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  • I want to get off this rock for a little while,

  • so that's what we're going to do.

  • We're going to look at global sustainability from a unique perspective.

  • Of course, being the science techno-geek person that I am,

  • having worked with the space shuttle and somewhat immersed

  • in a lot of the technological references

  • that enable an RBE to exist in the first place,

  • I decided to take this venture from Mars to Earth,

  • kind of going a different way.

  • When you think about space exploration, it's usually the other way around,

  • going from Earth to somewhere. Well, let's flip it.

  • So space exploration and sustainability: what is that all about?

  • Well, when you do anything in space,

  • it is inherent into the system that you need to be sustainable.

  • There is no Walmart, thank God, in orbit.

  • [Laughter]

  • So, you sort of want to plan accordingly, to maximize the efficiency

  • of the International Space Station, or shuttle missions,

  • or Dragon Missions from Space X, or whatever the case may be.

  • So what you do in this case is:

  • Let's do a Mars Base thought experiment and isolate some of the variables

  • that would be the most important and most relevant

  • to living on a hostile world that wasn't really designed for us.

  • Basic necessities of life:

  • air, food, water, sleep, medical care.

  • Then you ask yourself "Can those be provided in a way

  • such that the astronauts don't have to be the stewards

  • of their own habitat all day long?"

  • In fact, any researchers going to Mars,

  • their job is not to be the maid of their building.

  • It's to go out and drive and explore and dig up dirt and rocks ... right?

  • So, you would want to make sure that everything you put into their habitat

  • is as automated as possible, sustainable as possible,

  • self-correcting as possible.

  • And that also falls into the shelter, clothing, education,

  • energy, transportation and communication aspect as well.

  • Shelter's kind of a funny one, right?

  • On Earth, we can-... clothing too:

  • technically you can walk around naked under stars

  • and you'll be perfectly fine, unless it's winter in New England.

  • But, on Mars, you can't quite do it that way.

  • Your shelter is a life preserver in and of itself

  • because of the Martian atmosphere.

  • Your space suit is a life preserver for the exact same reason.

  • And so, some of that is also built into a sustainable aspect.

  • So, let's say something breaks on my space suit,

  • and I need to rapidly knock off a part.

  • Do I want to bring a whole bunch of parts with me,

  • that have mass and require bigger rockets to get up there?

  • Or, do I bring a 3D printer

  • and just knock off what I might need in the interim?

  • And so when you're looking at space exploration,

  • something to consider is abundance:

  • having more than enough to suit the needs of the region,

  • and by far probably one of the most important aspects

  • for us to live, peacefully.

  • I typically tell this story, and most people can resonate with it.

  • We have a room full of people here. If I put you all on a stranded island

  • with one coconut tree, no matter how awesome you think you are,

  • and how peaceful you are, at some point

  • you're probably gonna come to blows because there just isn't enough,

  • and so negative behaviors are going to manifest.

  • But if I put all of you on an island with an abundance of coconut trees

  • and food resources, you're not going to have a need to behave that way.

  • So, you would also do that, obviously, in any space exploration mission,

  • but it would also translate back home.

  • But in space we have technical abundance.

  • You can't really farm the land on Mars.

  • So you need to have certain ways, and air creation

  • (being able to have breathable air), water recycling systems, and what-not.

  • It's all done through technical means.

  • It's the ability to produce an abundance with minimum human labor input.

  • It goes back to the point of, what do you want your astronauts doing all day?

  • What do you want your researchers doing all day?

  • So, in order to give them the time to go do the awesome stuff

  • that they got educated to go do in the first place,

  • it's an absolute necessity on a Mars base.

  • So: from Mars to Earth, let's reverse gears. All right.

  • Can we do that on Mars? Yeah, we can.

  • In fact, we've had NASA and other space exploration institutes

  • have had designs and plans on the books for moon bases, for lunar bases

  • and Mars bases for quite some time, and I mean 30, 40, 50 years,

  • some of it rudimentary, or even better now than we were then,

  • but the concepts are still sound.

  • So if we can do that there, why the ... aren't we doing it here?

