S2E15: Are you a wizard or a prophet?—w/ Charles C. Mann - podcast episode cover

S2E15: Are you a wizard or a prophet?—w/ Charles C. Mann

Jun 02, 202054 minSeason 2Ep. 15
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Episode description

What is the best approach to solving the climate crisis? Should we leverage science and technology to ‘produce’ our way out of the problem? Or aspire to live in Hobbiton and radically reduce our human footprint?

Charles C. Mann is the New York Times bestselling author behind 1491, 1493 and The Wizard and the Prophet and a regular correspondent for The Atlantic, WIRED and Science Magazine. Today, Charles joins Ross to discuss the two major schools of thought he identified in the environmental movement—wizards and prophets—and introduce us to the scientists he uses to represent each camp in his book.

Charles walks us through the fundamental differences between the two groups, describing their values, blind spots and radically different ways of seeing the world. Listen in for Charles’ insight on a third school of thought that dismisses both wizards and prophets and find out where he falls on the wizard-prophet spectrum in light of the current global health crisis.

Connect with Ross

Nori

Nori on Patreon

Email podcast@nori.com

Resources

1491: New Revelations of the Americas Before Columbus

1493: Uncovering the New World Columbus Created

The Wizard and the Prophet: Two Remarkable Scientists and Their Dueling Visions to Shape Tomorrow’s World

Charles on Twitter

Norman Borlaug

Road to Survival by William Vogt

Jared Diamond

Naomi Klein

Paul Ehrlich

Bill McKibben

Ted Nordhaus

Hans Rosling

Jesse Ausubel

Ramez Naam

Emma Marris

Planet of the Humans

Nathaneal Johnson in Grist

‘The Call of Cthulhu’ by H.P. Lovecraft

Dr. Vandana Shiva

Adam Smith’s Parable of the Poor Man’s Son

Lynn Margulis

Transcript

Hey everyone, welcome to season 2 of reversing climate change. We are doing that podcasting. Now, in launching a patreon, you can find it at patreon.com slash Nori podcasts. There are various tiers with different types of goodies available. Do you want to receive a special newsletter digest of what Nori knots are reading that week? Be a part of a Nori book club. Get special access to Nori

events. Go take a look at patreon.com Nori podcast for what we're offering and in that Spirit of being lean and that So kind of way that, you know, we like to do this list of goodies is subject to change and we'd very much like your feedback. Is there something that you'd really like to see? But it isn't listed here.

Honest, feedback does a lot to help us shape what we offer to you, you can send an email to podcast that nor e.com or fill out our podcast survey anonymously in our newsletter, which you can find at nor e.com. Subscribe, and thank you so much for listening to another season of reversing climate change. Hello and welcome to the reversing climate change. Podcast. I'm Ross Kenyon today, I have with me Charles see man, journalist and author of 1491, 1493 and The Wizard in the prophet.

He's also a correspondent for the Atlantic wired and science. Thanks for being here. Charles it's my pleasure. Your work comes up all the time and we recently did a Nori patreon book club for The Wizard and the profit for the month of April generated. A lot of discussion and debate, I think this is a great book and a Great way to frame, I don't know. Various schools of thought within the environmental movement, why don't you give us a nice little bass line here for what?

Exactly are these camps who are the avatars of each that you feature in the book and how are you conceptualizing, the split basically, I'm a journalist, as you said and I've been reporting on environmental issues since the 1980s since the late 1980s and talking to activists politicians and above all researchers, And over time, I came to realize that the answer today is getting to my questions fell into two broad camps, not always, but generally, and I thought of them as Wizards in

profits and wizards, essentially are the people who want, you know, what's disparagingly called the Techno fix their argument is look. We have these technical challenges from, you know, the things that we did that we want to do and the the growth of our economies. And so, what we need to do is switch on the Science and Technology machine and essentially produce our way out of our dilemmas, the profits on the other hand say, that's

completely wrong. That's exactly the wrong directions, doing more of, what's gotten us into trouble in the past. And what we need to do is to conserve and radically cut back and reduce the the human

footprint. And a while ago, it suddenly dawned on me that these two approaches were kind of the opposite from each other and that many of the Conflicts, I saw both within the environmental movement and between the environmental movement and Society were expressions of the conflict between Wizards and Prophets.

And I thought, geez, I'd really like to read something about that and then I didn't so I decided that well okay, I'll try and do it since nobody else is. You know, I think you do a very good job of being fair to both of these camps because they each have a part of the puzzle. And depending on the issue or the various application with inside of environmental concerns You might find yourself leaning to one way or the other.

And I think you do a very good job of Steel Manning for The Listener opposite of straw Manning. So I think you treat both of these schools of thought, maybe even more fairly than you had to in order to write this book. Thank you very much. Now, I think it's important. And the reason is that relatively soon, my research, it suddenly dawned on me that these differences were not just kind of pragmatic differences about, you know, how do you do this,

but they express values. And their values that everybody shares in one proportion or another. And we just give different weights to them. So, typically, profits value community in the idea that we're all part of Nature and that we are embedded in this much much larger system and which we should play are assigned role.

And the Wizards on the contrary are much more about individual liberty and freedom, which is, you know, the idea of maximizing human potential and people living in the The best possible way that they can, and we all, like, both of these things in different amounts, it just that they come into conflict and where you end up, which side of that conflict determines a lot about whether your appealed to, by the Wizards of the prophets and the book you use a very interesting framing device.

