Bonus Joules and the Knowledge Economy
Junk Light Children
Bonus Joules witnesses the unlightening of the new generation.
Blog by Dave McArthur 1 November 2007
Bonus Joules and the Knowledge Economy: All images on this site are copyright 2001 and you are free to use them with
care.
Click through to Bonus Joules Cartoon Strip
You say three. I say five. What makes a symbol come alive?
If its one we die, if it’s the other we thrive. Especially if its CO2_ ..
A small test, dear reader: How did you interpret that CO2_ symbol? It is not a common symbol. Did you figure my finger
slipped on the key and you automatically corrected it to CO2… or CO2?
It was not an error and in that simple line or underscore symbol is the movement of billions of dollars and perhaps the
fate of billions of human beings. Such is the power of symbols. It is all about your money, your child’s life and death.
Which begs the question: what is a symbol?
A Web search of the symbol symbol throws up hundreds of definitions.
Wiki suggests:
Symbols are objects, characters, figures, sounds or colors used to represent abstract ideas or concepts. A symbol, in
its basic sense, is a conventional representation of a concept; i.e., an idea, object, quality, quantity, etc.
This is the best definition I could spot and I don’t find it very helpful. I think it is because it fails to express the
full potential of the symbol symbol. I define a symbol as anything that conveys shared meaning.
When a skunk stamps its feet, growls, fluffs its fur and lifts its tail it is sending out a signal – do not come closer
than fifteen feet. Now there are no skunks in New Zealand and yet I know the meaning of these auditory, visual and
olfactory symbols. I vividly imagine myself giving a skunk plenty of space. No doubt the vividness of my image is in
part due to my olfactory experiences as a child as I killed highly pungent stoats and ferrets caught in my possum traps.
And my experience tells me that dimensions of the skunk’s space or exclusion zone that are communicated by this symbol
is variable. I might look skywards and note “mares’ tails” or cirrus clouds symbolising strong winds from the north.
That abstract “skunk space” suddenly moves southwards of the skunk in my mind.
Did the same happen to you as read these words?
If you have ever ventured beyond the urban environment then the chances are we share a common meaning in this text. In
other words we draw common meaning from these symbols communicating the meaning of the skunk’s multi-sense symbols.
It is interesting to observe the symbol symbol derives from the Greek symbolon symbol,
The word "symbol" came to the English language by way of Middle English, from Old French, from Latin, from the Greek σύμβολον (sýmbolon) from the root words συν- (syn-) meaning "together" and βολή (bolē) "a throw", having the approximate meaning of "to throw together", literally a "co-incidence" (zu-fall), also "sign, ticket, or contract".
Your views and mine coincide as a result of our use of symbols. We agree (or have a contract) that it is unwise to approach a skunk if it lifts its tail. The skunk agrees not to attack us. In sharing this meaning
in these symbols you and I and the skunk can enjoy greater harmony. For instance, in this case if I go to the lands
where skunks reside then I am less likely to be coated with a sulphur compound called N-bulymercaptan and become a
miserable social outcast.
So I hope we now share the very wide meaning I find in the symbol symbol. A symbol is anything that conveys shared meaning between sentient beings.
An exploding volcano is a symbol of great power and risk to all creatures and plants that perceive it and this is
evident from all their common reactions such as fleeing the area or seeking shelter.
This sentience may include plants, as we do know they respond to the pheromones released by neighbouring plants as they
are browsed by animals and begin to release toxins in self-defence.
I attended a preview of the revised New Zealand Education Curriculum this week and noted it spoke of our children “Using
language, symbols and texts” and “Using different codes, symbols and texts to express meaning”. If you share my
definition of the symbol symbol then you too will fail to find sense in these statements.
Implicit in these statements is the concept that language, texts and codes are somehow not symbols. According to the
definition I employ, language, texts and codes are just symbol forms. They are each a subset of symbols or a type of
symbol. They are meaning made manifest in the same way that fossil fuels, trees, air and oceans are just energy forms or
energy made manifest.
You ask why is this so important?
Well, for a start it indicates our new education curriculum is stuck in the same old mould that has generated our
current unsustainable culture. Modern neurophysics employing technology such as fMRI scans, is confirming that we are
Trace Beings in that, for instance, we may be conscious of a couple of thousand changes happening in any second while
our subconscious is registering perhaps six billion changes. If the Sustainability Principle of Energy holds then any
education system that denies change on this scale puts our children at great peril.
You ask how might this be?
When I use symbols in the form of, for instance, this text to communicate to you I am profoundly aware that the images
they generate in you will be the results of computations based on the cumulative experience of your total being – and
that experience includes the ancient wisdom of your genes. The images and associated responses will be a product of all
your sensory experiences in your life. So, for instance, these text symbols are subject to a sea of transformations
within your being before forming an image that you act on.
