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Omni connexae!
22nd February 2012, 09:13
It's easy to get wrapped up with the negative things in life, I think. We, subject to the human experience, often see that which poses a potential threat being most worthy of our attention. I suppose there's good reasons for that, one of our jobs is survival after all. But in a world where mainsteam and alternative media, that thrives on negativities, plays such a large roll in our experience, perhaps it's wise to take a step back now and again, and re evaluate our world view. The most succesful forms of media appeal to our emotion: perhaps a tale that touches the heart, or a story that inspires us; gives us hope. However, more often then not, media, in all it's shapes and forms, likes to tell us about what it knows we fear. If one isn't careful, these emotionally targeted stories can create a negative bias within us.

They say that balance is the key, and that's a principle that can serve us well. So for any Avalonians who may feel bogged down by all the doom and gloom, I've found a book that personally helped me re evaluate how things really are around us, perhaps it may help balance your own thoughts too, or hopefully atleast, offer a new perspective to consider. The book's called Abundance: The Future is Better Than You Think (http://www.abundancethebook.com/), by Peter H. Diamandis and Steven Kotler.

I've found a short interview (http://www.samharris.org/blog/item/better-than-you-think) by Sam Harris with the authors, which discusses the nature of the book:

Is the world really getting better?

If you pull back a little bit from the sea of bad news that’s assaulting us these days, what you actually see is a preponderance of trends that are moving in a fantastic direction. Take healthcare: Over the past century, child mortality rates have dropped by 90 percent, while the length of human lifespan has doubled. Or poverty, which has dropped more in the past 50 years than it has in the previous 500.

At a global level, the gap between wealthy nations and poorer nations continues to close. Across the board, we are living longer, wealthier, healthier lives. Certainly, there are still millions of people living in dire, back-breaking poverty, but using almost every quality-of-life metric available—access to goods and services, access to transportation, access to information, access to education, access to life-saving medicines and procedures, means of communication, value of human rights, importance of democratic institutions, durable shelter, available calories, available employment, affordable energy, even affordable beer—our day-to-day experience has improved massively over the past two centuries.

Why aren’t we more aware of these positive trends?

The simple answer is because we’re hard-wired not to notice. As the first order of business for any organism is survival, our brain privileges information that appears to threaten us. As a result, we tend to focus too much on the bad news even as the good news struggles to get through. The media is so saturated with bad news – if it bleeds, it leads – because they’re vying for the amygdala’s attention.

Furthermore, to handle the massive influx of information we process on a moment by moment basis, the brain relies on heuristics. Most of the time these work. Sometimes they fail. When they fail we call them cognitive biases. As it turns out, a lot of our cognitive biases keep us pessimistic as well. The negativity bias is a tendency to give more weight to negative information and experiences than positive ones. Confirmation bias is our tendency to search for or interpret information in ways that confirms our preconceptions—which might not be so bad on its own, but when you add the media’s focus on negative news, you have a recipe for psychological disaster. This list goes on. The result is a brain that believes the end is near and there’s not a damn thing we can do about it.

What do you mean by “abundance”?

We believe that over the next two to three decades it will be possible to significantly raise global standards of living. Abundance is not about providing everyone on this planet with a life of luxury—rather it’s about providing everyone with a life of possibility. To be able to live such a life requires having the basics covered and then some. It also means stanching some fairly ridiculous bleeding: feeding the hungry, providing access to clean water, ending indoor air pollution, and wiping out malaria—four entirely preventable conditions that kill, respectively, seven, three, three, and two people per minute world-wide. But ultimately, abundance is about creating a world of possibility: a world where everyone’s days are spent dreaming and doing, not scrapping and scraping.

What makes you think that this is possible?

The data for starters. We combed through decades of research, reams of hard facts, and interviewed dozens of scientists, innovators, engineers, and philanthropists. We also see four emerging forces that now beginning to really make their presence felt in the world, but together should enable us to make the equivalent of 200 years of progress over the next 20 years.

What are these forces?