This is I thought your book described as a joint biography or some such. And so you have these two avatars of these two ways of being and thinking, who are they? And what are broadly Their life arcs. Well, as I said, I've been a journalist for a long time and over the years, I realized I've often heard this name. Norman, Borlaug. And people who I later, came to think of his Wizards, would say, I want to do for X. What? Borlaug did for wheat? And who Norman Borlaug was?

He's the main figure in What's called the Green Revolution, which is the mix of high yielding hybrid seeds, high-intensity fertilizer and hi Volume irrigation that created within called the Green Revolution, which doubled tripled or even quadrupled Global grain yields in the 1960s 70s and 80s and had a huge impact on our lives. And one way of putting it is that as far back as few historians can go, the majority of humankind has faced hunger at some point or other in the in the year.

You know, when I graduated from high school, you know the UN was food and agricultural organization. Estimated that between 40 and 60 percent of the world's population was malnourished. Now, those same people are estimating that, it's on the order of eight to ten percent. So you see this enormous and dramatic decline that the Green

Revolution had a lot to do with. And so people saw that and they took a very powerful lesson from it which is that you, you know, switch on the science machine and you can have this dramatic impact on life and they hope that they can do the same in whatever field that there's in. So that's the reason.

In for looking at Borlaug, it's this sort of prototypical wizard at about the same time, I realized it when I talk to especially older environmentalists I heard this name, I would hear this name occasionally that I had, certainly never heard in some public discourse. And I was a guy named William vote and essentially he put together the ideas behind the modern environmental movement, he wrote the first modern world going to hell book.

If you know what I mean, that was back in 1948 was called the road to survival and if you read people like Jared, Mentor people Paul Ehrlich or you know, Bill McKibben to some extent Naomi Klein. All these kinds of people, their ideas directly traced back to Bill and William vote. And then I was fascinated to realize that they both got their ideas, which diametrically opposed to each other at the same time from in the same place, which is rural Central

Mexico in the mid-1940s. Yeah, I bet the journalist in your love, that you found that nice little connection there. R. Oh absolutely. He's like wait a minute. There's a way you could actually tell this story if the two people got their ideas at the same place and time. Matt had this immediate collision and never never spoke to each other again. Well yeah, I do do like that nice intersection there.

I'm trying to think you just gave a great list of various other people who may qualify as profits that are currently operating might be some of the great Wizards. I guess, the first person that comes to mind is also an alumnus of this podcast, which is Ted nordhaus of the Breakthrough Institute. Do you think that's fair than who might, who might be in his company?

Sure, I mean there's lots of those kinds of people and they you know Hans rosling, the guy wrote faithfulness would We'd be another just the ausa Bell, lots of people with the resources for the future and these, you know, one of your guests Mez ramez naam, a good friend of mine would certainly count this one. He's told me himself, I mean, you can you can find them all

over there. The people who are, you know, boosting the idea of huge solar installations, all those huge wind installations, people who want to do next Generation nukes. The people who are arguing, I think Emma Maris recently. Argued in wired, that GMOs are necessary to save nature, so that kind of average is a

Wizard's approach. And by the way, just by naming them are not trying to sort of single them out, or criticizing them, just saying, there are exemplars of a kind of tendency that's been around in the environmental movement since the very beginning, Norman Borlaug. The guy who described as an agricultural scientist, also saw himself as an environmentalist because he believed that intensifying production and having this, you know, much more quote, unquote, scientific Of

Agriculture would lead to increased yields and fewer demands on nature. So, you wouldn't have hungry people going out into the forests and Meadows and just sort of stripping them Bear. Yeah, absolutely. It's my intention not to name and shame these people either because I think it's very useful in learning to split ideas into their various camps. Like, I like that. There's a wizard in a profit group and that helps me really wrap my head around this and a clear way.

And if, if one of them, clearly was right about 100% of everything, there were no longer be at the Kata me and this partition between them, one of them would have just concretely one once and for all. And I think that means that each of them have something to say here. But that being said, when you do create a nice partition in, there's two options or two, broad schools of thought with an issue group, that's the sort of begging out to be disrupted and

to be complicated. So what are some of the complexities that that might face such a divided like this? Well, first, I should say that what I'm talking about is a kind of mental model, you know, for how to sort things. And there's a famous expression that all models are wrong, but some are useful. So the first thing to stipulate is that there's tons of exceptions and caveat sand and so forth. And this model then the question is, is it a useful way to break things down?

And I think it is. And one of the things that would I think that I would be complexities that say, take Ted nordhaus at At the Breakthrough Institute. I think Ted would be appalled if any of this were to be taken as somehow that his belief in technological, solutions were taken to be a lack of Love of Nature, and a lack of respect

for the natural world. And, similarly, I think the prophets who were saying in favor of organic farming, and this kind thing embedding themselves in a community are very upset Get that being taken for anti-science. You know, there's a guy just down the road, I live in a small town in Massachusetts and just down the road from me is a small organic farm and they regard themselves as highly scientific.

Because they see themselves as embedded into, you know, the ecosystems around them and they have gone to considerable trouble to understand how these work. So, one way to put it would be that, they both Express different parts of a love of Nature and different parts of Anna, love of science. Okay, I think that's useful one of the various other axes, that seems like, it might map on to wizards and Prophets is to what degree do you believe in economies of scale versus decentralization?