  • [Applause]

  • What I'm gonna do in the interest of time is to isolate two key examples,

  • just something to think about: biological need of food,

  • and a quality-of-life need of energy. Energy is an amazing thing.

  • If you look at the development of human civilization throughout time,

  • energy- harnessing energy- is by far the dominant characteristic

  • that changes our quality of life.

  • So let's look at technical abundance for food.

  • You have hydroponics, aquaponics,

  • sciences that are relatively new in some respects,

  • as far as our ability to apply reasons why this stuff works:

  • technical know-how, technical capabilities,

  • that allow us to grow without the need of using soil at all.

  • Then you have self-sustaining systems that can regulate

  • with sensors and monitors, pH-balance adjusters, things like that,

  • to make sure that the water is great for the plants and the fish.

  • Clean energy power systems (which I'll touch on in a bit),

  • and it can be highly automated. Now, I'm not saying that

  • such systems would be completely void of human interaction.

  • But then again, they don't have to be.

  • You're going to have people that want to trim the tomato plants,

  • that enjoy getting into the plants and stuff.

  • So it's not so much that we have to automate all of it-

  • that's it, that's what we have to do- like some dictatorship.

  • It's about automating as much as we can, so that the person

  • who is the agriculturist that just loves to grow spinach or what not,

  • can go in there and just do the minimal things that they want to do,

  • and then spend the rest of the day hanging out with the kids,

  • or enjoying life, or learning something

  • and really reinvigorating that whole family unit

  • that seems to be disintegrating a lot these days.

  • And then you look at our clean energy needs.

  • We all... far too many people actually don't understand

  • the clean energy potential, that we have on this planet.

  • This planet is bombarded on a regular basis

  • by a boatload of energy from the sun.

  • We have wind, we have wave, tidal,

  • hydro, geothermal ways of harnessing energy,

  • and it's not like 'free' energy as if it comes from some invisible ether,

  • all you're doing is converting from one form to another,

  • and we're getting really good at converting Earth's energy potential

  • into something we can use.

  • So you have ideas like this, where you take vertical axis wind turbines

  • and put them on the light posts that you're electric car would drive by,

  • for example. You zip by at 60 mph, and somebody else zips by at 60 mph,

  • that little wind turbine is 'gonna haul ass', spinning.

  • And what's it going to do when it does that?

  • Generate power, which is going to charge a battery in the bottom.

  • And then at night time, what's going to turn on the light?: the battery

  • that was charged by the people who drove by during the day.

  • No grid. The whole pole runs itself.

  • [Applause]

  • So if we implemented abundant solution sets for our most basic needs-...

  • there's the question, isn't it?

  • Of course, most of the people in here probably know the answer to this one.

  • Can the current socioeconomic system we live in now

  • actually handle such robust global sustainability?

  • No.

  • [Laughter]

  • It was never designed to.

  • It served a purpose to get us to where we are, right?

  • I akin it to this: are you bitter or mad at the pants you used to wear

  • when you were 9 years old?

  • No. When you were 9 years old

  • the pants served a purpose, right? They fit you, they worked.

  • And then you outgrew the pants.

  • [Applause]

  • So we need new pants.

  • So what do we have now? A system based on scarcity.

  • What we're moving towards-... and this is a very organic movement.

  • Yes, The Zeitgeist Movement is a representation of a train of thought

  • that a lot of people cling onto, and there are other groups and organizations.

  • It's like ... a good chunk of the world is starting to wake up.

  • I blame the Internet a lot, because now we're able to share information

  • in such a way that people are going "What the fuck are we doing?!"

  • [Laughter]

  • We have a system based on inefficient human labor.

  • Let's go to technical labor to cover most of the labor needs.

  • Cyclical growth and consumption on a finite planet? That's a brilliant idea!

  • Let's be a bunch of bacteria in a Petri dish, and grow and grow and grow,

  • and then when we reach the maximum size of the Petri dish, we die.

  • 'Cause that's what happens! Science, people, wake up!

  • And so, when you look at the finite carrying capacity of the Earth,

  • it would make sense to manage what you're doing

  • and limit that whole 'growth forever' thought process.

  • A system based on ownership and control, is what we have now.

  • We know we're all moving towards usership and open access,

  • open source of information and ideas, even blueprints

  • and thought process, 3D printers, the list goes on.

