Difference between revisions of "How It Came to Be Other Resources"

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*''Wikipedia''. "Geological History of Earth." Read Introduction. [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geological_history_of_Earth Link] 1 min.
 
*''Wikipedia''. "Geological History of Earth." Read Introduction. [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geological_history_of_Earth Link] 1 min.
 
*''Wikipedia''. "Timeline of the Evolutionary History of Life." Read introduction. [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_the_evolutionary_history_of_life Link] 1 min.
 
*''Wikipedia''. "Timeline of the Evolutionary History of Life." Read introduction. [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_the_evolutionary_history_of_life Link] 1 min.
*Ponting, Clive. (1993). "Foundations of History." ''Green History of the World.'' pp. 8-18. [https://drive.google.com/file/d/0By0w-ttO7JmrNkxFSFdhbjFCTzA/view?usp=sharing Link]. 15 min.
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*Ponting, Clive. (1993). "Foundations of History." ''Green History of the World.'' pp. 8-18. [https://drive.google.com/file/d/0By0w-ttO7JmrNkxFSFdhbjFCTzA/view?usp=sharing&resourcekey=0-cIseq0Q7Ugtgi_coE81YfQ Link]. 15 min.
*Birdsell, J.B.. (1975) "The Universe and Our Place in It." ''Human Evolution.'' pp. 11-19. [https://drive.google.com/file/d/0By0w-ttO7JmrSkVOVlZvaWI1czQ/view?usp=sharing Link] 10 min.
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*Birdsell, J.B.. (1975) "The Universe and Our Place in It." ''Human Evolution.'' pp. 11-19. [https://drive.google.com/file/d/0By0w-ttO7JmrSkVOVlZvaWI1czQ/view?usp=sharing&resourcekey=0-S1a5hrci2ojrhYbYxo9faQ Link] 10 min.
*Harvey, Joe. (1990). "Growth in Perspective." ''Rocky Mountain Institute Newsletter.'' p. 4, 7. [https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B8dQDga7c8qYTHA0WlpkQ2VfSDg/view?usp=sharing Link] 10 min.
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*Harvey, Joe. (1990). "Growth in Perspective." ''Rocky Mountain Institute Newsletter.'' p. 4, 7. [https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B8dQDga7c8qYTHA0WlpkQ2VfSDg/view?usp=sharing&resourcekey=0-9l4xfOUMhef_6dPwoYZ4rQ Link] 10 min.
 
Harvey draws one-day analogy to 3.5 billion years of life on Earth and shows destructiveness of what humans have done and impossibility of continuing.  
 
Harvey draws one-day analogy to 3.5 billion years of life on Earth and shows destructiveness of what humans have done and impossibility of continuing.  
 
* [[H. Sapiens Notes]] 1 min.
 
* [[H. Sapiens Notes]] 1 min.
*Diamond, Jared. (1987). "The Worst Mistake in the History of the Human Race." ''Discover Magazine''. [https://drive.google.com/open?id=0B8dQDga7c8qYRFNLZEY1ZTRCRDg Link] 3 pp, 5 min.
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*Diamond, Jared. (1987). "The Worst Mistake in the History of the Human Race." ''Discover Magazine''. [https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B8dQDga7c8qYRFNLZEY1ZTRCRDg/view?usp=sharing&resourcekey=0-cobIR3Wrpt9DVYjL_Xdrww Link] 3 pp, 5 min.
*Shepard, Paul. (1998). "10,000 Years of Crisis." ''The Tender Carnivore and the Sacred Game.'' pp. 1-26. [https://drive.google.com/file/d/0By0w-ttO7JmrSTdYcGJmMjROenc/view?usp=sharing link] 40 min.
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*Shepard, Paul. (1998). "10,000 Years of Crisis." ''The Tender Carnivore and the Sacred Game.'' pp. 1-26. [https://drive.google.com/file/d/0By0w-ttO7JmrSTdYcGJmMjROenc/view?usp=sharing&resourcekey=0-RTdFLwRXbhgkzVdviRBrrw link] 40 min.
 
Shepard portrays the shift to agriculture as a key element in decline of humanity and planet.  
 