Yes, well there, there that, that's exactly the Wizards typically. Not always look to centralized Solutions and economies of scale the prophets regard, those is brittle and tend to look for decentralized networks. And there's a whole division about whether they are Craddock or not. Okay. Yeah. I guess I could definitely think of a counter examples to especially with something like the potential of blockchain to be radically decentralizing an

important kind of way. So a lot of people who are extremely wizardly about blockchains also are some of the most strong Advocates I know of against centralized institutions so that isn't true. This doesn't break the model

just maybe later. Yeah. No. But you could for example, take solar power when the serve two models of solar power and one Gigantic installations, you know, the the you hear this sort of calculation, you cover x amount of the Arizona desert in solar panels and that would be enough to power the entire country. And the idea is that, you know, on some level, you should actually do that.

We should have these huge places in the desert and then they would leave the rest for and then pipe it around the country. And, you know, leave the restaurant for nature and the prophets tend to viscerally react against that because they see this as creating a kind of a sacrifice Zone. What they like the idea is of these immense networks of neighborhood solar, you know, lots and lots of rooftop, and small scale installations all networked together, passing

power back and forth. And they see that as under much more local control Much More decentralized, Much More resilient in case of disaster. And so you get, you know, and identical technology, the the PV panel thought of into remarkably different ways. Do you think? Okay? So another axis I'd like to apply op on top of this and see if it Maps at all. Do you see it fitting along partisan lines or even just political philosophy lines or is it more complicated than that?

What's a little bit? You know, it is certainly the case that, you know that at various times, for instance, there is as we speak. There is a relatively recently, a Michael Moore produced a documentary that was planted humans. I saw this. It was everyone's been yelling about it, so a little scared again. Well, My opinion is not particularly good. Let's put it that way.

But one of the things that it does is it calls various environmentalists who have embraced larger scale solutions to which are typically Wizards. It calls from corporate sellouts and the implication is the, you know, they're sort of playing into the hands of the right and the capital F, and this kind of thing. So, there's a kind of gloss, political glossy can put on it, but I think at its bottom, it

isn't really like that. The so much because there are plenty of people on both sides who, like the different values. And so, typically Wizards are the ones who argue that technology will let everybody pack and together into these super dense cities where knowledge and can be centralized in and accumulated and passed on better leaving the rest of the world for nature. And then the profits are typically are like small town type people.

You know who like the idea of these smaller scale communities and regard, these kind of mega cities that are embraced by people like Ted at the Breakthrough Institute as you know, kind of cesspools of corruption and inequality and you'll find people, you know, on the right and left on both sides of that debate. Absolutely you can. And when I think about this too, especially within the prophet Camp, I can think of many conservatives. I know thinkers. I like who prefer much smaller.

Are much more local. And I also know, a lot of people who are more in the permaculture, small farms movement that very well might end up Neighbors in agreed on that. One thing, even though their lives may look very different. Yes. Yeah. And so, one of the, I mean, not

really something. I thought of when I first started, one of the things I was pleased to see, is that it occurred to me that if I looked at things from this Viewpoint, I might get a little past kind of a partisan divide right now that has devolved into Often a kind of scorp making it isn't really particularly useful. Yeah, I suppose when you say something like that it reminds me of.

I think I got this from the Daniel Johnson, I Grist, but that b over nuclear power are more symbolic of just a values, divide more than actually, the science of whether or not nuclear is good or not. Is that you kind of hinting at? Yes. And the thing that I would slightly amend what you said, is often at their just about values and what you prefer, and that sent FID rather than about

science. And that said to dismiss the values, But I actually think the values are really, really important, and that the discussion would be much more useful if it was actually about the values rather than the sort of pretend argument about the science. Yeah, so there's like a proxy war. That's the way Downstream that work fighting. But you want to go back and be like, what kind of role do you actually want to create? You think we should be talking

on that level? Yeah, I mean, the reason that people, you know, that I know of at least don't like, nuclear power at bottom is not because of this or that. Radiation counter this or that, you know, environmental footprint. It's because they see this as this giant facility that's tinkering with things that people just should have a lot more. Humility about got it. Yeah, I think that's a very fair point and that's not a bad idea. That's not a bad argument to me.

I mean, you know, the, the idea that, you know, we need to think about our or place in the order of creation and respected. That's not a terrible argument. But people are afraid to make these And spiritual or religious or moral or whatever, ethical whatever word you want to use type of arguments. And so instead, they Dragged In These proxies, as you pointed out where they say, oh, it's unsafe for something.

When at bottom, even if somehow it was proven to be safe, they just don't want to go down that path and very, similar logic applies to GMOs. Charles, I remember that I wanted to do this and I'm glad I recalled it, but I think I found the basically, the perfect summation of the Prophet way of thinking. At its most extreme and also if it's very neatly in here and I don't know if you know this, but have you read the Call of Cthulhu by HP Lovecraft? Well, that sentence did not ended up.

Like, I expected to, yes, I read it but a long time ago. All right, check this out, I love this paragraph, it's beautiful, and a bit terrifying. The most merciful thing in the world. I think, is the inability of the human mind to correlate all its contents we live on a planet. The island of ignorance, in the midst of black Seas of infinity, and it was not meant that we should Voyage far the Sciences. Each straining in its own Direction.

Have hitherto harmed us little, but someday the piecing together of dissociated knowledge will open up, such terrifying vistas of reality and of our frightful position. They're in that we shall either. Go mad from the Revelation or flee from the deadly light into the peace and safety of a new Dark Age. What do you think of that? That's pretty close this. Pretty close vintage HP Lovecraft super overwritten but onto something. Well yeah that's absolutely there.

