The Long Descent (35 page)

Read The Long Descent Online

Authors: John Michael Greer

Tags: #SOC026000

BOOK: The Long Descent
6.25Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

Human societies and nonhuman species cannot be equated in a simplistic manner, but the radical differences that exist in subsistence and production strategies among human societies allow them to be compared to distinct biotic groups in certain contexts. Human societies enter into common ecological relationships such as symbiosis, commensality, parasitism, predation, and competitive exclusion with other societies. Thus processes by which human societies are replaced by others may be usefully compared to succession to see if common features emerge.

The model of catabolic collapse suggests one such common feature. As outlined above, societies differ in their response to changes in resource availability and maintenance costs. Some societies succeed in maintaining a steady state through timely adjustments; others experience a history of repeated maintenance crises and partial breakdowns followed by recoveries; still others undergo severe depletion crises followed by total collapse. These differences, according to the model presented here, unfold from differing relationships among resources, capital, production, and waste, especially the relationships between capital production and maintenance, C(p)/M(p), and between use and replenishment rates of resources, d(R)/r(R).

These variations among human societies parallel differences between R-selected and K-selected nonhuman species. A society that maximizes its production of capital, like an R-selected species, prospers in an environment with substantial uncaptured resources, but falters once these are exhausted. Its successors are likely to be societies that, like K-selected species, use key resources more sus-tainably at the cost of decreased production of capital. Nonhuman climax communities also typically display a higher diversity of species — but a lower population per species — than earlier seral stages, and they produce notably lower volumes of biomass than do earlier stages over equal time frames (Odum 1969).

Broadly similar changes often distinguish precollapse and post-collapse societies. Thus the collapse of the western Roman Empire, for example, could be seen as a succession process in which one se-ral stage, dominated by a single sociopolitical “species” that maximized capital production at the cost of inefficiency, was replaced by a more diverse community of societies, consisting of many less populous “species” better adapted to their own local conditions, and producing capital at lower but more sustainable rates. Analyses that portray this transformation as pure tragedy miss something important; the Roman collapse enabled other societies to emerge from Rome's shadow, launching major cultural initiatives such as vernacular literatures in the ancestors of today's Celtic, Germanic, and Romance languages (Wiseman 1997). As with any succession process, there were gainers as well as losers. If a lapse into fantasy may be excused, were nonhuman biota literate and interested in their past, a history of lake eutrophication written by meadow grasses would differ sharply from one written by fish.

Since humans have capacities for change that most species lack, the same human individuals can change from fish to grass, so to speak, composing an R-selected production-maximizing society at one time and its K-selected sustainability-maximizing replacement at a later time. The example of the Kachin cited above shows that this is not merely a theoretical possibility. However, as other cited examples and the general evidence of history suggest, such a change is not inevitable. Whenever a society shows signs of being unable to maintain its existing capital, a maintenance crisis may follow, and whenever capital production depends on the use of resources at rates significantly above their rate of replacement, a depletion crisis followed by catabolic collapse is a significant possibility.

Such assessments of past and present societies, in order to achieve a high degree of analytic or predictive value, require careful quantitative analysis of a sort not attempted here. Since each element in the conceptual model presented here stands for a diverse and constantly changing set of variables, such analysis offers significant challenges; in many historical examples it may be impossible to go beyond proxy measurements of uncertain value for crucial variables. However, general patterns corresponding to the catabolic collapse model may be easier to extract from incomplete data. Any society that displays broad increases in most measures of capital production coupled with signs of serious depletion of key resources is a potential candidate for catabolic collapse.

Bibliography

Abelson, Philip A., “A potential phosphate crisis,”
Science
283 (1999), p. 2015.

Agricultural Marketing Service, United States Department of Agriculture,
National Directory of Farmers Markets
(US Department of Agriculture, 2006).

Barkun, Michael,
A Culture of Conspiracy: Apocalyptic Visions in Contemporary
America
(University of California Press, 2003).

Beck, M. G.,
Potlatch: Native Ceremony and Myth on the Northwest Coast
(Alaska Northwest, 1993).

Becker, Charles M., and David Bloom,“The demographic crisis in the former Soviet Union,”
World Development
26:11 (1998), pp. 1913–1919.

Beyer, Paul,
When Time Shall Be No More: Prophecy Belief in Modern
American Culture
(Harvard University Press, 1992).

Billington, R. A.,
Westward Expansion: A History of the American Frontier
(Macmillan, 1982).