Exponential Technologies: Over the past few decades, researchers have come to conclude that any information-based technology is advancing along exponential growth curves. This is why the cell phone in your pocket is as powerful as a mid-70s era supercomputer for a minute fraction of the cost. Besides communication technology, exponential forces are at work in computational and network systems, artificial intelligence, robotics, biotechnology, bio-informatics, nanotechnology, human-machine interfaces, and many more. These technologies will soon enable the vast majority of human beings to experience what only the affluent have had access to thus far. In Abundance, we examine how exponential technologies are being used (and can be used) to provide 7 billion people with clean water, nutritious food, affordable housing, personalized education, top-tier medical care, non-polluting and ubiquitous energy.

DIY Innovators: DIY innovators are individuals and small groups empowered by exponential technologies and driven by the desire to take on humanity’s grand challenges. As we explore in the book, these groups now have the ability to tackle problems that were once the sole domain of governments and major corporations and NGOs. As a result, we are at the front end of a DIY revolution unlike anything the world has yet seen.

Technophilanthropists: Today there are more than 1,400 billionaires and 93,000 “ultra-high-net-worth” individuals in the world. Many of these are young, very socially-conscious entrepreneurs who made their money in technology and are now interested in using it to slay some of the world’s grandest challenges. Bill Gates fighting against malaria, Jeff Skoll crusading against pandemics, Pierre Omyidar democracy-spreading efforts. There are many, many more. We call these individuals Technophilanthropists.

Rising Billion: These are the poorest people on Earth, the so-called “bottom billion.” We have renamed this group the “Rising Billion” because, thanks to the exponential spread of communication and information technologies (like the smart phone), these people are coming on line for the very first time. Their voices, which have never before been heard, are suddenly joining the global conversation. Aided by these technologies, the Rising Billion are beginning to pull themselves out of poverty. They are already on their way to becoming a powerful and significant consuming segment of humanity, and many companies are rushing to develop ultra-low cost products to meet their needs. This effort will drive down the price of basic goods and services in a fashion that will benefit everyone. But the Rising Billion have also become a producing and consuming segment of humanity, generating new ideas, insights, products and services that add to the overall wealth of Earth.

It seems to me that all of this can sound a little quixotic and out of touch with some of the challenges that humanity now faces. Can you give me a concrete example of a trend toward abundance that is unlikely to ever be reversed?

Over the past twenty years wireless technologies and the Internet have become ubiquitous, affordable and available to almost everyone. Africa has skipped a technological generation, by-passing the landlines that stripe our Western skies for the wireless way. Today, a Masai warrior with a cellphone has better telecom capabilities than the President of the United States did 25 years ago. If he’s a Masai warrior on a smart phone with access to Google, then he has access to more information than the President did just 15 years ago. By the end of 2013, over 70 percent of humanity will have access to instantaneous, low-cost, communications and information. In other words, we are now living in a world of information and communication abundance.

And to your exact point—poverty has been reduced more in the past 50 years than in the previous 500. One major reason is the abundance of information-and-communication technology. According to research done at the London School of Business, adding ten cell phones per hundred people raises GDP by .6 percent. To quote technology write Nicholas Sullivan on this matter: “extrapolating from UN figures on poverty reduction (1 percent GDP growth results in a 2 percent poverty reduction), that.0.6 percent growth would cut poverty by roughly 1.2 percent. Given 4 billion people in poverty, that means with every 10 new phones per 100 people, 48 million people graduate from poverty.”

So do you believe that the future is guaranteed to be better than most people think?

We are not so naďve as to think that there won’t be bumps along the way. Some of those will be big bumps: economic melt-downs, natural disasters, terrorist attacks. During these times, the concept of abundance will seem far-off, alien, even nonsensical, but if history is our guide then progress continues through the good times and the bad.

The twentieth century, for example, witnessed both incredible advancement and unspeakable tragedy. The 1918 influenza epidemic killed fifty million people, World War II killed another sixty million. There were tsunamis, hurricanes, earthquakes, fires, floods, even plagues of locust. Despite such problems, this period also saw infant mortality decrease by 90 percent, maternal mortality decrease by 99 percent, and, overall, human lifespan increase by more than 100 percent.