There's an ornate nests there that is out of fashion. You could say these days among many other things that he thought. Yeah. Yeah. No he what I've read that when I was 17 or 18, and it's certainly in general left an impression but obviously I didn't remember that paragraph. Terrific. Thanks for sharing it. Yeah, no. Awesome. Sorry to just basically, add a non-diegetic insert there, just for my own edification. Well, okay, I guess.

One thing I wanted us to get to is when I think about schools of thought or paradigms, I like to think of them kaleidoscopic Ali. I like being able to do I like be able to flip through them and say, okay, if I think about a problem this way, it illuminates this thing, but it also has its own blind spot in this way, right? And I think one of the signs of intelligence that I look for which because I value this, I'm sorry. Pacing myself it's like that

aside. I think that the more those that you can hold oftentimes the better off you are and being able to understand problems. So if we're able to treat the wizard in the prophet paradigms like kaleidoscopic Lee, treat them kaleidoscopic Lee? What do you think they are showing us and what do you think they are obscuring. The thing. So you're saying that you know a point of view is I guess I would think of it this way is like a spotlight, it calf intense light but also Dark Shadows.

Yes, exactly. And in this particular case I would say that one of the things that Wizards often do is make a kind of pragmatic case that this is the way to go because these features of the prophets worldview are counterproductive or don't make any sense or will make things worse. And so you see all the times for calculations like, if all farming were organic we would produce much less much more land and it would be an environmental disaster.

I'm sure you've read things like that and I want to say to them there. What's missing here and missing from many these things, is that the current type of farming, we have is a social Arrangement. It's been carefully, put together in some places and haphazardly in others, but it depends. An entire body of Institutions and laws and practices and so forth that have largely been created since the 1940s and 1950s, there's nothing

inevitable about that. So one of the exercises I did is I went to Northwest Illinois, and I met this guy who is kind of a model profit farmer and his neighbor is a kind of a model wizard farmer and I got them to write down all the subsidies of various types that They were eligible for and essentially the wizard farmer, you know, produce an entire page of different programs that were devoted to helping his kind of farm go and the prophet type of farmer had nothing there.

He didn't exist as far as the state local and federal governments existed, and The Wizard farmer cheerfully confessed. That without all these, you know, federal and state and local initiatives that he was embedded in his farm would collapse. So it's very, very difficult. Old to make that kind of comparison. Because theyre, the exist in such different worlds, and often the Wizards kind of forget about the sort of social legal, historical, cultural etcetera, aspects of this. The prophets.

Meanwhile are often quite strong, the sort of potential risks. These things are much less good in my view at understanding. The kind of nitty-gritty social changes that would be Required to achieve their Vision.

Again, to talk about the same. The fundamental difference as far as I could see between the organic farm and the farm, there was next to it. The, which was, you know, it was all GMOs, which is, you know, with, with corn and soy, was not what they're growing not, but the different labor or month, there were in it. The smaller scale, much more complicated Farm needed. Many, many more workers there. The one was 1,200 acres and it had two workers.

Two million dollars worth of equipment and the other one, had a thousand different crops and was recreating natural. Ecosystems an amazing place, but it had 30 different workers. And so, the need to pay those workers. Meant that his prices were very high that you couldn't charge cheap for this. And the reason for that is that there's a bazillion subsidies for agricultural equipment, but there's a zero subsidies for Farm labor. And, you know, the fundamental difference between them was

social. And I typically think that people who Are very embracing in these don't see how contingent their successes would be on these social historical and cultural Arrangements. That's an interesting angle. I hadn't thought about it in that way. Yeah, when I get done, I do think about profits, they're sort of aesthetic, ideal strikes me very much like the Shire and they would like to recreate that.

Yeah, and the thing is that the Shire, presumably had a whole bunch of Institutions that don't know what Tolkien was thinking, of, presumably, or similar to the ones that existed in the English Countryside in the 1920s. But there's a, there's hundreds of years of history that underlay. The fact that the English Countryside worked in the 1920s. I think it's very easy for both sides to dismiss the others. As you know, not being likely to

exist for pragmatic reasons. When the real reasons are have to do with institutions, there's no particular reason that we couldn't if we wanted to subsidize Farm labor. For example, we subsidize labor all the time for example recently Amazon you know last year I think it was wanted to create its secondary headquarters and states and

cities competed. For and they offered Amazon millions of dollars and what they were essentially doing with subsidizing, the labor of Amazon workers some New York offered, you know, several billion dollars in return would get 50,000 jobs, that's subsidizing labor. And we do that all the time for labor that we've considered to be valuable. It's just the reason that we don't do it for agricultural laborers, we don't consider it to be valuable, but that doesn't mean that it couldn't be done.

And if you subsidize the hiring of Neighbor. The prices from these kind of small scale Farms would drop dramatically and much. Poor people could afford the produce from them, that's a fascinating Point. What do you call this? When there's just a tendency of the human mind of you whatever is around us that we are acculturated into to be natural. Quote unquote. What is the name for this way of seeing that is clearly? Blinding us to how constructed our reality actually is.

Yeah, I don't know what it is. I guess there's a possibly is related to what the Orion is called presentism, which is judging by the past, by the standards of the of the present and something, you should you should avoid but it is. There's this idea that these things that are around us are quote unquote natural and but in fact they've often been constructed. That doesn't mean they're bad, but it does mean that they can be changed if we want to.