Bradley, R.,
The Passage of Arms: An Archaeological Analysis of Prehistoric
Hoards and Votive Deposits
(Cambridge University Press, 1990).

Braithwaite, Timothy,
Y2K Lessons Learned
(Wiley, 2000).

Brierley, Corale L., et al.,
Coal: Research and Development to Support National
Energies Policy
(National Academies Press, 2007).

British Museum,
Coin Hoards from Roman Britain
, 11 vols. (British Museum, 1982–).

Bury, J. B.,
History of the Later Roman Empire
(Macmillan, 1923).

Butler, W. E.,
Magic: Its Ritual, Power and Purpose
(Aquarian, 1975).

Butti, Ken, and John Perlin,
A Golden Thread: 2500 Years of Solar Architecture
and Technology
(Cheshire Books, 1980).

Byrne, Rhonda,
The Secret
(Atria Books, 2006).

Cahill, Thomas,
How the Irish Saved Civilization
(Doubleday, 1995).

Carnes, Mark C.,
Secret Ritual and Manhood in Victorian America
(Yale University Press, 1989).

Carruthers, Mary, and Jan M. Ziolkowski, eds.,
The Medieval Craft of
Memory
(University of Pennsylvania Press, 2002).

Catton, William R., Jr.,
Overshoot: The Ecological Basis of Revolutionary
Change
(University of Illinois Press, 1980).

Chawla, Mukesh, Gordon Betcherman, and Arup Banerji,
From Red to
Gray
(World Bank, 2007).

Clarke, Arthur C.,
Profiles of the Future,
rev. ed. (Harper and Row, 1973).

Clark, C., and M. Haswell,
The Economics of Subsistence Agriculture
(Macmillan, 1996).

Corning, P. A.,
The Synergism Hypothesis
(McGraw-Hill, 1983).

Corning, P. A., “‘Devolution' as an opportunity to test the ‘synergism hypothesis' and a cybernetic theory of political systems,”
Systems Research
and Behavioral Science
19:1 (2002), pp. 3–24.

Costanza, Richard, “Social traps and environmental policy,”
Bioscience
37(6) (1987) pp. 407–412.

Costanza, R., R. d'Arge, R. de Groot, S. Farber, M. Grasso, B.–Hannon, K. Limburg, S. Naeem, R. O'Neill, J. Paruelo, R. Raskin, P. Sutton, and M. van den Belt, “The value of the world's ecosystem services and natural capital,”
Nature
387 (1997), pp. 253–260.

Couliano, Ioan,
Eros and Magic in the Renaissance
(University of Chicago Press, 1987).

Cross, J., and M. Guyer,
Social Traps
(University of Michigan Press, 1980).

Daly, Herman,
Toward a Steady State Economy
(William Freeman, 1973).

Danaher, Kevin,
Fifty Years is Enough: The Case Against the World Bank
and the International Monetary Fund
(South End Press, 1994).

Darley, Julian,
High Noon for Natural Gas: The New Energy Crisis
(Chelsea Green, 2004).

Dawkins, Richard,
The God Delusion
(Bantam, 2006).

Dean, Carolyn, with Trueman Tuck,
Death by Modern Medicine
(Ash Tree, 2005).

Deffeyes, Kenneth,
Hubbert's Peak
(Princeton University Press, 2003). deMoll, Lane, ed.,
Rainbook: Resources for Appropriate Technology
(Schocken, 1977).

Diamond, Jared,
Collapse: How Societies Choose to Fail or Succeed
(Penguin, 2005).

Di Cosmo, N., “State formation and periodization in inner Asia,”
International
History Review
20:2 (1999), pp. 287–309.

Drachman, A. G.,
The Mechanical Technology of Greek and Roman Antiquity
(University of Wisconsin Press, 1963).

Drury, Nevill,
The New Age: The History of a Movement
(Thames &Hudson, 2004).

Duhon, David,
One Circle
(Ecology Action, 1985).

Duncan, Richard C., “The life-expectancy of industrial civilization: The decline to global equilibrium,”
Population and Environment
14:4 (1993), pp. 325–357.

Economic Research Service, United States Department of Agriculture, “Briefing room: Organic farming and marketing,” ers .usda.gov/ Briefing/Organic/ Elvin, M., “Three thousand years of unsustainable growth: China's environment from archaic times to the present,”
East Asian History
6 (1993), pp. 7–46.

Epstein, Paul R., “Climate and health,”
Science
285 (1999), pp. 347–348.

