[Oe List ...] Conservation Economy
Herman Greene
hfgreene at mindspring.com
Wed Nov 22 08:49:16 EST 2006
Jann,
I know Stuart Cowan as well. He is excellent.
Herman
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Sent: Wednesday, November 22, 2006 12:44 AM
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Subject: [Oe List ...] Conservation Economy
Forwarded by Jann McGuire. Stuart Cowan was one of my teachers at
University
of Creation Spirituality, a visionary scientist.
Web site review by Tom Atlee: Another of my favorite developments is Stuart
Cowan's "Patterns of a Conservation Economy"
<http://www.conservationeconomy.net> which delineate a "pattern language"
for bioregional sustainability. A
"pattern language" is architect/planner Christopher Alexander's term for a
coherent collection of design elements needed to make a livable Place --
from
micro-factors like back yards to macro-factors like regional plans. Each
design
element acts like a systemic "need" which can be satisfied in a wide variety
of
ways -- so the whole system of design elements ("the pattern language")
encourages tremendous creativity and diversity.
Cowan's modular/ fractal web of such factors constitutes a mini-
encyclopedia
of sustainable ideas and practices, such as
* Awareness of Consumption and Its Effects
* Beauty and Play
* Community-Based Financial Institutions
* Cyclical Patterns of Production and Consumption
* Local Currencies and Trading Systems
* Practical Skills in Support of Place
* Regional Tax Revenue Sharing
* Urban Growth Boundaries
* Waste as a Resource
* Wildlife Corridors
* and dozens more.
Notice how each one of these systemic needs can be satisfied in many
different ways, which makes room for the many different initiatives
we're all working on. The whole pattern is laid out in a web-like
chart, and you can click on any part of it to get a succinct
description of that factor and its links to related elements in the
overall pattern language. This beautifully integrated map -- in its
concept, content and presentation -- gives me hope that we just might
pull together our far-flung movements into a coherent whole -- a
wholesome cultural eddy ready to absorb the chaotic energies of
transition and become the whirlpool of a future new society.
Already each pattern description (which you find when you click on
the pattern name at <http://www.conservationeconomy.net>) includes
organizations and references that are relevant to that particular
area of life. At any time we could start expanding and deepening
this shared map -- using its form for cataloguing and linking all our
groups, initiatives, innovations, and resources. (Cowan has now
started a consulting firm, Autopoiesis <http://www.apoiesis.com/> to
actualize the insights he has gained in such studies as this. And I
am hoping over the next year to begin design of a comparable pattern
language for evolutionary dynamics to support people wanting to
consciously, proactively engage in the evolution of human
consciousness and social systems. But Cowan's original map remains,
begging to be filled out. Do you know anyone who would like to start
mapping ALL our resources and initiatives into the Conservation Economy
pattern language, and bringing others into that world?)
Anne Forbes
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