Reflections on life at “De Witte Wand”…

  • The Revenge Of Gaia

    As promised, last night I curled up with James Lovelock’s The Revenge Of Gaia instead of watching Live Earth. I’m pretty sure it was a much better use of my time.

    Lovelock wrote the book when he was in his mid-eighties, and it’s a powerful mixture of passion, knowledge, experience and elegiac reflection. The book discusses the threat and evidence of global warming, and ways in which its effects could be ameliorated.

    What I hadn’t realised until last night was that he has parted ways with many of his fellow environmentalists by stating that nuclear energy is the only realistic alternative to fossil fuels. He makes a good case in the book for saying that nuclear energy has been unfairly demonised, and it has certainly got me thinking about it. He has gone on record as offering:

    …to accept all of the high-level waste produced in a year from a nuclear power station for deposit on my small plot of land; it would occupy a space about a cubic metre in size and fit safely in a concrete pit, and I would use the heat from its decaying radioactive elements to heat my home. It would be a waste not to use it. More important, it would be no danger to me, my family or the wildlife.

    He examines the evidence of how and why the nuclear energy industry has become demonised over the years. As an example, he quotes a report issued in 2000 by the United Nations Scientific Committee on the Effects of Atomic Radiation (UNSCEAR). Interestingly, I see from the report that the average yearly natural background radiation is 2.4 millisieverts per caput (person), and "ranges from 1-10 mSv, depending on circumstances at particular locations, with sizeable population also at 10-20 mSv". Diagnostic medical examinations turn out to be 0.4 mSv per caput per year. Against these figures, the equivalent amount caused by the Chernobyl accident (0.002 mSv) or nuclear power production (0.0002 mSv) seem comfortably low. Lovelock puts these conclusions in a form that makes it even clearer:

    From the conclusions we could reasonably expect that the consequences of exposing the entire population of Europe to ten millisieverts of radiation, about as much as would come from 100 chest X-rays, would be 400,000 deaths.

    Put like this it seems a terrible risk, but it is an amazingly naive way of presenting the facts. What matters is not whether we die but when we die. If the 400,000 were to die the week after the irradiation it would indeed be terrible, but what if instead they lived out their normal lifespans but died a week earlier than expected? The facts of radiation biology are that ten millisieverts of radiation reduces human lifespan by about four days, a much less emotive conclusion. Using the same calculations, the exposure of all those living in Northern Europe to Chernobyl’s radiation on average reduces their lifespan by one to three hours. For comparison, a life-long smoker will lose seven years of life.

    No wonder the media and the anti-nuclear activists prefer to talk of the risk of cancer death. It makes a better story than the loss of a few hours of life expectation. If a lie is defined as a statement that purposefully intends to deceive, the persistent repetition of the huge Chernobyl death toll is a powerful lie.

    It’s true that the media have stated high figures as the eventual death toll from Chernobyl (e.g. this BBC story that claims 200,000), but the World Health Organisation has found, in examining the health of those in the area polluted by the plume from Chernobyl fourteen and nineteen years after the accident, evidence of only forty-five and seventy-five people, respectively, who had died as a result. And the Chernobyl Forum has found that while 600,000 people received high levels of exposure as a result of the accident, the eventual death toll directly attributable to Chernobyl is likely to be only "several thousand".

    As I say, much to think about. One can play a "what if" game here. The goal of producing power by nuclear energy is to do so by the process of nuclear fusion, rather than nuclear fission. The former is much more efficient, and hence produces less waste. But fusion is also much more difficult to achieve. All operational power plants today use the more wasteful process of nuclear fission. While experimental nuclear fusion reactors exist (e.g. the Tokomak), they are at least 20 years, and possibly a century away, from being put into production. The "what if" comes in wondering where we might have been in our struggle to reduce carbon dioxide emissions if the whole nuclear energy industry had not been so consistently demonised for so many years.

