A journal of SMC Seminar Fall 2009

Monday, October 26, 2009

Pre-Class Post Week of 10.28.09

What a great book! Thanks so much for suggesting this Mike, I really enjoyed it and was inspired to think more about my own consumption choices.

I thought that the last two chapters of Cradle to Cradle were the best and most inspiring, focusing on what we should be doing in industry and in our daily lives to be more eco-effective. The concept of nourishing the earth and not just sustaining it is a novel one but also a one that should have been obvious to us (look at the rest of the planet). Perhaps that is the "good versus bad" concept that we were bumping up against in The World Without Us. The question should not be "is what we are doing bad for the earth?" but rather "how does what we are doing promote life (of all things) on earth?". And even with this concept Cradle to Cradle avoids "isms" and recognizes the importance of Economy and Equity in designing products (fractal tile page 150).

The redesigning of the Ford plant using experts different sectors and backgrounds reminded me a lot of SMC. Being "undisciplinary" in addressing problems or engaging ideas is crucial to this redesign effort.

If someone could help me understand the heating and cooling system that they described on pages 134-135 that would be much appreciated, between distractions while reading and my inability to visualize it I could use some help on that front.

I think an interesting idea for a next assignment might involve creating a proposal for a landscaped area at Lehigh using only native plants and materials that are eco-effective. Though it is a small and easy step I think this type of assignment (as a group project perhaps?) would be a proactive step.

Post-Class Post Week of 10.21.09

Wednesday, October 21, 2009

Pre-Class Post Week of 10.21.09

So this post comes two hours before class... certainly late. I apologize to you all but hope that it will be thought provoking for those of you who have a chance to read it before class starts.


I appreciated the authors' concern not only with industry or the environment but with both. The idea of a biosphere and a technosphere is really interesting but I do see one problem with particularly the biosphere disposal system that is proposed. I do think that most people would like to have their technical waste taken care of by the industries that created them, but I could definitely see an unwillingness or even inability to deal with biological waste in the appropriate ways. Does this simply mean that all biological waste can go to a landfill (which becomes a giant compost pile?) or will people be expected to compost at home? Very few people have enough space available to compost all of their biological waste. Beyond that, many people will have an aversion to dealing with a compost pile (which is essentially rotting matter), frankly some people just aren't into worms.

An interesting way to deal with this in our current climate would be to add another waste management system... a compost management. For those of us who would like to allow our bio-matter to feed the earth (which it clearly can't do contaminated by toxins in landfills) who are unable to compost due to location it would be a great idea to have a compost-management program that picks up our compost. This could probably be a free service (or at least very low cost) since profits could be made selling the fertile soil that the compost will create.

Chapter three mentions a "green" building that the authors worked on. I thought it was great that their ideas extended beyond being eco-friendly and that the building was also worker-friendly. "In fact this building is just as energy-efficient as the first, but that is a sisde effect of a broader and more complex goal: to create a building that celebrates a range of cultural and natural pleasures- sun, light, air, nature, even food- in order to enhance the lives of people who work there." (p74). This idea made me wonder how our "STEPS" building will rank both in terms of energy efficiency as well as enjoyable and healthy for people to work and study in.

Wednesday, October 14, 2009

Post-Class Post Week of 10.14.09

To preface this blog entry I'm going to mention that I'm currently sitting in my apartment under three blankets and my nose feels like an ice pop (silly heat that won't work). So, if this blog is incoherent let's agree to blame it on the fact that the most warmth I have access too is the heat coming from the bottom of my lap top.

"Cradle to Cradle" seems like it will be mostly about how industry could produce things differently to be less wasteful and how to create products that are healthier for humans. My hope is that the "scare-tactics" are over because, frankly, I'm on board. While the introduction was effective in convincing me that we need to change the way we make things I hope that the rest of the book isn't just a big list of how bad everything around me is for my health.

Admittedly, last class I was very caught up in an idea that was a bit different from this topic in particular. Specifically, I was trying to reconcile how we would get companies to even create these products. Perhaps the authors will address this later in the book, but as of now it seems that companies make things the way that they do not for a lack of innovation (we create tons of new products all the time) but for a lack of will or resources.

I am inclined to think that even if companies are presented with the designs that this book will inevitably offer the products will rarely make into mainstream consumer culture. The new less-wasteful pro-human-health-and-environment products will probably be seen by companies as a luxury for the wealthy and the educated, so companies will not be inclined to produce shoes that are easy to recycle and reuse they will instead choose to produce knock-off nikes.