So, no, I'm not advocating that we should subsidize Farm labor. That that's not the point of the argument. The point of the argument is that people who are saying That this or that is inherently less unproductive or inherently less affordable are missing the point that there's reasons underneath that they do to have nothing to do with some imagined agricultural productivity. Sure, I've seen arguments like

that all over the place. Perhaps most famously against Norman Borlaug is Vandana Shiva as work saying, like, like if you take and all the ecological costs in the subsidies, is this actually feeding the world is this actually cheaper and Sir, probably not. Yeah, and I would take her calculations like all these calculations with a grain of salt because it's very difficult to imagine, you know what, the actual cost would be in some completely different social arrangement. Don't know, sir.

I think that's perfectly fair. I'm not sure. I don't have the chops necessary to evaluate these complete competing, highly technical claims either. So I read these things go. Hmm, seems plausible and I just think you should be skeptical of them. You know what, you know to take now, to take this sort of

undone. I Shiva argument about an industrial agriculture which is essentially saying is that there's environmental costs and environmental costs are so high that they wipe out all the gains. And you can say well there's entire literature of economics about how to do those kinds of external costs are called externalities you know the first textbook on externalities is written back in 1918. And so there is a whole lot of things that you could do that would dramatically reduce it.

For instance, there's all kinds of reasons right now, the farmers way over use fertilizer. And because it's cheap, and it's cheap because it's been if subsidized in all kinds of different ways, if it was less cheap, Possibly people might look at using it more sparingly or using it in ways that are less likely to cause washout into rivers and streams or might be formulated different or, you know, and you can lift a whole

variety of things. There's nothing inherent about the way that we do fertilizer right now which is one of the main coffee, right? Because it goes, the fertilizer goes into their streams and goes into the rivers and ends up in the ocean causes. You know, fertilizer in the ocean is still fertilizer causes the Immense Blooms of algae and other aquatic plants. They drop down to they die. They drop down to the bottom bacteria. Eat them. The bacteria multiply in such a

frenzy. They suck all the oxygen and you get these dead spots. There's a one in the Gulf of Mexico that's about the size of New Jersey. There's one in the Bay of Bengal. It's three times bigger than that and that's a huge environmental cost. So I'm done a Shiva is totally right about drawing our attention to that because when we, you know, eater or wonder bread or whatever, we're not thinking about the fact that producing that Wonder Bread.

Add to this gigantic dead spot in the Gulf of Mexico. She's dead right about that but there's nothing inherent about using fertilizer, that automatically gets you there. Okay. Yeah, this is great and nuanced and thank you for bringing it here. Charles, I am going to reveal my bias here and then maybe you can tell me what I'm missing which is that Nori as a whole, I'd like the company's prime minister around.

The idea that technology can help us, solve environmental crises, notably climate and help us wrap our heads around that helped us, get to a healthy level of PPM. Get that carbon down to a safe stable level that we can build expectations around based upon what human life has come to expect and depend upon. Then I was watching planet of the humans, too. As I had to because everyone was yelling and saying not to watch this movie.

So, of course, I had to watch it immediately and because that's just the way that the brain works. And there's a line in there, that always bothers me, which is paraphrasing here that the same way of thinking that got us into this problem. Cannot get us out of it and it was applied to embrace technology but it was posing as rhetorical fashion. That was, can we use the same technology that got us into this problem to get us out and meet

at Holmes? Yes, yes, we absolutely have to because we can't just walk away from this. Like there's already a certain amount of warming that's locked in. We have to start pulling carbon dioxide out of the atmosphere. We can't just Retreat and then go to hobbiton and do our like liver a little permaculture live. That's a great thing to do, but we also need, like, large-scale technology to make that sort of profits lifestyle even possible. At this point, what am I

missing? So, first, I'm not gonna argue with you. What's wrong about the argument, you know the same technology, it's not the same technology, you know, the kind of things that you're talking about, Carbon eating and photovoltaic panels and windmills and, you know, power lines that don't waste 50% of their power and resistance and all that. That's not the technology they

got is into the problem. The technology they got us into the problem is coal-fired power plants and we're dramatically reducing their number. So to me, it's like you're saying, like, you're allergic to apples, so, therefore, you shouldn't be eating oranges, you know, it's it's a nonsensical statement. So, So that part I'm not going

to disagree with you. What I would argue is both sides involved that this living in hobbiton, in a modern sense involves all kinds of technology and it's just different kinds of

Technology right now. You know, if you put solar panels and all the roofs and in those little ones in the backyards and you made them much more efficient and you develop methods of localized storage, you know which are the sort of idea that Elon Musk talks about when you say the, you would Or in his batteries I just don't think we know how much that could do you know right now the most efficient solar panels are on the order of I think about 48 percent is the incident

radiation coming in right now. They're very, very expensive because we don't choose to subsidize them. You know, there are lots and lots of things in our society that we choose to subsidize. If we wanted to, we could choose to subsidize that we could kick up a lot more on the research into how to switch power back and forth. We could kick out. We could subsidize To this end, you know, we could get a lot of the way towards hobbiton, if we wanted to, it would be difficult.

But all paths are going to be difficult. Doing the other kind of path, you know, where we construct large scale, centralized installations, and somehow send the power all around, like, you know, that square mile and they in the Sonoran Desert. That's also extremely difficult. So I just feel that we just don't know.