So while there are likely to be plenty of rude, heartbreaking interruptions between here and there, we do feel that with the proper application of resources and capital, global living standards can continue to improve regardless of the horrors that dominate the headlines.

What do you hope people will get from reading your book?

The first is hope. You can’t change the world if you don’t believe it’s changeable.

The second is a vision and road map: a way to take bigger risks, create an innovation culture, and focus on solving problems rather than complaining about them.

Most importantly, we want people to understand that, more than ever before in history, individuals can now band together to solve grand challenges. We don’t believe abundance happens automatically. It’s up to each of us. That’s what makes today so different. We face enormous problems, but we—as individuals— have enormous power to solve them.

It really is a magical time.

:hippie:



http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OfJRX-8SXOs

Omni connexae!
26th February 2012, 06:48
Faced with the ceaseless stream of news about war, crime, and terrorism, one could easily think we live in the most violent age ever seen. Yet as Steven Pinker shows in this startling and engaging new work, just the opposite is true: violence has been diminishing for millennia and we may be living in the most peaceful time in our species's existence. For most of history, war, slavery, infanticide, child abuse, assassinations, pogroms, gruesome punishments, deadly quarrels, and genocide were ordinary features of life. But today, Pinker shows (with the help of more than a hundred graphs and maps) all these forms of violence have dwindled and are widely condemned. How has this happened?

This groundbreaking book continues Pinker's exploration of the essence of human nature, mixing psychology and history to provide a remarkable picture of an increasingly nonviolent world. The key, he explains, is to understand our intrinsic motives- the inner demons that incline us toward violence and the better angels that steer us away-and how changing circumstances have allowed our better angels to prevail. Exploding fatalist myths about humankind's inherent violence and the curse of modernity, this ambitious and provocative book is sure to be hotly debated in living rooms and the Pentagon alike, and will challenge and change the way we think about our society.

http://www.amazon.com/Better-Angels-Our-Nature-Violence/dp/0670022950/?ie=UTF8&tag=wwwsamharri02-20&linkCode=as2&camp=1789&creative=9325&creativeASIN=0670022950


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j8jzumc1wvg

Omni connexae!
26th February 2012, 08:26
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k-yS8CGUzN4


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rpEWwIb0Xxg&feature=related

Life is getting better—and at an accelerating rate. Food availability, income, and life span are up; disease, child mortality, and violence are down — all across the globe. Though the world is far from perfect, necessities and luxuries alike are getting cheaper; population growth is slowing; Africa is following Asia out of poverty; the Internet, the mobile phone, and container shipping are enriching people’s lives as never before. The pessimists who dominate public discourse insist that we will soon reach a turning point and things will start to get worse. But they have been saying this for two hundred years.

Yet Matt Ridley does more than describe how things are getting better. He explains why. Prosperity comes from everybody working for everybody else. The habit of exchange and specialization—which started more than 100,000 years ago—has created a collective brain that sets human living standards on a rising trend. The mutual dependence, trust, and sharing that result are causes for hope, not despair.

This bold book covers the entire sweep of human history, from the Stone Age to the Internet, from the stagnation of the Ming empire to the invention of the steam engine, from the population explosion to the likely consequences of climate change. It ends with a confident assertion that thanks to the ceaseless capacity of the human race for innovative change, and despite inevitable disasters along the way, the twenty-first century will see both human prosperity and natural biodiversity enhanced. Acute, refreshing, and revelatory, The Rational Optimist will change your way of thinking about the world for the better.

http://www.amazon.com/Rational-Optimist-How-Prosperity-Evolves/dp/006145205X/?ie=UTF8&tag=wwwsamharri02-20&linkCode=as2&camp=1789&creative=9325&creativeASIN=/006145205X

Omni connexae!
26th February 2012, 08:44
Thomas Berry is one of the most eminent cultural historians of our time. Here he presents the culmination of his ideas and urges us to move from being a disrupting force on the Earth to a benign presence. This transition is the Great Work -- the most necessary and most ennobling work we will ever undertake. Berry's message is not one of doom but of hope. He reminds society of its function, particularly the universities and other educational institutions whose role is to guide students into an appreciation rather than an exploitation of the world around them. Berry is the leading spokesperson for the Earth, and his profound ecological insight illuminates the path we need to take in the realms of ethics, politics, economics, and education if both we and the planet are to survive.