Click through to Bonus Joules Cartoon Strip
As a result I know not to put much store by what you say or write. Rather I evaluate the impact of a symbol use by the
action it evokes. This is because what you say may be at complete variance with what actually happens. Neurophysics
shows this clearly. A classic example is the women who express distaste for advertisements featuring beautiful bodies while fMRI scans indicate mirror neuron
actively suggesting strong empathy and identification with the ads.
It is true the NZ Education Curriculum talks of the need to understand where children are coming from and of the need to
equip them for lifelong learning. However its overall framework denies this and provides major obstacles to these
objectives.
For instance, the curriculum teaches that science is a select and disconnected body of knowledge and that it is the
domain of a select community of people called “scientists” or the “science community” –maybe about 2% of the population
or less! It frames science as an activity like language, art, health and social studies rather than as the capacity that
enables each of these activities to exist.
In so doing the NZ education curriculum denies the wonderful capacity for science that we are all born with – our
capacity for inquiry, compassion, sharing (collegiality) and honest reflection. So while it talks of the need to be
inclusive the Curriculum is thus actually very exclusive.
Its denial of the billions of transformations that each child represents is very apparent in practice: witness how our
education system focuses on measuring what a child says or writes rather than what they do. This means a child can grow
up to be a top professor in Environmental Studies or a world leading expert in Climate patterns dripping with academic
accolades while being a powerful model in unsustainable uses of symbols and resources. At the same time a child
condemned as a failure by our education system may actively lead a life of exemplary science and sustainability.
You say you know many examples where this is not true?
You are correct. However the framework of the new Curriculum clearly denies change on scale and if the Sustainability Principle of Energy holds true then we can expect it to increase rather than reduce the risks for our children.
The denial goes deep and is manifest in the most profound metaphors used in our schools. Our schools use Victorian
Industrial Revolution metaphors to portray atmospheric processes as in the Greenhouse model. This denies the incredible
capacity of air for thermal and other changes through convection (wind). Similarly our schools deny the most fundamental
manifestation of change of all – the thermodynamic base of our universe. You can read my discussion of our abuse of the
warming symbol here.
Talking of the Sustainability Principle of Energy and our use of the global warming symbol reminds me. Recently I began to notice a few blogs and articles observing with some derision that “climate
change activists” are starting to back away from the use of the global warming symbol to describe a human-induced thermal build-up of the atmosphere. These commentators took it as a sign that
“climate change activists” had a poor argument generally.
What interested me was that the observations were being made by so called “climate deniers” or people with vested
interests in obscuring human impacts on our climate balances. It so happens that this group of people provide me with
some of the most profound insights into the re-engineering of our most vital symbols. So I did a search on
“Sustainabilty Principle of Energy” and found the SCOOP News broadcast of my blog introducing the proposed Sustainabilty Principle of Energy rated near the top of the search pages.
So hopefully soon we will use the warming symbol being used in acceptance of change and with greater science from now on. We will thus be more able to all enjoy
greater harmony as we are better able to understand the thermal balances that sustain us – and the risks from a
human-induced thermal build-up in the atmosphere.
An educator said to me recently “Change is very important to you isn’t it.” I agreed and said something like “Well,
isn’t that what life’s all about”. It seems to me our greatest problems stem from our inability to accept change and I
do not wish our children to inherit them. Also the more I embrace change the more I find myself feeling liberated and
filled with awe and wonder at the vitality of existence.
I know change and acceptance of change has been at the heart of all the expositions of the great sages. I was reminded
of this last week as I looked at the life scale bronze statue of Mahatma Ghandi that has just been erected at the railway station of Wellington, New Zealand’s capital city. There he is, bony frame
draped in simple robes, striding along with his walking staff, gazing down with brow furrowed in deep thought. (He well
understood the power of symbols which is why he adopted the garb of the peasant though he was of the wealthy upper Hindu
class)
And there inscribed in bronze at his feet is this suggestion “Become the change you wish to see.”
Now I find Mahatma apparently uttered many variations of this:
“Be the change you wish to see.
“Be the change you wish to see in the world.”
“You must become the change you wish to see in the world.”
According to this site,
"To the skeptics who insisted that they could not change unless the world changes first, Gandhi replied, "No, the world
will not change if we don't change.”
As I stood beside Mahatma I wondered what he would think if he could lift his head to see into the high-rise buildings
that surround the Wellington railway station? What would he see in the eyes of the many policy wonks that must pass this
spot daily? I look around the buildings clustered here. There is our Parliament, our Treasury, our Reserve Bank,
Victoria University and the offices of our Ministries. The buildings are full of people in grand denial of change, busy
promoting carbon trading, "neutrality" and "offsetting", defining energy as fossil fuels and Bulk-generated electricity
and generating school curriculum such as I have described.