Shepard portrays the shift to agriculture as a key element in decline of humanity and planet.  
*Population Reference Bureau. (1994). "World Population Graph." [https://drive.google.com/open?id=0B8dQDga7c8qYRkJsd3FKWnY3am8 Link]
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*Population Reference Bureau. (1994). "World Population Graph." [https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B8dQDga7c8qYRkJsd3FKWnY3am8/view?usp=sharing&resourcekey=0-euvUefgek49kGg9VMJ3m0w Link]
*Miller, G. Tyler. (1975). ''Living in the Environment.'' "Kilocalories per Person per Day." [https://drive.google.com/open?id=0B8dQDga7c8qYM1BIVzdtMjVqa2c Link]
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*Miller, G. Tyler. (1975). ''Living in the Environment.'' "Kilocalories per Person per Day." [https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B8dQDga7c8qYM1BIVzdtMjVqa2c/view?usp=sharing&resourcekey=0-iAiX09E5lX8X6IpQXBT1Hw Link]
*Heilbroner, Robert. (1999). "The Economic Revolution." ''The Worldly Philosophers.'' pp. 18-41. [https://drive.google.com/file/d/0By0w-ttO7JmrNEIxREdxRXB5NEE/view?usp=sharing Link] 25 min.
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*Heilbroner, Robert. (1999). "The Economic Revolution." ''The Worldly Philosophers.'' pp. 18-41. [https://drive.google.com/file/d/0By0w-ttO7JmrNEIxREdxRXB5NEE/view?usp=sharing&resourcekey=0-3jPdxDAHC2NkNaf3pJrK2A Link] 25 min.
 
Heilbroner chronicles the emergence of mercantilism in Europe that marked the beginnings of a transformation from agrarian to industrial society, and from tradition-based social relationships to money-mediated society.
 
Heilbroner chronicles the emergence of mercantilism in Europe that marked the beginnings of a transformation from agrarian to industrial society, and from tradition-based social relationships to money-mediated society.
*Seavoy, Ronald. (1986). ''Famine in Peasant Societies''. [https://drive.google.com/file/d/0By0w-ttO7JmrUXdUOTVZZnZUb0E/view?usp=sharing Link] Read highlighted text and skim the rest. 30 min.  
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*Seavoy, Ronald. (1986). ''Famine in Peasant Societies''. [https://drive.google.com/file/d/0By0w-ttO7JmrUXdUOTVZZnZUb0E/view?usp=sharing&resourcekey=0-82sCaYhW5EME9AaVl4o4gw Link] Read highlighted text and skim the rest. 30 min.  
 
Seavoy argues that peasants prefer periodic famine to leisure. On the basis of examples drawn from diverse places and times he asserts that the only way to induce peasants to work hard enough to extract surplus from them is to deny them a "subsistence compromise," which he defines as working enough to feed everyone during normal years, and accepting that some will die during years of poor harvest.
 
Seavoy argues that peasants prefer periodic famine to leisure. On the basis of examples drawn from diverse places and times he asserts that the only way to induce peasants to work hard enough to extract surplus from them is to deny them a "subsistence compromise," which he defines as working enough to feed everyone during normal years, and accepting that some will die during years of poor harvest.
*Ponting, Clive. (1991). "Creating the Third World." ''Green History of the World''. [https://drive.google.com/file/d/0By0w-ttO7JmrWjlPOUxFbDBVY2M/view?usp=sharing Link] 30 min.
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*Ponting, Clive. (1991). "Creating the Third World." ''Green History of the World''. [https://drive.google.com/file/d/0By0w-ttO7JmrWjlPOUxFbDBVY2M/view?usp=sharing&resourcekey=0-uapAlXAVYw030IeUIO5rCQ Link] 30 min.
*''Wikipedia''. "Swing Riots."  [https://drive.google.com/open?id=0B8dQDga7c8qYb1BhbDhsYVRQLWM Link] 5 pp, 10 min.
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*''Wikipedia''. "Swing Riots."  [https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B8dQDga7c8qYb1BhbDhsYVRQLWM/view?usp=sharing&resourcekey=0-W2Yq0DQf8ARtnwWvU4RGKA Link] 5 pp, 10 min.
 
Swing riots in early 19th century England resulted from enclosure, mechanization, burdensome mandatory tithe, and rent, and were instrumental in evolution of workhouses as means to control the poor.
 
Swing riots in early 19th century England resulted from enclosure, mechanization, burdensome mandatory tithe, and rent, and were instrumental in evolution of workhouses as means to control the poor.
 
*''Wikipedia.'' "Workhouses." [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Workhouses Link] skim 5 min.
 
*''Wikipedia.'' "Workhouses." [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Workhouses Link] skim 5 min.
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*Riversong, Robert. (2007). Summary of: Ponting, Clive ''A New Green History of the World.'' [http://riversong.wordpress.com/new-green-history-of-the-world/ Link] 20pp.
 
*Riversong, Robert. (2007). Summary of: Ponting, Clive ''A New Green History of the World.'' [http://riversong.wordpress.com/new-green-history-of-the-world/ Link] 20pp.
 
Excellent, relatively lengthy summary of a book about human global history written from an ecological perspective.
 
