You've heard a million times that the history of life on earth is one of systems tending toward ever-increasing complexity, but in this episode, we argue evolutionary history is best conceptualized as one of ever-expanding boundaries of selfhood. In so doing, we apply a unique lens to questions with concrete strategic implications which have vexed environmental politics for generations: is the trend toward increasing scale and complexity in human societies intrinsically bad? Is nature whatever humans aren't doing? Can we exert conscious influence on ecosystems and revere them at the same time? We make a case for a politics in alliance with the broad tendency of life on earth to increase the scale of the “self,” arguing that while people have clearly lost hope in the revolutionary mythologies they invented out of psychological need, this particular mythology of expanding selfhood is real, and therefore durable.
Somewhere along the way, we note how the power exercised in extractive hierarchical societies precisely recapitulates the logic of cancer: when the perceived boundaries of the “self” shrinks, cells (or people) begin treating the systems of which they are a part as “other.” We also see how central nervous systems evolved repeatedly in different animal lineages, complex cell anatomy resulted from organisms failing to digest what they had eaten, octopus arms might be independently conscious, and domestication can be broken down into sub-components by relevant brain system. To top it all off, Arnold cries just a little at the very end. What more could you possible ask for? If your answer is “a video where a bunch of very interesting people who met through Fight Like An Animal talk about some of these same themes,” here's a link to a video called Scientific Animism: The Computational Boundaries of an Octopus.
Scientific Militant pt. 1
Group Mind pt. 1: Dancing Epidemics
The Nine Elders and the Ancient Scroll: A Constitutional Crisis Comedy Special
GHG Removal and the Worldviews That Consider It
A model political program for ecological survival
What Elephants Can Teach Us About Civil War
Do Not Worship the Deities That Came Before the Fire
Nature-Nurture Death Spiral pt. 4: Academic Gibberish vs. Life on Earth
Nature-Nurture Death Spiral pt. 3: Foucault Ruins Your Meeting
Nature-Nurture Death Spiral pt. 2: The Universal People
Nature-Nurture Death Spiral pt. 1: Margaret Mead Goes to Samoa
The Wilderness of Mirrors
Genocidal Mystics
The Psychology and Politics of Collapse: Interview with Ken Ward
It Isn't Nonviolent To Let People Hurt You
The Biology of the Right-Left Divide part 3
The Biology of the Right-Left Divide part 2
The Biology of the Right-Left Divide pt. 1
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