And one of the things that I, if you don't mind me, I'm going to give this a little bit of a tangent is okay, if I go on it, please do. Okay, I feel that the role of ignorance is insufficiently appreciated. There are lots of things. We simply don't know whether we can do, and that means, we don't know that it's now possible, or they don't know if there is possible and all we can really say is that we could actually go quite a bit of the ways towards hobbiton, if we wanted to do that.

Or we could go quite a bit in the opposite direction if we wanted to do that. And we don't really know because we can't predict the future. What? The fundamental So consequences would be. And so, I tend to get upset or annoyed when I hear people saying the great confidence this or that is not possible because I think the answer is, we just simply don't know, and it all comes back to that gigantic Lovecraft quote, that I forced

into this episode. Yeah. I think, I think humility is underappreciated all over the place and we try to do that. Like, basically the number of things that I hold with any degree of certainty, shrinks as I Older, are you that way too? Yeah, I mean you know one of the things that this also tells me though is that because he don't appreciate under understand. You know we're very lousy at

predicting the future. We should maybe both sides should be a little bit less dogmatic and we should investigate what you can do with very, very small scale and Nooks. For example, I don't think we know the consequences, well enough to for anything. Either side to similarly, we should look at what GMO Is can do. We should also try to see how much can we get with neighborhood. Solar. You know, why not?

Why not really kick it up and run some serious demonstrations of the best technique because that's neighborhood solar technology. We can and see what we get. I think that's a fine way to go. Think we need all the experiments and all the best we can. So right, you know, it wouldn't be so hard with neighborhoods. You know. My wife is an architect and designer, and she's very interested in sustainability. And so she's been building these Small-scale near Net, Zero

Energy homes. There should be some way for her to to programs you could apply to to convert them into totally neighborhood locally, powered, rinse and see how that worked. It seems fine to me II would say no gives to build a little version of hobbiton now look at it. Yeah. Charles one of the applications of your idea is that we played with in the the Nori patreon book club is Is to what degree does this? Apply on to, how one lives one's personal life?

And I ended up seizing Upon A Passage. I really like it's the most famous passage from Adam, Smith's theory of moral sentiments. It's called the poor man's son. Are you familiar with that? But I read the book in college. So, so the answer is, I should be more familiar with it than I actually am. Yeah, I was might be worth revisiting this section. It's definitely the most famous, and it's beautiful.

It starts with the poor man's son, whom heaven, and it's anger has visited With ambition, think it's such a powerful opening but I'm Smith sees ambition in this desire to get rich as a form of a curse, granted the person and the process of trying to get rich develops, many instruments and technological advances. That makes our lives better. But this sort of burden of ambition doesn't necessarily produce the most livable or

life. One could say, for instance, I don't personally want to be Elon Musk. I don't want to live in the same. Same name. It's funny. Grant will y'all? Yeah, I'm glad he's a father now and that's great. Immigrants have better. Coping is like six other kids Cheese Louise. Oh and that's who I guess. Yeah, I guess I was just caught my imagination but give that life seems is so demand.

Like, basically, I'm relatively Prophet asked, I don't expect to be remembered very long, especially not people very far removed from my own family, I'm relatively. Okay, with that, I think the most important thing, most people will do is raise children that are halfway decent. It kind people, I think that's great and I have the same

Ambitions myself. Anything I get above that is just sort of happenstance but I am so glad that there are Elon musk's out there because it's a form of human sacrifice. Ambition is the sort of like wizardly developing new things that we need that. But I think they lay themselves at the altar for the benefit of humanity by their own curse. Of this ambition, is that halfway makes sense to you. Yeah, you know, and I should I guess in fitting their theme

point out that on the opposite. Side, you know, Bill McKibben has sort of wrecked his life to lead. Three fifty.org, you know, I know I'm very slightly and I can tell you, he does not enjoy being a blip public and political figure, you know, it's not fun for him. He's doing it because he believes it by the way that documentary that we were talking about that was something that really annoyed me about it. The idea that bill has a corporate sellout, I've disagreed with him.

Plenty. Sometimes he's been so mad at me. We haven't spoken. But geez, the idea that he's not a figure of huge Integrity is completely ridiculous. He's kind of sacrificed his life in exactly the same way to try to create a political movement for fighting climate change and I think that's an, you know, again with the theme of social and political Arrangements.

That's absolutely necessary. No politicians going to stick their neck out to do it unless there's a lot of constituents who are behind it and he they have to show it and organizations like three fifty.org or for that, that's great. That's a great additional example to from a totally different angle. So yeah, I don't know that I would want to. Change places with any of those people. That sounds very stressful. Everyone scrutinizes.

Everything you do and to calls you a bad person, doesn't sound dumb. You know, people call McKibben, you know, you know, you've his ideas refer to the flu at all die and this sort of thing, right? It can't be pleasant. No, no. Well, I guess one thing that's comforting and in the darkest of ways is your relationship with Lynn morghulis. That's one thing that we haven't even gotten here but what it is,

what by the way, what was that? Like And also does this Wizard and profit Dynamic, even make sense in the face of her insights, which, what even were then, you know? So, that was part of the reason I included her because she's, like, a Critic of the entire thing. I wanted to incorporate the idea that there is perspectives from which everything I'm talking about just as stupid and doesn't isn't even worth considering. So her point of view is the marcoses famous biologist, right?

Famous. Especially for her contributions to understanding the microworld of in viruses and protests and all these other different tiny creatures. And from her point of view, which is pretty justifiable there. What's important about life on Earth there, 99% of the biomass 99% of the, you know, sort of evolutionary creativity in terms of, you know, the genetic variability, they're just amazing.

