Friday 3 June 2011

Soon we will all live in trees again



High rise: sometimes a temporary stage on the way to utopia.
I've always been fascinated by high rise living. Not as a long term solution (that requires low density and low impact living), but as a temporary answer to the biggest problem: persuading the world to change. In order to do so we need to show economic benefit. We also have a lot of people wanting to live green, but they cannot afford the land under the present system. An obvious solution is to find a green society that can absorb large numbers of people into a small space, thereby creating wealth, and use that wealth to expand into lower density city forms. My land rent site is based on this principle: find a way to let people experiment with new societies, and the most attractive one will attract the most people, then outperform the rest as each person creates more wealth than they destroy.

Friends and gardens
The biggest problem with high rise is social interaction: when you don't know your neighbors then city blocks become hell on Earth (for the poor) or cages of mistrust (for the rich). A second problem is the distance between each person and any open green space. When I was a child I often toyed with the idea of being an architect, and would sketch out designs for tiered cities, where people live in high density towers yet everyone has a garden and passes many neighbours each day. It looks like this design firm had the same idea.

Why cities
As I said, this is not a long term solution, but it provides a practical way to solve overcrowding if we cannot afford much space. Many details would need to be worked out, but as a general principle cities allow each person to have a lower environmental impact because everything that can be shared is shared. For example, if you have neighbors above, below and to each side, then you don't need any heating in those directions. Economies of scale mean producing nutrition is minimally expensive. High rise mean unit land costs are minimized. Internal transport costs are minimized. Recycling can become more and more efficient due to economies of scale. Then once we can create all our food locally then, irony of ironies, cities become the greenest places to live.

Creating food within the city
For the same reason I am fascinated by vertical farms. And the obvious ideal is to combine the two - as the end of this article suggests: 

Avatar becomes real
Taken to its extreme, every building becomes a skeleton surrounded by foliage, and we meet our neighbours as we walk along the branches. We are back to living in trees, except these are giant trees as in Avatar. In the future knowledge economy the heart of each tree would be its knowledge, its social networks, its wisdom. I am not  a great fan of Avatar - in the real world the movie could not work for numerous reasons (in particular, after defeating the Earth people, Earth would see Pandora as a massive threat and nuke it from orbit), but everyone living in giant wise trees makes a lot of sense.

Saturday 14 May 2011

Today I hit a rabbit with my car and killed it instantly.

I've been thinking of its life ever since. How it must have grown up and learned. How it saw the world. It was the centre of its universe.  I hope it didn't have any children.

Sunday 8 May 2011

God, religions, life after death, abortion, torture, animals, the future, and why the universe exists

These pages were previously part of AnswersAnswers.com, but I removed the links because they distracted from the economic focus. I think they are among the best things I have ever done, but they are only outlines of ideas, and I have no energy to expand on them.

God:
http://answersanswers.com/pantheism.html

Other stuff:
http://answersanswers.com/tough_questions.html

Saturday 7 May 2011

Google confirms it: I'm not like other people

You probably think I am exaggerating when I say there is nobody like me in the world. So here is a trivial, everyday example. Every day I Google topics that interest me, and come up with zero results. Every day. Here are some examples from today. Today I wanted to think logically, so naturally I began by questioning my premises. The obvious place to start is to question any hidden assumptions in the words used. Is it possible to use words without built-in assumptions? So I Googled:
So nobody has ever asked this question before. It's not just the way I word my questions - when I read in more depth and read lengthy essays I find that people really do not examine these ideas, not in the way that I do. Philosophy in particular has been a great disappointment to me.

So I gave up on esoterica and spoke to my hope-one-day-to-be-girlfriend instead. We spoke about ordinary stuff, what she was doing (going out to a pub with her friend). She was concerned that she and I have little in common - for example, I would not know what to do on a night out in a pub (apart from drink and talk, which can be done at home). So after she signed off I Googled:

O.K., so nobody has asked this question either. I considered working on my game some more, but it's another of those projects that gets blank looks from others - it isn't like any existing game so people don't know how to relate to it. So instead I went back to my previous topic, the question of logic. I decided to investigate assumptions on my own. Basic logic begins with a hypothesis - an assumption. I wondered if there was any related term that was logically less suspect. So I visited synonym.com:

These are just three examples of zero results, I could add to this list every day.

Intellectually I am alone, but it's OK to be alone in one or two areas as long as you connect with people in other areas. What about emotionally? I think I blogged already about the choices people make. (Follow up 1, follow up 2). What about socially? I may have mentioned about finding a site devoted to lonely people and finding I was the odd one out. But I have my family around me, right? Yes, my family who's life revolves around a church I rejected, at the cost of my marriage, and their deepest wish is for me to change.

