brianlux wrote:I finished reading Daniel Quinn's Ishmael today and felt like I'd found something I've been looking for for quite a long time- a book that put's a lot of the pieces together without sermonizing or giving away too much or pretending to offer "an incantation" or "a magic word that would sweep all the nastiness away".
brianlux wrote:Will we change as a species, die off or remain the same?
brianlux wrote:Should we stay the course and hope for a last minute fix, become a hunter gather society in order avoid altering the environment such that large mammals including ours become extinct, or is there some other choice?
brianlux wrote:If someone you knew we're to choose a very simple, basic lifestyle such as hunter-gatherer/herders would you consider that "regressing"?
brianlux wrote:Can we continue to operate as a consumer species ("takers") and still somehow allow for a balance of nature and the ability for other forms of life to continue?
brianlux wrote:What approaches to solutions or change do you think work best? Legislation? Coercion? Education? Do nothing? Others?


JonnyPistachio wrote:oh, haha, to answer your main question, "where are we headed?"
I dunno, I sometimes get the feeling that there's nobody steering the ship these days.
hedonist wrote:"tell the captain this boat's not safe and we're drowning...turns out he's the one making waves"
Could take that on a political lean (which I have), but, maybe, we're all captains?
Not passengers.
Ishmael was like a wonderful slap in the face for me - "WAKE UP!" - and its / Quinn's philosophy has a firm place in my life. Not every day, to be honest, but enough that my conscience is usually clear.
(wait till you get into his other books, Brian!)
brianlux wrote:JonnyPistachio wrote:oh, haha, to answer your main question, "where are we headed?"
I dunno, I sometimes get the feeling that there's nobody steering the ship these days.
The Raid Can analogy, is a good one, Jonny. I'm concerned that we might be our own Raid Can by our reckless disregard for ecological balance. We seem to think we can continue to take what we want from the planet at an unchecked rate without paying consequences.
As for steering the ship I think we have three types:
1. Reckless captains who drive only for the thrill of speed and personal gain in the moment.
2. Wide eyed pilots who are trying desperately to steer the ship clear of the cliff we are speeding toward and
3. I very large group of passengers trying their best to numb themselves with TV or drugs or alcohol or whatever in order to avoid looking at the danger.

usamamasan1 wrote:one image from the story that has stuck with me is when Ismael speaks of someone who creates a flying bike or something like that. I think the bike that you pedal to make the wings flap is supposed to be our society.
when dude takes said bike and drives it off a cliff he starts "flying" faster and faster and thinks "damn, this bike is the shit". Problem is, the ground below is approaching faster and faster (imminent death). Dude is fucked though since the bike can't fly for shit, pedaling faster doesn't help.
or, something like that. great book. When I read it it seems to articualte my thoughts well.
Jeanwah wrote:Great topic, that book changed my outlook on life! I should probably pick it up again. Right after I read Gregg Allmann's biography.
I have to come back to this and gather my thoughts first.
I do think that the species will die off if we continue on the consumption treadmill we're currently on with capitalism guiding the way.
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