http://www.amazon.com/Great-Work-Our-into-Future/dp/0609804995/?ie=UTF8&tag=wwwsamharri02-20&linkCode=as2&camp=1789&creative=9325&creativeASIN=0609804995

eileenrose
26th February 2012, 08:49
I do have a theory. That is we are creating the destructive forces we perceive and the only thing that would stop this (this path to destruction) is our changing out tunes. Which would mean getting out of higher and higher paying professional jobs working for the forces of evil (corporations) and entering back into the stream of life.
I guess until that happens, mankind slows down and starts to see how self destructive they've become, destruction will occur. Not to terrorize us, but to un-fix us from our present course.

just my take 'the future is better than you think'. ie you can write nice sounding books about possible futures....but until we start living in a way that it is in unity with our resources (our lives), we remain stuck in a permanent downward spiral. ...that we create ourselves with our fixation on success, goals and ambition (over anyone and everything).

Omni connexae!
26th February 2012, 09:00
just my take 'the future is better than you think'. ie you can write nice sounding books about possible futures....but until we start living in a way that it is in unity with our resources (our lives), we remain stuck in a permanent downward spiral. ...that we create ourselves with our fixation on success, goals and ambition (over anyone and everything).

How do you think we could get back into the stream of life? I'd love to hear some of your ideas. Personally, I don't see a downward spiral. We do have problems that need to be solved, yeah. However, I think the data speaks for itself =)

eileenrose
26th February 2012, 13:58
Hi Omni,
If you choose to not perceive 'a downward spiral' for all of humanity, then we each are seeing what we want to see. You want humanity to see a better future.

I would be happy if humanity would wake up and perceive our present.

As (as Paul Lowe says), 'nothing happens in the future'.

Omni connexae!
26th February 2012, 19:40
If you choose to not perceive 'a downward spiral' for all of humanity, then we each are seeing what we want to see.

Perhaps you are, but if you really think I'm just seeing what I want to see, why not show me? Show me how there's a downwards spiral. If you're so sure, why shouldn't you? As you said you would love humanity to wake up and percieve our present, so why not wake me up? I try to look at what is, not what I want to see. What are the reasons you feel the way you do? I'd love to hear about and discuss them. I just don't put much stock in empty claims, sorry.

I'd still like to hear more about your theory.

eileenrose
28th February 2012, 09:54
Hi Omni,
You asked how I can make 'empty claims', re: downward spiral (of humanity).

Actually, why don't you prove it is an upward spiral?

I don't need to prove it, we live it. Whether it is another starving person dying every few seconds, or children with cholera in the Sudan (I just pick an obvious choice here), I can always, find proof we are going down (as a race of people). Why do you think there is a movement (inwardly)?

Arguing only assumes we have something negative in common. Is that a trait that will sustain a civilization? People getting charged up and saying they are right (rather than saying....I will take a look).

As long as humans have egos, and do nothing about it, we will self destruct as a species. 'Me first' being the ego's main direction.
The question is, will we wake up and realize this or go the way of past civilizations? Time will tell.

Omni connexae!
2nd March 2012, 01:14
Hey eileen,


You asked how I can make 'empty claims', re: downward spiral (of humanity).

Actually, why don't you prove it is an upward spiral?

Over the last 100 years:

>The average human lifespan has more than doubled.

>Average income per-capita (adjusted for inflation) around the world has tripled.

>Childhood mortality decreased by a factor of 10

>The cost of food has decreased by a factor of 10

>The cost of electricity has decreased by a factor of 20

>The cost of transportation has decreased by a factor of 100

>The cost of communications has decreased by a factor of 1000

>If you take a look at the video by Steven Pinker that I posted previously, he shows that we are living in the most peaceful time in human history. He provides evidence and data, not opinion.

>Global literacy has gone up from 25% to over 80% in the last 130 years.


Notice a trend?


I don't need to prove it, we live it.

Claims require evidence.