    Lovelock closes his book with an elegiac chapter: Beyond The Terminus. He states that he is not a pessimist, but is increasingly seeing the doom-laden predictions of the Astronomer Royal, Sir Martin Rees, in his book Our Final Century as being prescient:

    …for now the evidence coming in from the watchers around the world brings news of an imminent shift in our climate towards one that could easily be described as Hell: so hot, so deadly that only a handful of the teeming billions now alive will survive. We have made this appalling mess of the planet and mostly with rampant liberal good intentions. Even now, when the bell has started tolling to mark our ending, we still talk of sustainable development and renewable energy as if these feeble offerings would be accepted by Gaia as an appropriate and affordable sacrifice. We are like a careless and thoughtless family member whose presence is destructive and who seems to think that an apology is enough. We are part of the Gaian family, and valued as such, but until we stop acting as if human welfare was all that mattered, and was the excuse for our bad behaviour, all talk of further development of any kind is unacceptable.

    Let me be quite clear, Lovelock does not think that the planet is doomed – Gaia is resilient, and that includes the life that is part of the system. What he is clearly worried about is the very real possibility that while human breeding pairs will survive, human civilisation is doomed. He sees a new Dark Age approaching, and proposes a means to lessen its impact:

    One thing we can do to lessen the consequences of catastrophe is to write a guidebook for our survivors to help them rebuild civilisation without repeating too many of our mistakes. I have long thought that a proper gift for our children and grandchildren is an accurate record of all that we know about the present and past environment.

    No such book exists. For most of us, what we know of the Earth comes from books and television programmes that present either the single-minded view of a specialist or persuasion from a talented lobbyist. We live in adversarial, not thoughtful, times and tend to hear only the arguments of each of the special-interest groups.

    Scan the shelves of a bookshop or a public library for a book that clearly explains the present condition and how it happened. You will not find it. The books that are there are about the evanescent things of today. Well-written, entertaining, or informative they may be but almost all of them are in the current context. They take so much for granted and forget how hard won was the scientific knowledge that gave us the comfortable and safe life we enjoy. We are so ignorant of those individual acts of genius that established civilization that we now give equal place on our bookshelves to the extravagance of astrology, creationism and homeopathy. Books on these subjects at first entertained us or titillated our hypochondria. We now take them seriously and treat them as if they were reporting facts.

    Imagine the survivors of a failed civilization. Imagine them trying to cope with a cholera epidemic using knowledge gathered from a tattered book on alternative medicine. Yet in the debris such a book would be more likely to have survived and be readable than a medical text.

    What Lovelock calls for is, in effect, the creation of a Bible of science – printed on durable paper with long-lasting print – for any kind of medium that requires a computer and electricity to read it would be useless.

    What we need is a book of knowledge written so well as to constitute literature in its own right. Something for anyone interested in the state of the Earth and of us – a manual for living well and for survival.The quality of its writing must be such that it would serve for pleasure, for devotional reading, as a source of facts and even as a primary school text. It would range from simple things such as how to light a fire, to our place in the solar system and the universe. It would be a primer of philosophy and science – it would provide a top-down look at the Earth and us. It would explain the natural selection of all living things, and give the key facts of medicine, including the circulation of the blood, the role of the organs. The discovery that bacteria and viruses caused infection diseases is relatively recent; imagine the consequences if such knowledge was lost. In its time the Bible set the constraints for behaviour and for health. We need a new book like the Bible that would serve in the same way but acknowledge science. It would explain properties like temperature, the meaning of their scales of measurement and how to measure them. It would list the periodic table of the elements. It would give an account of the air, the rocks, and the oceans. It would give the schoolchildren of today a proper understanding of our civilization and of the planet it occupies. It would inform them at an age when their minds were most receptive and give them facts they would remember for a lifetime. It would also be the survival manual for our successors. It would help bring science part as part of our culture and be an inheritance Whatever else may be wrong with science, it still provides the best explanation we have of the material world.

