming ecologically barren stretches of lawn. Imagine if we, as a society, take on an ethic of improving the health of the Earth’s ecosystems and of creating abundance for future generations. Although we have in recent history been able to produce an increase in abundance in food production via the so-called “green revolution” after WWII, like many other measures (including Clean Air Act and Clean Water Act) this has been a stop-gap measure at best. Habitat and species loss are as prevalent as the loss of dietary diversity and self-reliance. If GNP was a measure of our natural capital availability, how would we view waste, pollution, clear-cutting, and strip-mining regardless of legislative regulations? How would we be “investing” for the future of the country?


Which brings me back once again to third permaculture ethic: re-investing the surplus to further support a) care for the earth and b) care for people. This third ethic closes the loop – and if there’s one thing permaculture is about, it is closed loops!


In the garden, an example of a closed loop is composting – returning spent vegetation (popularly viewed as a waste product) which grew from the existing soil back to the soil to start the nutrient cycle again. In communities, it can be elders passing wisdom and skills to the next generation, either directly person-to-person through traditions and mentor/apprenticeships or in the form of information (books, videos, etc.). In the money world, it is sometimes called “redistribution of wealth.” Using the analogy of money as water, the economy can be viewed as a pond with a pump to keep the circulation going. If the pump is linear, taking the water (money) further away from the source, the pond will soon go dry and the resource dissipated. However, by closed-loop circulation, water returns to the general source and the cycle continues indefinitely. Now, I am not going to argue for or against large-scale government redistribution – although I personally believe some government actions/programs are necessary, I will say that nearly everyone agrees that it is inefficient as well often ineffective and potentially doesn’t reflect one’s personal values or priorities. Personal reinvestment (giving of your surplus), be it time or money or expertise, gives you direct control of choosing that which aligns most to your particular values or ethics. And, like a beloved plant, you must feed those things that reflect your values it if you want them to grow and bare fruit.


Creating a surplus to have for “investing” often first requires decreasing the use of that resource so that an excess is available, be it time or money or natural capital. Financial advisors ask their clients to look at their expenses to find areas (like those premium lattes) where their cash expenses don’t align to their long-term goals. By focusing on areas where they can save money without impacting the things in their life that mean the most to them (such as time with their children) a surplus can be generated. Notice the difference between increasing surplus through reduction rather than increased production, such as by taking an additional part-time job, which would take time away from the family. Often, by gaining a surplus to be invested through reduction still allows for an increase in production, but without a corresponding increase in work or time inputs.


I will end this post by returning back to the Prime Directive: taking personal responsibility for the direction of one’s life – responsibility for the waste produced in one’s life and by one’s lifestyle; responsibility for the conditions that one’s purchases creates in other countries; responsibility for the infrastructure that one’s lifestyle supports; responsibility for the conditions of the land and animals that one’s food consumption choices support. Taking personal responsibility also asks the question: What in your life are you reinvesting … and to what end?

Thursday, September 10, 2009

Liar, Liar ...

Ok, I guess I lied about my first "real" post being about permaculture (or being posted sometime soon after July 14th, for that matter).

There will be a post about permaculture and ethics forthcoming. In the meantime, here's an interesting article from an unlikely source:

We Are All Madoffs

Tuesday, September 8, 2009

Autobiographical Sketch

I have always followed my curiosity – first to books, then to nature & science, and now to socio-economic issues. When I was young, I loved to gaze up at the stars, stretching my mind to comprehend the smallness of the Earth in its place in the Milky Way as well as to grasp my own smallness on a planet that seemed so vast. Nature, it seemed to me then, had a reassuring order about it: the sun always rising in the east, spring always following winter, water always flowing downhill …. Even later, while studying advanced chemistry, it seemed fairly straight-forward to learn chemical reactions, crystal structures, and thermodynamics. There were simple rules. And knowing the rules, some things in life were probable … even predictable! Science was easy. Significance, and the other hand, was much more difficult for me to understand.

Since I had a dual science major (Chemistry and Environmental Science), my exposure in college to social sciences and the humanities was limited. To me history contained nothing but facts and dates; literature, nothing but drama and anguish. Both history and literature (I thought) I could do without, or perhaps read on my own time when I felt the urge to do so. It is only now, having more years behind me, that I appreciate the connection and continuity that the disciplines I had neglected provide – they give us context. Just as thermodynamics can test for the possibility of a chemical reaction, history can be an assay of social reactions (both with their barriers to activation and dependence on reaction kinetics).

Social sciences and literature also help answer the question, what do we do with knowledge once gained? It is one thing to be able to understand and apply quantum physics; it is quite another to contemplate the ethics of doing so and to fully consider the social and environmental ramifications – not just of immediate or interim gains (economic or otherwise), but of the real long-term view. How we will be judged in the future’s history books and by the generations that follow ours? Will we be heralded, vilified, or just plain pitied for the choices we are making for our use of our scientific and technical knowledge? Do our current choices bring us closer together as humanity, or drive us to be isolated souls surrounded by the remnants of wasted resources and destroyed habitats?

So here I find myself, nearing middle-age and playing catch-up on all that I didn’t want to learn or to pay attention to in school … only now seeking to gain knowledge from the context that connects science to our collective natural soul.

Tuesday, July 14, 2009

First Post

Coming soon. First post will be on Permaculture!