The Mayor of Wellington, Kerry Prendergast, said at the unveiling,
“The station site was selected because Gandhi was a man of the people and liked to use trains and other public
transport, she said.
"Gandhi showed the world you can achieve social and political progress through peace and brotherhood. That is a valuable
lesson to us all."
If Mahatma could look behind him he would see just the shell of a railway station now, with many levels now inhabited
by Victoria University- the institution that contributed so much to the destruction of New Zealand’s national rail
system and our electrical potential.
Looking to Parliament and our Treasury he would glimpse a deep hatred of rail in the hearts of our elite and an
addictive infatuation with private cars and jet travel. A friend told me last week she just bought the cheapest fare by
electric rail from Wellington to Auckland (over $NZ100) but she is flying back for $NZ35 – such is the wisdom of our
Parliament and our policy wonks. That amounts to transporting a person through our stratosphere for an hour for about 10
cents a mile.
Or if you like our Parliament can arrange you three trips by air for the price of one by rail and each jet uses ten
times as much fuel equivalent as a train per mile.
It is very appropriate that Mahatma looks thoughtful in this setting!
And what would he make of carbon trading (“Let The Market be the change you don’t want to see”), carbon offsetting (“Let
someone else be the change you don’t want to be”) and carbon neutrality ("Let the children be the change you don’t want
to be”.
The Sustainability Principle of Energy suggests our nation’s adoption of the carbon neutrality symbol is particularly high risk because it is denial of change on an eonic scale. This risk was highlighted last week in a Guardian article:
Click through to Bonus Joules Cartoon Strip
Steep decline in oil production brings risk of war and unrest, says new study
• Output peaked in 2006 and will fall 7% a year
• Decline in gas, coal and uranium also predicted
Ashley Seager
Monday October 22, 2007
World oil production has already peaked and will fall by half as soon as 2030, according to a report which also warns
that extreme shortages of fossil fuels will lead to wars and social breakdown.
The German-based Energy Watch Group will release its study in London today saying that global oil production peaked in
2006 - much earlier than most experts had expected. The report, which predicts that production will now fall by 7% a
year, comes after oil prices set new records almost every day last week, on Friday hitting more than $90 (£44) a barrel.
In brief, there is no such thing as carbon neutrality. We burn mineral oil once and it’s gone. There is nothing neutral
about that car trip down to the store to buy an ice-cream that uses up mineral oil that used otherwise could have put
food on the plates of a hundred children. The nonsense of the carbon neutral symbol was also highlighted this week with this report
UNITED NATIONS: A U.N. expert on Friday called the growing practice of turning crops into biofuel "a crime against humanity" because it
has created food shortages and sent food prices soaring, leaving millions of poor people hungry.
And is this week’s UNEP report the change we wish to see?
Planet's Tougher Problems Persist, UN Report Warns
Nairobi/New York, 25 October:The United Nations Environment Programme says that major threats to the planet such as
climate change, the rate of extinction of species, and the challenge of feeding a growing population are among the many
that remain unresolved, and all of them put humanity at risk.
And sadly The Sustainability Principle of Energy predicts this new organization called Bethechange will probably be
counterproductive because at heart it profoundly denies change
Thursday, 25 October 2007, 5:36 pm
Press Release: Greenpeace New Zealand
New Zealanders take on fight against climate change
Auckland October 25 - A major new campaign being launched tomorrow aims to get tens of thousands of New Zealanders
active in tackling climate change.
..Spearheaded by Greenpeace, Oxfam and Forest & Bird, Be The Change will provide advice and encouragement to community groups and individuals from Bluff to Kaitaia,
and from the cowshed to the boardroom, on reducing their personal impact on the climate.
Even this statement evidences a deep hostility to change. Why fight it? Why tackle it? (In New Zealand, a rugby nation,
the tackle symbol has a special meaning – to seize, stop or throw-down your opponent.) Climate change is experienced as a wondrous
process by those who embrace life. The change we need become is a change to activities that conserve the climate
balances that sustain us. This involves changes to our state of being.
It is interesting to observe that Mahatma clearly understood that we are Mirror Beings – our brains are laced with
mirror neurons so that changes within us are reflected to the world (“We need to be the change we wish to see in the
world”). He, and for that matter sages like Jesus and the Buddha, did not have or need fMRI technology to understand
this fact while all the modern policy makers with all their high speed computers and large incomes cannot even begin to
comprehend the dynamic and intimate relationship each of us has with the world, less still our role as stewards. Yes the
sad truth is the statue of Mahatma is surrounded by office blocks full of people in major denial of both change and
stewardship.