    Like Lovelock, I would love to see such a book. Parts of it do exist, scattered over thousands of other works, but I fear, like Lovelock, that in the aftermath, their small voices will be drowned out by the roar of the detritus of pseudoscience and celebrity culture.

    Speaking of celebrity culture, I see that the BBC News web page reporting on Live Earth has one of those instant Vote questions. The question sums up for me the feeling that we are well and truly fucked because of the breathtakingly inane way it’s phrased. If that’s indicative of of our capability to save civilisation, then we might as well kiss our arses goodbye.  

    3 responses to “The Revenge Of Gaia”

    1. polar coityu Avatar
      polar coityu

      Thinking About Polar Cities — Or Trying ToBy Kit StolzAn interesting journalist named Dan Bloom, now based in Taiwan, hasbeen agitating for consideration of one of James Lovelock’s morealarming ideas — polar cities. (Here’s his site on the subject.) Idon’t have answers for Mr. …A Change in the Wind

    2. polar coityu Avatar
      polar coityu

      POLAR CITIES ENVISIONED TO SURVIVE GLOBAL WARMINGWebposted: July 1, 2007Environmental activist Dan Bloom has come up with a solution to globalwarming that apparently no one else is talking about: polar cities.That’s right, Bloom envisions future polar cities will house some 200million survivors of global warming in the far distant future (perhapsin the year 2500, he says on his blog), and he’s lobbying on theInternet for their planning, design and construction — NOW!"Sounds nutty, I know" the 58-year-old self-described "eco-dreamer"says from his home in Asia, where he has been based since 1991. "Butglobal warming is for real, climate change is for real, and polarcities just might be important if humankind is to survive the coming’events’, whatever they might be, in whatever form they take."Bloom, a 1971 graduate of Tufts University in Boston, says he came upwith the idea of polar cities after reading a long interview withBritish scientist James Lovelock, who has predicted that in thefuture, the only survivors of global warming might be around 200million people who migrate to the polar regions of the world."Lovelock pointed me in this direction," Bloom says. "Although he hasnever spoken of polar cities per se, he has talked about thepossibility that the polar regions might be the only place wherehumans can survive if a major cataclysmic event occurs as a directresult of global warming, in the far distant future. I think we’ve gotabout 30 generations of human beings to get ready for this."Does Bloom, who has created a blog and video on YouTube, think thatpolar cities are practicial?""Practical, necessary, imperative," he says. "We need to start

      thinking about them now, and maybe even designing and building themnow, while we still have time and transportation and fuel andmaterials and perspective. Even if they never get built, the very ideaof polar cities should scare the pants off people who hear about theconcept and goad them into doing something concrete about globalwarming. That’s part of my agenda, too."For more information: http://climatechange3000.blogspot.comGOOGLE: "polar cities"WIKIPEDIA: "polar cities"BLOG SEARCH: "polar cities"

    3. polar coityu Avatar
      polar coityu

      GOOD POINT HERE:
      Let me be quite clear, Lovelock does not think that the planet is doomed – Gaia is resilient, and that includes the life that is part of the system. What he is clearly worried about is the very real possibility that while human breeding pairs will survive, human civilisation is doomed. He sees a new Dark Age approaching, and proposes a means to lessen its impact:

      One thing we can do to lessen the consequences of catastrophe is to write a guidebook for our survivors to help them rebuild civilisation without repeating too many of our mistakes. I have long thought that a proper gift for our children and grandchildren is an accurate record of all that we know about the present and past environment.

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  • No Guarantee

    While I might wish it otherwise, being gay is of itself no guarantee of being rational and wise. Here’s ample proof: the Education Minister of the German state of Hesse has recently come out both as a lesbian, and for the teaching of creationism in school biology lessons. Duh.