So, now we are presented with a dilemma (I know I should finish reading the book and see what solutions the authors offer, but what the heck). We know that it is possible to make products that are good for us and good for the environment, and we know how to make them. Whose responsibility is it to make sure that these are the goods we use everyday rather than the harmful goods? And furthermore does anybody have a right to make sure we are buying earth-friendly or non-toxic products? What if I want to buy the cheaper paint with lead in it? Should I be able to or are the environmental and medical/social costs too high? How do we quantify this?

While my opinion isn't completely formulated I think (at least until I'm convinced otherwise) that government and industry should partner with the scientific community that is already researching these harmful substances and create a system to (at the very least) easily inform consumers of the dangers of certain products. Every time I buy a pack of cigarettes I am reminded that they can give me cancer. If a t-shirt can do the same thing it should also be labeled with a skull and crossbones. Or (at the more invasive end of the spectrum) government should ban certain ecologically and medically harmful substances from even being used in production. I'm sure the right answer is somewhere between those two extremes.

Wow, sorry about the rant. My fingers are a bit warmer now...

Pre-Class Post Week of 10.14.09

So to begin with, I think this book is going to be really interesting. It does a good job of presenting "facts" like the World Without Us but is much better at integrating it into a story and I'm hoping for more interesting solutions. Here are a few of my thoughts.

* What if we found a way to regulate the waste that products create? If there were taxes on products based on the amount of waste it produces we would address the social costs of a product that aren't addressed now (kind of like the taxes on cigarettes). Or we could have flat-out limits on how much waste we're willing to associate with a certain product (life-saving products maybe would be allowed more waste than hair straighteners and cosmetics for instance). A more consumer-driven version of this same idea could be to force companies to lower their prices to cover the cost of waste to consumers (we do have to pay to have our trashed picked up, right?)

* I found it really interesting that most of what we "consume" isn't actually consumed, it's thrown away. When I thought more about it most of what I bring home from the grocery store is packaging... and I probably pay much more for the food precisely because of the packaging it's in. That doesn't seem quite right... I pay more for my food/household items so that their containers can be hazardous to the environment.

*The bit about diapers was also interesting to me. That diapers fill up landfills more than any other product seems strange and like something we could definitely find a way to tackle. Why don't we use biodegradable diapers more? Cloth ones? Joan- as the only person in our group with a real personal investment in this matter what's your take??

* What struck me the most was probably our societies idea of "progress" as economic well-being (in the form of a high GNP). What an economically liberal concept that has completely infiltrated our collective unconscious (or conscious) and has become a global disease. It's strange too, because as people we usually recognize that well-being is not completely tied to money in our personal lives. Unfortunately it also seems that developing countries are buying into this "well-being-as-growth, progress-as-industry" model and probably killing their collective sense of well-being in the process. It would be interesting to look at how people in what we consider "developing nations" live, and judge nations based on rates of depression, suicide, mental health disorders, familial relationships, etc. and see where the US and other "industrialized" countries rank. It seems that with progress and economic gain we've also inherited a myriad of problems. Is it even possible to retain the benefits of industrialization and economic growth without the negative side effects? If not, then would we rather live unhappy and wealthy or happy and simply or even (god forbid) without any luxury?

Monday, October 12, 2009

Pre-Class Past Week of 10.7.09 "Catch Up"

So this post is a little bit less than a week late, but in my attempt to be diligent about blogging I'm going to write it anyway.

PANDEMIC II... what a concept. Let's create a disease and try to kill the world, a bio-terrorist's dream game. And as sick as it may be the game is actually quite interesting. While I grew board with the game quickly I was really excited when I learned that my disease had spread to another region, or that the first death as a result of my disease had occurred. So, what's wrong with us!?

Playing PANDEMIC forced me to wonder just what it is about mass extinction is so interesting to us humans. Of course we're all interested in death, but for some reason it seems like the end of the human race is a hot topic for each of us. Even though it probably won't happen in our lifetime (or our great great great grandchildren's for that matter) and we definitely won't see much of it (we'll be dead or on our way to dead) we still want to know about it. I think this might have to do with wanting to know how to pre-empt the forces leading to human extinction.

This brings me back to "The World Without Us", and the author's point in writing the book. I think that maybe Weisman was trying to get us interested in what would happen to our "stuff" if we disappeared the same way we're interested in the way that the disappearance would occur.