[p2p-research] ecovillages and communities : which ones are interested in "open p2p" ?
Dante-Gabryell Monson
dante.monson at gmail.com
Sun Sep 13 15:47:14 CEST 2009
Thanks for the reply Nathan !
very interesting !
I do indeed feel the same resistance towards " technology " in some
intentional communities I visited ,
except for "geek" coworking spaces : hacklabs, certain art residencies
focused on new media, and perhaps... university towns and campuses ? could
those be defined as IC's ?
Another echo I seem to get related to the perception of technology ( and of
computers and the internet ) in certain intentional communities is that it
brings us further away from authentic connections with ourselves and with
nature , that it brings us further from authentic connections with the
other persons, and that it can affect our energy flows negatively.
( so a reference to more spiritual and health related aspects )
I also have the feeling that , in some cases, at least what concerns
computers and the internet, it may be perceived as "consumption" and as some
kind of laziness,
setting "hard physical work" as some "more real" work... ( ? )
Although this applies perhaps more to a way of thinking of a few individuals
that seemed to be mostly in some of the more isolated , more conservative
ic's ... ?
But perhaps there is still a difference in perception depending on "what
kind" of technology.
I have the feeling indeed that the "craftmanship" and "shared collaborative
passionnate creative" spirit seems to be a interesting approach to possibly
share libre p2p memes accross the whole spectrum going from Neo-Luddite to
Transhuman...
And perhaps it also depends "for what kind of work" the technologies are
used.
In some communities, I feel that there is a feeling of perceiving excess
investment in communication, including through the use of ICT's, as a loss
of time compared to forms of work that may seem to be more directly related
to more tangible forms of production.
Although in the case of intentional communities that receive a substantial
part of their income through offering venues for conferences, or for
courses, there seems to be more of an understanding of investing time into
communication by using information technologies as to promote the
subsistence of the intentional community ?
It would be interesting to receive more opinions from people within our
networks that might have experience with a diversity of IC's...
I am personally also interested in contributing to the spread of p2p memes
that support active involvement in developing solutions to counter
artificial scarcity,
and not merely in fighting scarcity,
hence staying connected to global communication channels and the potential
of global emergence. I guess this is kind of part of the "global village"
concept.
I do find the Luddite ( vs Transhuman ? ) conversation interesting...
I feel like finishing this mail with a link Paul shared :
http://www.changesurfer.com/Acad/DemocraticTranshumanism.htm
On Sun, Sep 13, 2009 at 6:47 AM, Nathan Cravens <knuggy at gmail.com> wrote:
> Hi Dante,
> For the uninitiated, when I'm asked 'what I do', I'm now in the habit of
> saying, 'I help people better care for themselves'. If I were in the East,
> (and I hope in parts of Europe) I would say, 'I help people care for their
> families'. (family is a far more interesting and satisfying idea in my
> opinion, but to say that in the culture that surrounds me presently, this
> would be considered unpractical or overly dramatic.)
>
> Thanks for addressing this topic, Dante. Intentional communities at the
> surface, seeing that they are an alternative social movement wanting to be a
> community movement, you might think they would be attracted to p2p; and I
> believe they are for the most part; but the established language used in
> these areas are probably the greatest challenge to overcome unless we have
> viable solutions to show rather than tell.
>
> The greatest hurdle in my experience is addressing the topic of technology.
> If you call it 'technology', in the IC crowd I've lived in for a time, the
> listening stops. There's a tremendously deep seeded neoluddite sentiment
> (like that professed by the romantic and very persuasive prose of
> Kirkpatrick Sale) that I believe is a great detriment to the autonomy these
> groups would like to establish. The issue is not that technology is bad,
> but that technology in this view is confused with mass production, only one
> general approach to tool and object manipulation, which is not bad in
> itself, but it is bad if you want to 'earn money in the workforce'. This
> means I'd like to see all existing jobs fully automated, just like a
> majority shareholder of a company, but the difference between the
> shareholder and I is that I want to see this further decay the economic
> system that surfaced the mass model so that more people see the need to
> develop something better 'underneath'; and that 'better' is a "commons
> floor" which will rise to better production standards than mass production
> as development attention is better coordinated; after the vision is better
> defined: broken into easy to comprehend developmental parts (first for key
> developers that can better establish in more detail what must be done; then
> presented for users to do for themselves without a developer hierarchy),
> assembled, and distributed.
>
> My views may be considered post-luddite, (though I seem to have skipped the
> luddite phase ;p) as I believe craft production (or personal fabrication in
> contemporary terms) is the most sincere or meaningful work, but I understand
> the benefit in having more advanced techniques that may include having a
> desktop device produce the entire product, especially if it for someone
> else, like the elderly, that may not be able to produce or deliver needed
> items for themselves when I or anyone else cannot possibly produce or
> deliver what everyone needs with simple hand tools. That may be practical in
> smaller 300-600 village settings with the right people, but not for large
> urban areas where abilities are more difficult to match a variety of needs.