  • Outdated multi-century old ideologies and institutions:

  • I think that has been hammered pretty good up to this point

  • by the great speakers before me.

  • We need a forward-thinking, adaptive and emergent train of thought

  • in society that says "Just because it worked yesterday

  • doesn't mean that it's going to work tomorrow."

  • Like the sciences do, keep punching at your theories until they break,

  • and then when they break, go "Sweet! Now I have a better idea."

  • [Applause]

  • We have a system based on hostile competition,

  • secrecy and differential advantage.

  • What we need is a more cooperative, collaborative system of ideas

  • for information and mutual benefit.

  • And then political opinion (yay- politics)

  • dictate the ebb and flow of global operations,

  • including corporate influence on government.

  • Quite obviously, that's not a very good idea for moving forward.

  • So mankind needs to upgrade its global OS (its operating system).

  • You can call it an RBE, a Natural Earth, a Star Trek economy,

  • what the hell ever else you want to call it, doesn't matter.

  • There are a lot of different names for the same general concept.

  • Just remember this: there are no utopias.

  • As you notice, there's kind of a theme with this 'no utopia' thing.

  • There are always going to be problems and things to tackle,

  • like building that Mars base. That's going to be a pain in the ass.

  • It's going to be great. It's going to be fun. It's going to be challenging.

  • It's gonna cause us to rethink all kinds of ways of doing things.

  • So there are going to be challenges.

  • So you're going to need new tools and new ways of thinking,

  • and I akin that back to the utopian idea,

  • to the hunter-gatherers of 50,000 years ago.

  • Try to explain today, just try to explain air-conditioning-...

  • they're going to call you a utopianist!

  • "Wait, I can sit in one building all day and call that my home?

  • And go to a store that has all kinds of stuff, and it's shipped all over?

  • What the hell's the Internet? And what's that? Phone? Satellites? What?!"

  • OK, the list could go on for a really long time.

  • Transitioning, how do we get there from here? I love the transition question.

  • "Transition: I want an itemized 1 through 27 list

  • of exactly what we're going to do!"

  • [Laughter]

  • You can't even do that looking through history

  • at transitions that happened, that we know happened,

  • because they frickin' happened, you know? Agricultural to industrial, whatever.

  • It's a piecewise meal of several functions and variables;

  • I can probably do calculus on the damn stuff.

  • The point is that it's a very emergent, flowing,

  • nebulous move from one thing to the other.

  • But in short, it's an erosion process.

  • It's basically reducing the dependency on the current system

  • and helping to improve, or move to a different way of thinking and doing things.

  • There's a lot of ways that people can go about doing this:

  • from joining a group or a network,

  • starting at their own corporately social responsible company

  • that's kind of a hybrid between...

  • It's like this monetary company, but it's got an RBE brain behind it,

  • so the point is to kind of drive yourself out of business in the long run.

  • You kind of play the game now, and then you eventually say

  • "Good, I don't have to worry about doing that anymore," something like that.

  • Start or work for a non-profit, that can kind of do the same thing.

  • But also work with what you're passionate about.

  • Don't email me saying "I'm gonna be an engineer

  • because I think that's the best thing to do."

  • [No.] Are you going to be an engineer because that's what you want to do

  • or because that's the best thing you think that needs to be done?

  • If you happen to be a musician or an artist or whatever, do that.

  • Don't just become something because you think

  • that's what needs to be done in that respect.

  • I don't think you're going to do yourself or anybody else any major favors

  • by just jumping into something because you think it's appropriate.

  • And so, a quote to end on. It's always good to have a good quote to end on.

  • Good old Bucky [R. Buckminster Fuller]:

  • "You never change things by fighting the existing reality.

  • To change something, build a new model

  • that makes the existing model obsolete."

  • [Applause]

  • The Zeitgeist Movement

I want to get off this rock for a little while,

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B1 中級 美國腔

2013年 "時代精神日"。道格拉斯-馬萊特|"從火星到地球"[11的第4部分] (Zeitgeist Day 2013: Douglas Mallette | "From Mars to Earth" [Part 4 of 11])

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    王惟惟 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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