Whether it is another starving person dying every few seconds, or children with cholera in the Sudan (I just pick an obvious choice here), I can always, find proof we are going down (as a race of people).


Certainly, we have problems, some of them are massive problems that we need to solve. But you are claiming a downward spiral. Things need to be getting worse for there to be a downward trend. I don't want to sound harsh, but pointing out how some things are really bad, does not prove things are getting worse. As it turns out, things used to be a lot worse.


Arguing only assumes we have something negative in common. Is that a trait that will sustain a civilization? People getting charged up and saying they are right (rather than saying....I will take a look).

There's nothing wrong with disagreeing. Debates/arguments are not inherently negative. I'm used to a rather critical environment, where people don't take anything for granted. Perhaps that rubs off on people the wrong way here sometimes. So we are clear, my responces are not charged or anything, I'm not trying to be right for the sake of being right. If I'm shown good reason to show I'm wrong, I'll happily concede =)

I think we do need to work out what's right and what's wrong, as we live in a time where humanity simply cannot afford to be wrong. You're implying that I havn't taken a look at what you have to say, or that I'm being closeminded... I've actually spent a lot of time looking into these things, and to be honest, you havn't given me much to look at here, you've simply stated your opinion as fact.

We have problems in the world, problems that me and you both care about, problems that we would both like to fix. But the only way to fix these problems is by being objective and honest with ourselves. By looking at what we're doing wrong, but also what we're doing right.


As long as humans have egos, and do nothing about it, we will self destruct as a species. 'Me first' being the ego's main direction.

Ego? You mean that in a psychological sense, or? If what your saying is that many humans need to act less selfish, then I agree.

eileenrose
2nd March 2012, 12:41
Hi, lots of facts (but few feelings) in what you say Omni.

here we go: (anyone can come into this discussion).
It looks like I have to do all the work Omni (you just picked out a quick article....I didn't have one handy).

Over the last 100 years:

>The average human lifespan has more than doubled.
Is this a good thing? Does it make you happy? There are more people and they are older.

ps: What I actually heard is that the US worker's income hasn't changed in 30 years. ...I will keep an eye open for the article (...the article had more facts....I am just guessing).

>Average income per-capita (adjusted for inflation) around the world has tripled.
This isn't the US or Europe. This is China, Turkey, and other countries (from what I have read). ie not where you live.
And does money make a person happy? Or is it just misplaced pride?

ps: More money seems to have consequences as well....though that is something else.

>Childhood mortality decreased by a factor of 10
More children means more people, less resources. Does it make you happy?

I don't see have we can have a brighter future with this one. I think you meant (if you had actually taken the time to write this yourself instead of copying someone else's words) that if you had a baby it would do better now. Is this true? (say 'vaccination', 'GMO', "respitory illnesses due to Smog", "new allergies in young children, increased rates of autism etc."). I think this one is balancing out on its own.

>The cost of food has decreased by a factor of 10
GMO food. They subsidize corn here so we get cheap Coke and you get diabetes. So does having more food make you happy?

ps: I can hardly eat myself. Food makes me ill. Whole another story.

>The cost of electricity has decreased by a factor of 20
I use to think this was great. Not any more (the smart meter on my house is killing me...enough said). I am starting to see all electric companies (gas included) as part of some sort of swindle perpetrated on us. Just my thoughts on it.

>The cost of transportation has decreased by a factor of 100
Yet in California they want us to spend our last dime (say Agenda 21) on a bullet train (to ...no where...who goes between LA and SF daily? ...no one). As if a stupid expensive stadium wasn't bad enough (northern California).

Gas prices just shot up the last 10 days (and people are getting pissed). Are you happy? Or are you coming down to earth?
I just don't see how you can have a 'happy future' if you are not happy now. It is like saying I will be happy when....and then make something up. It never works. We are never 'happy' with more. Ever!!

>The cost of communications has decreased by a factor of 1000
Yeah, don't get me going on the killing fields cell phone towers and the related EM technology. I have a hard time not grabbing smart phones out of peoples hands (and laptops...they are the worse...give me the worse migraine) and smashing them. So much for 'better communications'. I am diffently more unhappy about 'cost going down'.