Excellent, relatively lengthy summary of a book about human global history written from an ecological perspective.
*McAlpin, Michelle. (1986). Review of Seavoy, Ronald E. ''Famine in Peasant Societies.'' pp. 237-239. [http://www.jstor.org/stable/2122397 Link] 5 min.
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*McAlpin, Michelle. (1986). Review of Seavoy, Ronald E. ''Famine in Peasant Societies.'' pp. 237-239. (Library login required) [http://www.jstor.org/stable/2122397 Link] 5 min.
 
McAlpin recounts how Seavoy explains peasant commitment to leisure over security even to the point of accepting periodic famine, and why this commitment makes denial of the "subsistence compromise" essential to sever peasants from the land and enlist them in the commercial exchange economy.
 
McAlpin recounts how Seavoy explains peasant commitment to leisure over security even to the point of accepting periodic famine, and why this commitment makes denial of the "subsistence compromise" essential to sever peasants from the land and enlist them in the commercial exchange economy.
 
*Represent.Us. (2016). ''Corruption is Legal in America''.  [https://represent.us/action/theproblem-4/ Link]
 
*Represent.Us. (2016). ''Corruption is Legal in America''.  [https://represent.us/action/theproblem-4/ Link]

Latest revision as of 16:20, 30 November 2023

Core Readings

  • Wikipedia. "Geological History of Earth." Read Introduction. Link 1 min.
  • Wikipedia. "Timeline of the Evolutionary History of Life." Read introduction. Link 1 min.
  • Ponting, Clive. (1993). "Foundations of History." Green History of the World. pp. 8-18. Link. 15 min.
  • Birdsell, J.B.. (1975) "The Universe and Our Place in It." Human Evolution. pp. 11-19. Link 10 min.
  • Harvey, Joe. (1990). "Growth in Perspective." Rocky Mountain Institute Newsletter. p. 4, 7. Link 10 min.

Harvey draws one-day analogy to 3.5 billion years of life on Earth and shows destructiveness of what humans have done and impossibility of continuing.

  • H. Sapiens Notes 1 min.
  • Diamond, Jared. (1987). "The Worst Mistake in the History of the Human Race." Discover Magazine. Link 3 pp, 5 min.
  • Shepard, Paul. (1998). "10,000 Years of Crisis." The Tender Carnivore and the Sacred Game. pp. 1-26. link 40 min.

Shepard portrays the shift to agriculture as a key element in decline of humanity and planet.

  • Population Reference Bureau. (1994). "World Population Graph." Link
  • Miller, G. Tyler. (1975). Living in the Environment. "Kilocalories per Person per Day." Link
  • Heilbroner, Robert. (1999). "The Economic Revolution." The Worldly Philosophers. pp. 18-41. Link 25 min.

Heilbroner chronicles the emergence of mercantilism in Europe that marked the beginnings of a transformation from agrarian to industrial society, and from tradition-based social relationships to money-mediated society.

  • Seavoy, Ronald. (1986). Famine in Peasant Societies. Link Read highlighted text and skim the rest. 30 min.

Seavoy argues that peasants prefer periodic famine to leisure. On the basis of examples drawn from diverse places and times he asserts that the only way to induce peasants to work hard enough to extract surplus from them is to deny them a "subsistence compromise," which he defines as working enough to feed everyone during normal years, and accepting that some will die during years of poor harvest.

  • Ponting, Clive. (1991). "Creating the Third World." Green History of the World. Link 30 min.
  • Wikipedia. "Swing Riots." Link 5 pp, 10 min.

Swing riots in early 19th century England resulted from enclosure, mechanization, burdensome mandatory tithe, and rent, and were instrumental in evolution of workhouses as means to control the poor.

  • Wikipedia. "Workhouses." Link skim 5 min.

Read the intro and the section entitled "Modern View." Roots of 'social Darwinism', class, and the 1% in 17th-19th century England.

Interest Readings

  • Wikipedia. "Evolution." Link Read introduction. 5 min.
  • Riversong, Robert. (2007). Summary of: Ponting, Clive A New Green History of the World. Link 20pp.

Excellent, relatively lengthy summary of a book about human global history written from an ecological perspective.

  • McAlpin, Michelle. (1986). Review of Seavoy, Ronald E. Famine in Peasant Societies. pp. 237-239. (Library login required) Link 5 min.

McAlpin recounts how Seavoy explains peasant commitment to leisure over security even to the point of accepting periodic famine, and why this commitment makes denial of the "subsistence compromise" essential to sever peasants from the land and enlist them in the commercial exchange economy.

  • Represent.Us. (2016). Corruption is Legal in America. Link

Two graphics: lobbying, return on lobbying investment.

  • Chomsky, Noam. (2015). "Magna Carta Messed Up the World; Here's How to Fix It." Reader Supported News. Link 6pp., 6 min.

With broad strokes Chomsky traces 800-years of Anglo-American legal history regarding freedom and property and describes the fictions by which we've limited the former for most and elevated it for the holders of the latter with devastating results for our common condition.