Festinger, Leon, Henry W. Riecken, and Stanley Schachter,
When
Prophecy Fails
(University of Minnesota Press, 1956).

Fields, Rick,
How the Swans Came to the Lake: A Narrative History of
Buddhism in America
(Shambhala, 1985).

Forster, E. M.,
Collected Stories
(Penguin, 1947).

Forster, E. M., “The Machine Stops,” in
The Machine Stops and Other Stories
(André Deutsch, 1997).

Freeman, John,
Survival Gardening
( John's Press, 1983).

Freeth, Tony, et al., “Decoding the ancient Greek astronomical calculator known as the Antikythera mechanism,”
Nature
444 (2006), pp. 587– 591.

Galbraith, John Kenneth,
The Culture of Contentment
(Houghton Mifflin, 1992).

Galbraith, John Kenneth,
The Great Crash 1929
(Houghton Mifflin, 1954).

Garrett, Laurie,
The Coming Plague
(Penguin, 1994).

Gates, H.,
China's Motor: A Thousand Years of Petty Capitalism
(Cornell University Press, 1996).

Gever, John, Richard Kaufman, Dennis Skole, and Charles –Vörösmarty,
Beyond Oil: The Threat to Food and Fuel in the Coming Decades
(–Ballinger, 1986).

Gibbon, Edward,
The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire
(Britannica Books, 1962).

Gimpel, Jean,
The Medieval Machine
(Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 1972).

Goldstein, Joseph,
One Dharma: The Emerging Western Buddhism
(Harper–SanFrancisco, 2002).

Grant, Michael,
The Fall of the Roman Empire
(Weidenfeld and –Nicolson, 1990).

Grant, Michael,
The Collapse and Recovery of the Roman Empire
(–Routledge, 1999).

Greer, John Michael,
The Druidry Handbook
(Weiser, 2006).

Gross, Bernard,
Friendly Fascism
(South End Press, 1980).

Gross, William H., “Haute con job” and “Con job redux,”
PIMCO Investment
Commentary
, October 2004, archived at
pimco.com
.

Hanayama, Shinsho,
A History of Japanese Buddhism
(Bukkyo Dendo Kyokai, 1960).

Hanegraaf, Wouter J.,
New Age Religion and Western Culture
(E. J. Brill, 1996).

Hanley, Susan B., “Tokugawa society: Material culture, standard of living, and life-styles,” in John W. Hall, ed.,
The Cambridge History of Japan
vol. 4, Early Modern Japan
(Cambridge University Press, 1991).

Hanson, Victor David,
The Other Greeks
(Free Press, 1995).

Harrington, Alan,
The Immortalist
(Avon, 1970).

Hearne, Derrick,
The Rise of the Welsh Republic
(Y Lolfa, 1976).

Heinberg, Richard,
The Party's Over: Oil, War, and the Fate of Industrial
Societies
(New Society Publishers, 2003).

Heinberg, Richard,
Powerdown: Options and Actions for a Post-Carbon
World
(New Society Publishers, 2004).

Henderson, John,
The Medieval World of Isidore of Seville
(Cambridge University Press, 2007).

Herbert, Frank,
Dune
(Ace Books, 1965).

Hirsch, Robert L., Roger Bezdek, and Robert Wendling,
Peaking of
World Oil Production: Impacts, Mitigation, and Risk Management
(US Department of Energy, 2005).

Ho, P.-T., “Economic and institutional factors in the decline of the Chinese empire,” in C. M. Cipolla, ed.,
The Economic Decline of Empires
(Methuen, 1970), pp. 264–277.

Howard, Albert,
An Agricultural Testament
(Rodale Books, 1973).

Hughes, J. Donald,
Ecology in Ancient Civilizations
(University of New Mexico Press, 1975).

Hynes, James W., and James R. Lindner, “Lessons from the draft horse industry in East Texas,”
Journal of Extension
44:2 (2006), online edition. Icke, David,
Children of the Matrix
(Bridge of Love, 2001).

Jacobs, Jane,
Dark Age Ahead
(Random House, 2004).

Jacobs, Margaret,
The Cultural Meaning of the Scientific Revolution
(University of Pennsylvania Press, 1988).

Other books

A Lion Shame (Bear Creek Grizzlies Book 3) by Layla Nash, Callista Ball
Maggie's Door by Patricia Reilly Giff
Say It Sexy by Virna Depaul
Taboo1 TakingInstruction by Cheyenne McCray
The Last Good Day by Peter Blauner
Days Without Number by Robert Goddard