>If you take a look at the video by Steven Pinker that I posted previously, he shows that we are living in the most peaceful time in human history. He provides evidence and data, not opinion.

Tell that to the people in middle east with deplete uranium. ...it will never ever go away (eons)...and will just keep killing. Arn't there 26 wars on the planet right now involving tens of millions civilians? Just wondering which world he is living in.

>Global literacy has gone up from 25% to over 80% in the last 130 years.
Doesn't seem to be helping. Propaganda anyone?

Headlines from just today (I picked ones that affect 'future' times)...and I only picked a few (it was too depressing to do more).
(and I have the links saved if someone wants one....but they are all from Rense.com today...so easy to find).

These are the real issues (not some imaginary 'future' we can spend our days day dreaming about while the planet/civilization falls around our ears)
1.Monsanto prevails in suit brought by organic growers
GMO foods will kill everyone. period. Unless we stop them.

2. New 'thinking cap' technologies that control weaponry 'a step closer'
Weapons that can kill you, from a distance, and you without even knowing they exist (can we say 'military presence' now?).

3. Doctors 'should have the right to KILL unwanted or disabled babies at birth as they are not a real person' claims former Oxford academic
They think they are god now. The BigPharm babies (doctors). Killing the world one pill at a time (their real slogan).

4. The TSA Is Coming To A Highway Near You
You have zero rights (new 'welcome to USA' signs)

5. Dairy Farmer is Ready to Go to Jail Over Food Rights
The last straw (we are breaking people over this).

I have more. They just get too real.

I am just stating facts. We can fix facts. Not so easy to fix ideas.

ps: the overall feeling of the material is that the person wants to make their point and ignore anything that doesn't fit into it. Just my feeling with reading all the material you have provided. but I would be happy to address each and every point they feel they need to make (over and over...sounds like....yep good old fashion speech material....make them (the masses) feel good dope) Omni.
AND, I have read soo soo many articles now. It is hard to let beginners to this (the internet) off easily. Sorry....he needs (the author) to read Gordon Duff for a time and rethink his argument (not judging him...otherwise I would call him/they (who wrote this puff piece) something rude...).

Omni connexae!
2nd March 2012, 21:30
:rolleyes:

Delight
2nd March 2012, 22:59
Hi Omni Connexae!

Thanks for your affirmations here.

How can we say what is really true about the "world" of images from a screen or on a page? How do we know what the world really is?

After strong consideration, I choose to pursue pronoia. It has proved to be true for me.

A dog showed up at my house. After seeing him for a long time run when he saw me, he bagan to stay put far awya. Then one day he came over to me. The cats are upset that another dog has showed up. I took this stray 64 pound dog who showed up to the vet. I was worried about herat worms. He is negative. I can pay $100.00 a year to give him preventative. He has an old leg injury that is not amenable to surgery. All the vet could offer was amputation. The dog doesn't use his leg but he is not seeming to be in pain. He wrestles with my other dog constantly. They are in love. Is this a good situation or bad?

I believe that someone could pick this short glimpse into my life and find something that looks bad. Not me! It is evidence to me that my world gets better everyday. Am I crazy? Yes, like a fox!!

VzV9QExGFQs

In my personal experience, everything is wonderful today. Why claim that the world is terrible? Delight

eileenrose
3rd March 2012, 07:34
Hi Omni,
I see you are ignoring my post. I will do the same for you (as it took me hours to put together a reply....), in the future.

Bo Atkinson
3rd March 2012, 11:16
I think attitude wags it's own tail ^__^

(Adding to eileenrose's list...) I think Tesla's basic AC grid deserves most credit for "better-abundance" through the brand new industrialized efficiencies from lighting to sanitation, (etc)... The mega-price-tag of electricity 100 years ago reflected the immediate capital cost of startups. So only half this period saw much use of electricity.

Despite grey clouds out there, i love silver linings. So i whole heartedly agree with Omni connexae!'s attitude. Let us feel better. Let us wonder, what can we do to make the 'now' better. Frankly, i'm persuaded that we actually have to build our betterment. An occasional article, slogan or pop song can help feelings. Comprehensive research and development is a bigger task.