Also a quick visit to the Greenpeace website reveals much confusion
Greenpeace exists because this fragile Earth deserves a voice. It needs solutions. It needs change. It needs action.
Climate change is real. We're seeing the effects all around us – polar ice melting, sea level rising and extreme weather
events.
If we want to reduce the impact of climate change and have reliable energy sources, we must make changes, at a
government and individual level.
Solutions to climate change and energy crises already exist - clean energy, energy efficiency and new environmentally
sound technologies.
This denies the reality that our planet is a constant flux of change and action and the idea that it needs change is in
direct conflict with Mahatma’s suggestion that we be the change.
Similarly I suggest he would say there is no such thing as an energy crisis but rather we have a resource use crisis -
it is a crisis of our own making. Every time I hear that we have an "energy crisis" I look out the window, observe the
universe is still functioning OK and wonder deeply at the psychology that denies this.
On the positive side I see the Greenpeace Aotearoa website has ceased urging us to Fight Global Warming and to Stop
Global Warming, unlike Greenpeace International.
And they seem to have pulled their Clean Energy Guide with its urging of us to SWITCH OFF CLIMATE CHANGE
Maybe they read my last blog in which I pointed out that Greenpeace’s darling, Meridian Energy, has just signed a deal
with Comalco to 2030 ensuring New Zealanders subsidise the production of cheap cars in Japan, Korea etc is neither
“carbon neutral” nor very green. Maybe they have even realised that the Clean Energy Guide sustains a corrupt (fascist)
structure in the form of the New Zealand Electricity Reforms? Or maybe they realise that there is no such thing as
"clean energy". Energy is. It is what we do with it that matters.
Which brings me back to valuing our great symbols. I have discussed elsewhere in great detail how banking interests have
re-engineered our energy and power symbols to serve their short term interests, thereby affecting the flow of billions of dollars in ways that put
humanity at great risk. Recently the CO2_symbol hit the headlines generated by an interview with Tim Flannery:
Climate Change - critical threshold was passed in 2005
From: ABC Lateline website 8/10/07
TELEVISION INTERVIEW TRANSCRIPT
TIM FLANNERY:…. That's right. We thought we'd be at that threshold within about a decade, we thought we had that much
time. But the new data indicates that in about mid 2005 we crossed that threshold. So as of mid 2005, there was about
455 parts per million of what's called carbon dioxide equivalent. And that's a figure that's gathered by taking the
potential of all of the 30 greenhouse gases and converting them into carbon dioxide potential, so we call it CO2
equivalent.
Some of the media reports of Tim’s statement suggest there is profound confusion of what exactly a CO2 equivalent is.
When some folk debated what exactly the CO2_symbol means others suggested this was just dancing on a pinhead. Steve Goldthorpe, who originally pointed out flaws in
the Celsias report, made this acute observation and plea:
“Please can I urge you to be more precise with your numbers and definitions when dealing with greenhouse accounting
numbers, even for everyday statements. Now that we are entering a trading regime where accountants and auditors will be
scrutinising the numbers and the sums of money are large then precision is vital, even if there is still significant
uncertainty in the underlying science of cause and effect.”
A word of comfort: do not feel disempowered if you still don’t know what the CO2_ symbol means even after reading the
Wiki definition I linked to. Oscar Wilde is credited with the observation, “ The cynic know the price of everything and
the value of nothing”.
Click through to Bonus Joules Cartoon Strip
Understand that carbon trading is born of profound cynicism, as I discussed in my last blog. The platoons of accountants, auditors and traders that attempt to put prices on carbon would not be engaged in this
activity if they cared for and valued themselves as Carbon Beings. These folk are symbols of cynicism and denial.
Understand you are part of a great carbon flux in which carbon is transformed in every moment. Value being part of it
with your every breath and with your every mouthful of food and with your life and with your death. In so doing you will
find your material aspirations alter and you will become a symbol of sustainability, enabling humanity to survive
despite the carbon, “energy” and “power” traders. Rather than striving for carbon neutrality, enjoy carbon harmony
through knowing carbon is incredibly precious. Be the change you want to see in the world.
Footnote: the cartoon panel that accompanies this blog was first published about four years ago. I had sent a cartoon
character (Bonus Joules symbolising wise uses of energy) off on a search of the nature of energy. Another character
emerged (Junk Joules symbolising unwise uses of energy) and they become twin complementary and co-evolving travellers
together.
In 2001 I knew the New Zealand Government was preparing a booklet on “climate change” for our primary schools. I devoted
much of my spare time to preparing a submission discussing symbol use so as to promote science in the publication. My
endeavours were a complete waste of time, as this cartoon strip records.
ENDS