Which chapter did you write?emordnilap wrote:
I recommend it too, though I would, wouldn't I?
(One of the authors gave me a copy.)
Moderator: Peak Moderation
I'm not that clever. No, I meant its compilation was driven by thinkers over this side of the Irish sea.biffvernon wrote:Which chapter did you write?emordnilap wrote:
I recommend it too, though I would, wouldn't I?
It is a big book with lots of contributors.emordnilap wrote:I recommend it too, though I would, wouldn't I? Luckily, there are contributions from Richard Douthwaite.kenneal - lagger wrote:I recommend the book, with its contribution from our own Chris Vernon (clv101), very highly.
I love the chapter by Orlov about the boat building.
I think that is driven by the cheaper cost of living rather than anything else. Richard Douthwaite is English, and from his name, his family is from Yorkshire or environs originally I would think.emordnilap wrote:.......driven by thinkers over this side of the Irish sea.
D'ya mean loik dis lhittle lheprecaun?emordnilap wrote:I'm not that clever. No, I meant its compilation was driven by thinkers over this side of the Irish sea.
The quotation was from Mobbsey a few posts back.emordnilap wrote:
But, to have a go (gah! useful and practical? I won't quite manage that, there are some very good philosophical chapters)
It's a readable book though, with lots of possibilities hidden in the detail
There are lots of books out there describing and theorising about those problems but very few suggesting doable responses.
Hey I bett he U-value of those bricks is brilliant!mobbsey wrote:D'ya mean loik dis lhittle lheprecaun?emordnilap wrote:I'm not that clever. No, I meant its compilation was driven by thinkers over this side of the Irish sea.
Feasta indeed.emordnilap wrote: I meant its compilation was driven by thinkers over this side of the Irish sea.
And this lecture, given long before PowerSwitch started and most of us had heard of peak oil, is still as relevant to the current situation as ever. Parts of it are included in David Flemng's book Lean Logic.The depletion of oil and gas, the degradation of the environment and the decline of social capital all threaten to collapse the market economy. Fleming believes that such a collapse cannot be averted and that public policy should concentrate on laying the foundations for the transformed political economy that could rise from the ashes. In his lecture he explored the social and cultural qualities that will be indispensable for surviving the crash and moving on to recovery, renewal and stability.
I was just thinking that Richard Douthwaite might be on your side of the Irish Sea for the same economic reasons that some people on this forum are there.emordnilap wrote:¿? Don't understand.kenneal - lagger wrote:I think that is driven by the cheaper cost of living rather than anything else.
The cost of living generally is higher here than in England. It becomes a real problem when stuff you want is simply not available here but, in the main, we personally manage simply by having lower expectations. We're low earners but don't actually need much money.kenneal - lagger wrote:I was just thinking that Richard Douthwaite might be on your side of the Irish Sea for the same economic reasons that some people on this forum are there.emordnilap wrote:¿? Don't understand.kenneal - lagger wrote:I think that is driven by the cheaper cost of living rather than anything else.
Sometimes, yes. There is wheat in amongst the chaff, though - hence my reference to 'nutritional resilience'. To me, that was one of the most positive contributions, giving practical advice. Such articles get swamped by the economically-focussed chapters (though producing nutritionally complete food makes economic sense).Roger Adair wrote:So my assertion is that a lot of this sort of stuff, that seems quite radical, turns out to be positively reactionary and essentially a dressed up version of some scheme to primarily benefit the proposer when you strip it down.
I don't think you can be so dismissive of it, Roger. No book - including Fleeing Vesuvius - is going to solve that much but it's part of the type of thinking that's required. I highly recommend it; such books should be bought two at a time, giving the spare copy to someone 'influential'.Roger Adair wrote:This is scarcely thinking outside the box.