Introduction: what is Out Your Front Door? How can scaling down be good? Out Your Front Door is guided by the notion that there is a benefit to be had from public environments which ar human-sized. Since so many of the environments we find ourselves in seem larger than this, to get the benefit (if there is one to be had -- and we hope we can convince you that there is) from human-sized environments we must begin to measure our environments by what we we can see out our front doors. So what is human-sized, you ask. Some examples help to illustrate. A human-sized journey is one that can be made on foot or on a bike. A human-sized market is one in which all the goods can be touched. A human-sized neighborhood is one that can be easily walked. Here at Out Your Front Door we think that human-sized public environments are good both for those who live, work, shop and enjoy recreation in them but also for the environment of which these human-size public environments are a part. This isn't to say that human-sized environments are the only ones for which there is a benefit, but it is to say that spending time in human-sized environments is good for psychological health and good for the health of the natural world. Background, part 1: philosophy So why are human-sized spaces psychologically beneficial for those who inhabit them? We here at Out Your Front Door wish we had arguments for this, but all we can offer are reports about how we feel in such spaces and invite you to think about whether you share these feelings. Going to the farmer's market week after week and buying eggs, milk, vegetables, fruit (and the occasional turkey) from the same people who grow it all just up the road gives us a feeling of being connected to them and the place in which we live. It's corny and catch-wordy, but it gives us the feeling that we're connected to what we consume. Being able to walk or bike to the market makes it even better. If I can ride my bike there, I know exactly what it takes for dinner to brought to the table. Every link in the chain is perfectly observable and comprehensible. We feel some measure of control over what we're eating. Of course, here at Out Your Front Door we do more than just eat and make preparations for eating. We think, talk, run around the woods and work (when we have to). Of course, one thinks about all sort of things not to do with the immediate environment whether it's human-sized or not, but we believe that such thinking is easier to do in an environment that is human-sized. As for talking and running in the woods, I believe human-sized environments turn our thoughts toward the immediate here and now and make us more attentive and receptive to our interlocuters, and running through the woods is much different than being on a treadmill staring at 15 flashing screens. We would assert that taking the fresh air is better. As for work, we can only guess what it would mean to work in a human-sized environment, but if it's anything like what else can be done there it seems that it might be immensely more rewarding if it could be. Background, part 2: at 3% growth/year, there's a doubling of the economy every 23 years At the very end of George Monbiot's What is Progress?, he claims that "The crisis we face demands a profound philosophical discussion, a reappraisal of who we are and what progress means." The implication being that we can't think of progress as we have for the last 50 (100?) years, as that idea of progress has brought us to where we are now -- an economic and environmental precipice over which we seem sure to topple if we pursue our present course. This bit of Monbiot's thesis rings true to me, even though I have only rudimentary formal training in economics and environmental science. This bit of the thesis is also shocking because the thought of changing our collective (unsustainable) manner of behavior leads immediately to the seemingly unanswerable questions that demand answers: "What will we do?", "How will we live?" Of course, he's suggested the prerequisite we must satisfy to be able to begin to answer these questions. We must have a profound philosophical discussion about and reappraisal of who we are. Now I do have some training in philosophy (perhaps not in the profound variety), and as a philosopher I've learned that there are really no answers to be had from philosophizing, only the raising of more, and hopefully better, questions. Before I take my first stab at raising more, and hopefully better, questions, I'll briefly rehearse the high points of Monbiot's argument to try to convince those who are skeptical about the unsustainability of the economy based on growth. Actually, I may cheat a bit and bolster my own version of the situation with a visual aid. In Money as Debt, Paul Grignon asserts that an economy based on fiat money must be ever expanding in order to function. And whether or not he's right about that, it's beyond dispute that economic institutions such as the Federal Reserve have a keen interest to keep the economy growing rather than in recession. There must be something important at stake regarding the economy's expansion. Economic activity (especially in a global economy) is energy intensive. For example, goods are shipped to be traded, and shipping requires energy. If our methods of shipping were to remain exactly as they are now, but economic activity doubled (say for the sake of argument that shipping activity doubled also), then the energy to transport those goods would increase. Naively, it seems to me that the energy needed in an economy twice its present size would be roughly twice what is currently used. Since nonrenewable fossil fuels supply most of the energy for the transport of goods, it should be obvious that something about the present system of perpetual economic growth must change or the system must end. Either we find an energy source for the transport of goods that can increase geometrically (we can't rely on fossil fuels because our supply of these will not increase geometrically -- it will eventually decrease) or the economy will have to become such that it's not underwritten by constant growth. The inexorable choice that faces us doesn't loom at a comfortably remote distance -- it's nearing with an exponentially increasing speed. Regardless of environmental worries over side effects of burning fossil fuels, there's an economic crisis that must soon be dealt with. Al Gore's Nobel acceptance speech from 2007 offers an eloquent summary of the issues we face and what might be done to head in the direction of sustainability and at the same time in the direction of community. Is everything here to do with Human-Sized Environments? No, it's our hope that there will be all manner of content here. But we feel that our positive views of human-sized environments will be something that is consistent with all that content.
Sunday, May 24, 2009
Why 'Out Your Front Door'?
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