And so people are like this epiphenomena and the point of view is there just a species like any other. They're like protozoa, not two fundamentally different and Argue that this is Darwin's key Insight. You know, Darwin talked about Evolution. But before you could talk about Evolution, you had to have the idea that there is a single set of laws that applied to everything. No exceptions. You know, it's not like dogs have special rules, that apply

only to them. Evolution applies, to everything including us. We're just part of nature. Just another species among all the others. And one of the other rules is that species, that are inordinately successful don't live very long because they, either wipe themselves out or they'd Drown in their own waste, the exhaust, their own resources or all three.

So she saw that as happening to humans and the idea of both Wizards and Prophets are arguing about ways to save us, if you don't think that you can be saved because of the laws of nature. Say, no, then, it's sort of stupid. Do you have an argument between them on the one hand? I like that. She just out past the miss the prophets in the most serious of

ways. But also I find it kind of comforting to feel like it takes the pressure off the Race a little bit here like whenever you zoom out and think deep time, it really calms me. She regarded me as a sort of a Sentimental sap, you know, reading books about polar bears in the like, right. And she thought that, you know, we're completely deluded. If we thought that we were

special, she liked to say this. I mean, I didn't know her well, but she would always, she knew me well enough to prick my bubble whenever she could. She do you think we're special somehow a different species from everybody? Else how nice it must be to be you, you know, that kind of thing. And if you look at it her way, you can say, well, we're conducting.

This gigantic experiment now to find out if we're just a few, she's like everything else or if we are actually capable of changing in ways that no other species can, she would say as a betting person, the odds that she would say, the odds are very definitely, they were not special. Nah, this is a favorite theme of the show to we get into the Fermi Paradox and whether or not this is a great filter. Other event and whether human beings will supersede this sort

of challenge. I hope so, the reason I do, what I do is I hope we're able to do it but there is a chance that Lynn is correct and we're just following the pace set by every other creature that has been so successful that it's killed things off, right? And I think though that if you were around and we were talking now that even she would say that if we were successful that really would mean we are special That would be an astounding thing. The totally would be if we really cool, right?

You know, if success is not given than to actually be successful, will be just awesome. Yeah, I think so. Well, Charles, we didn't even get to talk to your other books and 1491 in 1493, which I have read in the last year. I read both of them made a really big impression to I like this focus on.

Well, one thing that's come up quite a lot inside of nori and also in the book club, is this idea that Native Americans are this sort of noble savage, this romantic idea of them as interacting with this primeval force and not changing it. And now, of course, we know and your work has documented the degree to which humans have an indigenous people in particular have shaped these environments. So I think that's a really cool Insight. I'm wondering like bigger than

that. Is there some connection between your work on indigenous peoples and the Columbian Exchange and also Wizards and Prophets like what is the connection? Well I thought of these two books, mentally, I mean I should first say I'm kind of embarrassed to talk about this and I was hoping you wouldn't bring it up because again he is going to sound really pretentious and the reason is going to sound pretentious is that it actually is pretentious.

I got to know what this is so I apologize in advance. I thought of these books as a Trilogy or any bad bad that does not necessarily bad. Oh yeah, right.

It's everybody wants to read a Trilogy in the the first one in their past present and future, you know, sort of the past represented by 1491 about the world that was created the present, being the 1493, which is this, you know, ricocheting of environmental consequences around the world and then the future, which is, you know, how we're going to get out of the situation that we're in, which is what's discussed in the wizard in there. And the prophet.

But unlike normal, trilogies they don't say, one, two, and three, and you can read them all in any order. That's cool. So okay, I guess that makes sense to me because you're saying that the world that we live in from 1493 in the Columbian Exchange. When you have various organisms Crossing giant barriers that had never previously been superseded in a large way. That's still the world. We're living in right now. Right. Right. And it's a world of globalization.

So one of the funny things is that, you know, there's these various protests against globalization And I'm sort of thinking man, you're locking the door and like 500 years. After that particular horse has been stolen. You know, we're living in a globalized world and the current president, you know, trying to stop that just, you know, who are you kidding? Fair enough.

And then so our choices for the future is whether we follow a wizardly or Prophet asked kind of path or maybe some hybrid is what is the chance that we have in front of us? Oh yeah, we can decide. I mean, there's nothing because these are all human regions. There's nothing that says that you couldn't combine parts of the Wizards, and the prophets. Uh, I'm sorry we're dealing with laws of physics.

You know, I can certainly invent scenarios more, you know, greater or lesser possibility that would combine them. But, you know, people seem to typically fall onto one end or another of this particular Spectrum. But it could be different. And, you know, I guess a little bit in the background mind. I hoped that reading it all sort of black-and-white my book would Spire the reader to think about ways of escaping that particular Paradigm. How are you feeling? You personally yourself Charles?

See man. Are you feeling more wizardly or more like a profit? These days? Oh boy. I guess the certainly, I'm feeling both because you're seeing in the current crisis of the coronavirus, the necessity for both science and community. In the sense that we really need to come up with some If advances and test them properly and rapidly disseminate them. And that's going to be very difficult to do without some

kinds of centralized controls. But then, while we're doing that, we also need to have functioning communities in which we all look out for each other. So, here's a case where which both are needed and you see people sort of splitting into this kind of funny thing where people are focusing, either on the community measures or saying there's going to be, you know, treatments and vaccines. And so we don't have to worry.