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  • Breaking The Spell

    Dan Dennett recently did an interview on Danish TV to talk about the ideas in his book Breaking The Spell. The interview has inevitably been put up on YouTube. Part 1 is here.
     
    If you haven’t read the book, Dennett does a good job of covering the contents in a straightforward and relaxed manner, it’s worth watching.
     
     
    Part 2:
     
     
    Part 3: 
     
     

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  • Technical Difficulties

    I see that Steorn are having a spot of technical difficult in demonstrating their "free energy" machine. I can’t say that I’m surprised, and neither is Ben Goldacre, over at his Bad Science blog. It’s led him to posit his first law of bullshit dynamics.

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  • What On Earth Is The Point?

    I’m sorry, but I really don’t understand the thinking behind Live Earth. A bunch of hypocrites prancing about on multiple stages ostensibly to raise awareness about global warming while being ferried to and from the event in their private jets, helicopters and limos while guzzling bottled water? Call me Victor Meldrew if you like, but if ever there was something that felt singularly pointless, it would be this. Marina Hyde feels the same way.
     
    I think I’ll crack open a good book instead. James Lovelock’s The Revenge of Gaia seems somewhat appropriate, I feel.
     
    Update: I did read the book. My thoughts about it are here.

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  • Not A Surprise

    Another little quiz that gave me a totally unsurprising result.
     
    You Are Very Skeptical

    Your personal motto is: "Prove it."
    While some ideas, like life after death, may seem nice…
    You aren’t going to believe them simply because it feels good.
    You let science and facts be your guide… Even if it means you don’t share the beliefs of those around you.

    How Skeptical Are You?

     

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  • Tears

    As an alternative to "Getting Hot Under The Collar", I offer you an alternative: a collage of tears. The purpose is the same – to draw attention to the money the European Commission gives to film making in Europe.
     
     
    There’s even a destination on YouTube: say hello to EUtube (groan).

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  • Being Broke

    I’ve been reading the One Good Thing blog for some time now, and occasionally drawing your attention to entries that seem to me to be especially relevant to life.
     
    I thought that I had Flea’s blog on my blogroll, but I’ve just discovered that I was mistaken. I’ve now corrected that oversight, and by way of penance, I implore you to go and read Broke, Part I and Broke, Part II. You won’t regret it.

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  • Our Brave Police

    Sometimes, following the rulebook can be a good thing. Sometimes it can kill.
     
    We’ve just had a bizarre incident here in the Netherlands, in Pernis, a town near Rotterdam. Apparently, two idiots were so taken with the schlock-horror film Hostel 2 that they decided to try torturing a third person to death, imitating a scene from the film. Neighbours heard the screams and called the police. Instead of entering the premises, the two policemen who arrived (and who were armed) hung around outside for 20-25 minutes and listened to the continuing screams of the victim. Apparently, they thought he was a hostage, and the rulebook says that you have to call for backup in such cases.
     
    By the time the backup arrived, it was too late, the victim had been mortally wounded and died shortly afterwards.
     
    Seems to me that someone made an error of judgement here, and a man died as a result. However, the Public Prosecutor’s Office says it sees no reason to order an investigation into the incident. Er, hello?
     

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  • 3D Illusions

    Here’s a series of flat images that give the illusion of being in three dimensions. Mind Hacks explains more about the background and what the brain is doing to construct the illusion.

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  • Damn

    George Melly has died. From rum, bum and concertina to family man. He’ll be missed.
     
    Update: good to read the tributes on the BBC site from folk far and wide. And more here. Double damn.

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  • How Many Colours Are There?

    Watch this little film to the end to understand the question.
     
     
    (hat tip to Houtlust)

    One response to “How Many Colours Are There?”

    1. Brian Avatar
      Brian

      Must admit, that had my green-flecked hazel eyes misting up at the end.

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  • They’re Back…

    You may recall that last August, I blogged about an Irish company – Steorn – that claimed it had discovered how to get energy for free. I declared myself unconvinced then, and I still stick to that now.
     