Maybe I should forget all the serious stuff and just take it easy. Go shopping for a pair of shoes perhaps? I think I mentioned on FaceBook about the problems of finding affordable shows for very large feet, so let's not awaken those painful memories. Or maybe I should lose myself in my hobbies? In every case, without exception, I make web sites on topics that interest me and find that nobody else in the whole world has done anything like it before. It becomes tiring.

I could give more examples from dating ("no matches in your area, defaulting to state wide" then no matches there either), or my career, or my current religious beliefs, or my goals, or any other area you choose to mention.

People sometimes say to me "you are not really alone" or "we all feel that way" as they laugh with their significant other and chat with their friends. They have no idea. They do not even have the vaguest notion of the beginning of an idea of what it is like to be different.

This is my hero, Grigori Perelman. He solves the world's hardest problems, and lives in a run down St Petersburg apartment with his mother. I am sure he would LOVE to have friends, especially a girlfriend, but he's smart enough to realize it cannot be. As for me, I'm not as smart as him so I still hold out hope.

My favorite quote, about why he turned down a million dollar prize for his work:  "I know how to control the universe. So tell me, why should I run for a million?”

Friday 6 May 2011

Thinking takes ages

I spent the last few months achieving very little outwardly, but working on very complicated ideas - like what should I do with my life at this crossroads? (This is very complicated because there are a lot of unknown variables.) The time spent  will be worth it- a single good decision can save years of wasted work - but still, months to make decisions. It's hard work!

Monday 18 April 2011

Teletubbies

Some of these posts may appear superficial, but they all have a serious side. Satire and observational humor are ways to make serious points. This is one of those posts - the serious point I'm making is left as an exercise for the reader.

Yesterday a friend mentioned the teletubbies, and reminded me of something I wrote a few years ago, entitled "The Eloi To Be." I can't find the original, but here is a summary.

There are two great novels of the future, that stand head and shoulders above the rest. George Orwell's 1984, set in the near future, and H.G.Wells' The Time Machine (TTM) set in the distant future. The Teletubbies (TTB) is the bridge between the two eras:

  • Obedience: it begins with crude propaganda (1984), evolves into pipes that give orders that are instantly obeyed (TTB), and finally we have a completely compliant and non-curious populace (TTM).
  • The landscape starts as bombed buildings (1984), becomes underground bomb shelters with nature reclaiming the open spaces (TTB), and eventually nature completely takes over the surface (TTM).
  • The underclass of workers starts as metaphorically underground (1984), begin to move literally underground (TTB) and ends up deep underground (TTM).
  • Workers and elites (1984) become noonoos and teletubbies (TTB), and eventually morlocks and eloi (TTM). Perhaps tubby custard is soylent green?
  • Telescreens: they start as crude stand alone boxes on the wall (1984). Technology evolves until they are wearable (TTB), and finally they are not needed because Earth is a fake paradise and all curiosity is dead (TTM).
  • I could go on, about the regression to childhood, the architectural styles, the importance of bedtime, the significance of flowers, etc., but you get the picture. 

Sunday 17 April 2011

A love that lasts when the stars grow cold

I'm a romantic. I believe in love that lasts forever. But not in any metaphorical or faith based way. I got proof.

Who am I? My physical atoms? No, they get recycled constantly, like water in a river. The real me is the river itself, the genes and the memes. When you love someone those genes and memes are mixed and the river continues stronger through the next regeneration.

Some of me, some of my genes, can be traced back to the days when the Earth was new born, and the first life fought to survive a burning hell (the Hadean period), and won. Those winning genes are still alive in my body, 3.8 billion years later! It's a proud heritage, and the love that creates the next generation will similarly last forever. These same genes, and their loved ones, will be holding hands in 900 million years as technology allows us to leave the then uninhabitable earth. These same genes, still in love, will be mixing and remixing and come back to visit the Earth in 5 billion years, sitting on a rock watching as the sun expands and burns off the remains of the planet's surface. By then our memes, through evolved technology, will have created new worlds. Those memes are being created now.

As we raise the children we love, we pass our ideas on, and the best of those ideas last forever.

As we hold children and cuddle them and give them confidence and help them with homework, we are ensuring that our love - expressed in their genes and memes - will still be together and loving and pro-creating long after the current stars grow cold. Love we share now, the things we do, really do last forever. And I MEAN forever.