Yeah I suppose so and it appears that you know the wizard and the prophet as a set of paradigms for understanding these decisions goes far beyond just environmental ones. It just seems like maybe this is much broader than that. I think so that weenies are, you know, in you can find Echoes of this, you know, Alexander Hamilton and Thomas Jefferson's famous arguments about whether the revenue management located in the city or the country, right?

Sure. Yeah. I could see him walk forces and full Terror versus Russo. These are these are modern versions of philosophical disputes have been going on for centuries. Yeah, I love that. I think this is such a good way to teach these Concepts into play with them.

And I think this is, if I was trying to bring someone into like the environmental space, I think this is a very useful rubric and also your ristic for testing how people like, what their inbuilt assumptions and values, are I think it's a great tool for doing so. So kudos for that. Well, thank you. Yeah, my pleasure. Well, Charles, if someone wanted to keep up with your work, obviously, they should read your Masterpiece here, Trilogy, your pretentious Trilogy, it's not that bad.

That wasn't that wasn't the most grandiose thing I've ever heard on this show. I probably said, worse myself. So don't be too hard on yourself, but how should someone keep up with your work? Oh, I don't know. I'm working on another book and when it comes out, you could buy it. Hardcover. People really, really help this guy out.

Yeah, exactly. I'm by my and apparently now what they want you to do is bite all the first week so that it, you know, Rockets up the, the bestseller list it there. I was told by my publisher recently that I hadn't really thought about it. But pre-orders, an Amazon, he said our gold is that right? That's good to know. Are you able to tell us tease us a little bit with what it might be about? Yeah, it's a personal thing.

Thing for me related to stuff, I'd done before we personal my rope 1491. It was originally supposed to have another final chapter about the North American West.

That's where I grew up miss an area that has, you know, obviously special personal meaning to me, the kind of out the Deep history of the West. And when I outlined it, the outline for the chapter was longer than all the other chapters, you know, do the unwritten and I tried to cut it down and just didn't work, so you ended up, cutting it out completely and papering together.

And if you look very carefully at the end of 1491, you'll see that it's, you can still see the sutures and the scars where I sort of laughed together, an end. And this been sticking in my mind and I finally thought, well I'll see what I got. And last year, I wrote out a link the outline and I realized wait this actually is a book of its own and it's about trying to consider the West in terms of its future as part of its ancient history.

You know, they're what we know about the West I mean without going into too much prediction is that What's going to be hotter and drier than it is today? We know that it's going to be roughly 40 percent Hispanic and you know, something like 8% Asian. And we know that water issues are going to be really really

important. And we also know this is probably the most quote-unquote controversy Jose, the 274 federally recognized tribes in the west are going to gain more and more sovereignty and that's the trajectory they've been on since the 1960s. And so in 2050 or something like that, there will be essentially almost 300 small nations in the West in this time of environmental conversion and

tremendous mixing. So the conventional history of the West which involves you know, the frontier and people coming in from the East and nature being tamed in the west essentially disappearing. Just doesn't seem very relevant to that and so it's a history of the what the West might be in the future. I love it. I want you back on the show to talk about it. We can even time it so it helps with your publisher.

Oh gee, thanks. I'm from Arizona and have a lot of affection for the Southwest spend, so much time out there. I am very interested in this. I can't wait when I might this come out. Well, I'm hoping it would be next year. Sometime probably a year and a half from now. Yeah, book publishing with their

long lead times. Well, this is actually good though because if you think about it, what it means is it forces you to try And imagine something and to write something, you have some value you know the beyond the immediate that's a good point. Yeah. That makes me feel better about it. I'm hoping you know that I wrote 1491 it was published in 2005 and it's kind of tickled to hear that you read it last year and

had some value to you. I thought wow you know it's sticking around a little bit yeah that thing holds up as far as I can tell, it's great and then you're also on Twitter, see that? Yeah. It's a, what is your handle their Charles? See, man, that's right. Man. Yeah, all of these links will be in the show notes. If you'd like to buy Charles's books or follow him on Twitter.

It's our website to it's actually down and then always download is taking of tinkering around, turn around with it, my expiration, my website expired for, I don't know, an hour and the domain snatcher got it up. So I have to deal with it, which I will do, as soon as I finish this drink of the book. Okay. Yeah, good. Good luck. I'll keep my eyes peeled into. This is It happens when, when you are just a person in your, in your fighting algorithms. Yeah.

Oh wow. There's a man versus technology. There you go. Yuri unsuccessfully versus technology. Yeah, yeah, yeah. You lost. You got Sky netted. Oops. Well, thanks for being here. Charles I was a lot of fun. I learned a lot and thanks for stimulating. My mind. And also, the patron book group is grateful for giving us such fruitful terrain for which to March over. So thank you. Well, it's my pleasure. That's the wrote the book in the hopes that would do.

And so thank you very much for the kind words, my pleasure. And if you would like to show, please rate review us on iTunes or a podcast Stitcher pod Bean, where are you listening to shows? And thank you so much for listening, but thank you so much for listening. If you like the show, please rate and review it in apple podcast and or Stitcher. It really helps us a lot to get this content to a wider audience. If you think what we're doing is, Interesting fun.

Hopefully all three. We certainly appreciate your rating and review. You can keep up with Nori at nor e.com where there is a newsletter that's Nori .com/srobiyt. There's podcast, there's a whole bunch else or you can send us an email at podcast at nor e.com. We are also now on patreon at patreon.com slash Nori podcasts, if you'd like more content engagement and community and thank you so much for your support.

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