>
>
> Its also important any p2p advocate be very sensitive to the established
> culture or spiritual beliefs; and try to understand them; and address the
> practices members of the group care to better meet or exceed. After the
> advocate is well established in the community then talk of other areas may
> be appropriate. (The term 'p2p colonialist' comes to mind... ;p We're the
> GOOD colonialists! ;p I would only jest on this if no other approach
> worked.)
>
> Our foundation needs to place a fairly rigorous amount of attention toward
> describing how p2p technology differs from mass production technology. P2P
> advocacy ensures self sufficiency by sharing knowledge and other resources
> in commons. Demonstrating good technologies like mesh network communications
> and solar power energy devices (for example) easy to personally fabricate
> and maintain by the community itself will go a long way in influencing this
> very important movement and potential partner.
>
>
> Nathan
>
>
> On Sat, Sep 12, 2009 at 12:02 PM, Dante-Gabryell Monson <
> dante.monson at gmail.com> wrote:
>
>> I ask myself : Which existing ecovillages would identify to " p2p meme"
>> approaches ,
>> or be interested in integrating such memes ?
>>
>> more in message below...
>>
>> Cordially,
>> Dante
>> http://hitchwiki.org/en/Dante
>>
>>
>> On Sat, Sep 12, 2009 at 4:33 PM, Michel Bauwens <michelsub2004 at gmail.com>wrote:
>>
>>> Hi Dante,
>>>
>>> interesting questions, but I´m not able to answer them, ecovillages is
>>> not something I have monitored at all.
>>>
>>> I would forward the question the whole p2p list, with cc to franz
>>> nahrada and possible try the global village list,
>>>
>>> Michel
>>>
>>> On 9/12/09, Dante-Gabryell Monson <dante.monson at gmail.com> wrote:
>>> > Hi Michel , Hi Nathan,
>>> >
>>> > This morning I am attempting to have a overview and reflect on emergent
>>> > community cultures,
>>> > what symbolical framework they may use, based on what heritage ?
>>> >
>>> > I am also reflecting on the relations between them, and on the
>>> potential
>>> > introduction of p2p memes into their narratives.
>>> >
>>> > For example, in some ecovillages in europe, there seems to some form of
>>> > revival using neo-paganism,
>>> > in some cases also combined to tibetan Buddhism ( itself also based on
>>> > paganism ? ) ,
>>> > or christian influences, etc
>>> >
>>> > Some of these communities are older and already well established ,
>>> > such as the Anthroposophic movement
>>> >
>>> > http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anthroposophy
>>> >
>>> > and also developed a number of communities / villages all over the
>>> world
>>> >
>>> > http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Camphill_movement
>>> >
>>> > which could correspond to some of the of various "ecovillage"
>>> definitions I
>>> > found on the net such as
>>> >
>>> > http://www.ecovillagenews.org/wiki/index.php/What_is_an_Ecovillage%3F
>>> >
>>> > http://gen.ecovillage.org/about/wiaev.php
>>> >
>>> >
>>> >
>>> > I ask myself : what do other "ecovillage listings" such as this one
>>> >
>>> > http://www.ecovillage.org/php/public/evdir/evsearch.php?lg=1
>>> >
>>> > or this one
>>> >
>>> > http://directory.ic.org/records/ecovillages.php
>>> >
>>> > see as common features between such communities, sharing a common
>>> > definition
>>> > ?
>>> > sharing common or divergent cultural, political, economic, etc
>>> approaches ?
>>> >
>>> > Which communities and ecovillages would identify to "p2p meme"
>>> approaches ,
>>> > or be interested in integrating such p2p memes ?
>>> >
>>>
>>>
>>> --
>>> Work: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dhurakij_Pundit_University -
>>> Research: http://www.dpu.ac.th/dpuic/info/Research.html - Think thank:
>>> http://www.asianforesightinstitute.org/index.php/eng/The-AFI
>>>
>>> P2P Foundation: http://p2pfoundation.net -
>>> http://blog.p2pfoundation.net
>>>
>>> Connect: http://p2pfoundation.ning.com; Discuss:
>>> http://listcultures.org/mailman/listinfo/p2presearch_listcultures.org
>>>
>>> Updates: http://del.icio.us/mbauwens; http://friendfeed.com/mbauwens;
>>> http://twitter.com/mbauwens; http://www.facebook.com/mbauwens
>>>
>>
>>
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>
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