    However, the company is now back in the spotlight with a demonstration of their "free energy" (i.e. perpetual motion) machine calld the Orbo. I remain unconvinced since Steorn is apparently still pitching to the media, and the demonstration will take place in an art museum fer gawd’s sake. You would think that if there was anything to this device that reputable scientists would have be screaming for it to be displayed in pride of place at the Science Museum. But no, you’ll have to go to Spitalfields (once a haunt of Jack The Ripper) to see it. Alternatively, you can see it via webcam here. Although if you believe that the device is what it claims to be on the strength of a webcam image, then I have a bridge that you might be interested in.

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  • Public Conveniences

    Public bodies, such as government agencies, are supposed to serve the public. But all too often, it seems, they actively take steps to thwart this intent.
     
    I came across two such examples today. First up is the UK’s Environment Agency. Amongst the data it collects on behalf of the British public is flood data. When OnOneMap (a site for prospective housebuyers) made the data accessible via Google Maps, housebuyers were delighted, but the Environment Agency was furious, and demanded that OnOneMap withdraw the facility. Read more here.
     
    Next up is the UK’s English Heritage, the Historic Buildings and Monuments Commission for England, and funded by the taxpayer and by visitors to some of its properties. It has a ViewFinder image gallery website, but this actively restricts public engagement rather than make it easy. Dan Lockton, over at fulminate // Architectures of Control has the story
     
    So at the moment, the score stands at:
    Housebuyers (the Public, first team): 0, Environment Agency (Wankers United): 1
    Amateur Historians (the Public, second team): 0, English Heritage (Dickheads Town): 1
     

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  • Getting Hot Under The Collar

    An interesting video from the European Commission to publicise the money it puts into European cinema. It’s getting some people hot under the collar. Perhaps they need to loosen up a little. Make love not war…
     
     

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  • The Light Fantastic

    While I think these artistic lights by Frank Buchwald look wonderful, I have the feeling that I would never be able to afford so much as a single brass screw. The fact that no prices are mentioned anywhere on the web site instantly kicks in the "if you have to ask, you can’t afford it" feeling. Bugger.

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  • Oh Dear…

    I’m not sure that this is going to be a good idea. It seems as though it’s calculated to stimulate my fight-or-flight response when viewing the next series of Doctor Who. Tom says it all.

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  • Architect Or Car Salesman?

    Steven Poole, over at the excellent Unspeak blog, takes a look at Frank Luntz’s latest book "Words That Work". It’s fair to say that he’s not impressed, and gives ample evidence to back up his opinion. Oh, and I can substantiate Poole’s puzzlement over the meaning of the word napkin. In my lifetime of nearly sixty years, it was never to be confused with the separate word nappy. Indeed I have a dictionary published thirty years ago that clearly lists both words and their totally separate meanings. So much for Luntz’s bizarre theory that thirty years ago, we British believed napkins were nappies.
     
    Luntz apparently thinks of himself as a "language architect". On this showing, he comes across more as a particularly oleaginous used car salesman. The only difference between Luntz and a used car salesman appears to be that the latter knows when he’s lying. Best avoided at all costs.

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  • Miracle Diet Pill?

    Mr. Angry deconstructs a drug company’s web site that mentions the side-effects of a diet pill in a rather coy way. Mr. Angry obliterates the coy, and leaves you in no doubt as to what you are very likely to experience. Very, very funny.

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  • Incompetent Clowns

    The shrill reporting by much of the British media over the attempted acts of terrorism in the UK last weekend is beginning to bring on a Victor Meldrew moment in me. Luckily, Lewis Page, writing in The Register, provides a countering voice. It struck me as an odd place to find his piece (The Register reports on IT matters in a manner that reminds me of the satirical magazine Private Eye), but then I discover that Mr. Page has been a bomb disposal expert in the past. So I assume that he knows whereof he writes.

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