Placeholder Image

字幕表 動画を再生する

  • Hello, my name is Peter Joseph and welcome to

  • 'Introduction to a Resource-Based Economy'.

  • The goal of the following brief presentation is to outline

  • the basic train of thought that arrives at this new economic model

  • which is based not on the movement of money

  • but rather the intelligent management of the Earth's resources

  • drawing inference from the physical world

  • as to the most efficient, strategic and sustainable method

  • for meeting the needs of the human population.

  • In the world today, societal decisions are essentially

  • the responsibility of individuals or groups

  • within the arena of politics or business;

  • in fact, one could note that politics and business

  • are the governing group entities of the social order as we know it.

  • And as history has shown

  • whenever anything goes wrong on the societal level

  • the tendency is for one group or a sub-group

  • to simply impose blame on another.

  • The left will blame the right, the Conservatives will blame the Liberals

  • a new administration will blame an old administration, etc.

  • Yet rarely do we hear any criticism

  • of the foundation of the social operation itself;

  • it appears to simply be presupposed by most.

  • In other words, the culture seems to unconditionally accept

  • the socioeconomic paradigm without question

  • and politics and business are assumed to be

  • a natural human state of affairs.

  • Even in a world of growing unemployment, growing poverty

  • growing mental health disorders, drug abuse, raw resource depletion

  • overall environmental degradation, violence and war propensities

  • systemic global debt defaults

  • accelerated inflation, atmospheric destabilization

  • and many other social and ecological problems

  • - too numerous to name at this stage -

  • there still exists a general refusal to consider that

  • maybe the socioeconomic system itself could be at fault.

  • What if the very game we play is really the problem?

  • What if the very nature of the dominant institutions

  • and methods of our time are actually creating

  • and reinforcing certain behavioral tendencies

  • which are (to put it simply) unsustainable and destructive

  • yet we simply don't see it?

  • As time has moved forward with the

  • exponential increase of human knowledge

  • we've seen a natural erosion of various forms of superstition

  • and provably non-progressive social practices.

  • We are slowly inching into a true age of reason

  • which recognizes that there are indeed proven governing natural laws

  • with direct physical reference

  • and that this method of thought, which we can term scientific

  • allows us to extrapolate viable approaches to our conduct

  • which almost virtually guarantee a tangible return

  • - if of course properly assessed.

  • This 'Scientific Inference'

  • is what has produced the vast technology we see around us

  • from airplanes to life-saving medicine

  • to even our understanding of the universe itself.

  • Simply put, science is an approach to our comprehension of the world

  • and ourselves, guiding us

  • to the closest approximation of reality as we could possibly have.

  • And of course while we all see the obvious fruits

  • of this method of thought and its vast applications

  • there is however still one area

  • which stands virtually untouched by the scientific methodology:

  • our Social System.

  • In this context we appear to be stuck in time

  • using antiquated traditionalized practices

  • which show clear signs of deficiency.

  • For instance:

  • we give dictatorial powers to politicians and political parties

  • under the guise of something we label 'Democracy'

  • - politicians who on average clearly have no education or training

  • in the technical affairs of social organization.

  • In a world where one child unnecessarily dies every five seconds

  • from poverty and deprivation

  • many look to government institutions for resolution

  • not really considering the scientific reality

  • that feeding and caring for the people of the world

  • is not a political issue.

  • It is a technical one

  • resolvable by simple resource management and allocation

  • and the intelligent and strategic application of technology.

  • Likewise, we have these things we call corporations or businesses

  • which are able to arbitrarily claim property

  • of the finite natural resources of this planet -

  • resources we all need.

  • They utilize those resources for the betterment of an isolated group

  • through a self-interest-based system we call free-market exchange.

  • In fact, when it comes down to it

  • the message of this system is quite clear:

  • either you submit to this game of differential advantage and self-interest

  • or you simply do not deserve the right to live.

  • You must earn your right to life on this planet, if you will

  • which, to a thinking mind, is clearly a pseudo-totalitarian construct

  • to perpetuate one group or class over another.

  • Yet again, this inhumanity goes unnoticed

  • for it is structurally built in.

  • We are born into this system and we are groomed to think

  • it is a natural fact, an empirical way of life...

  • Just as if years ago perhaps you were

  • born into a society as an abject slave

  • since you have never been exposed to anything contrary

  • you might even believe that you are supposed to be a slave

  • as though it is again a natural order of reality.

  • And if we couple that fact with a monetary system based explicitly on debt

  • which, unannounced to most, mathematically guarantees

  • that a subclass of the human population will always be deprived

  • we begin to see that we live in an

  • advanced variation of feudalism and nothing more.

  • It is technically impossible for everyone to

  • have their needs met in the current system.

  • The economic game of differential advantage

  • simply isn't designed to allow everyone to live and prosper.

  • It is a win-lose system, regardless of the state of the natural world

  • and what we are able to produce and technically accomplish.

  • Put succinctly, our economic system is completely decoupled

  • from natural processes of the physical world

  • a characteristic which can only lead to further problems

  • if a radical shift away from these outdated assumptions

  • is not commenced.

  • So, let's now take a large step back

  • putting aside everything that we might have been taught

  • about our social constructs and consider the following question:

  • What are the immutable foundations of human health and prosperity

  • and how do we construct a system which meets those needs

  • for the entire human population

  • - understanding of course, we live on a finite planet -

  • while ensuring the sustainability of this habitat

  • for future generations?

  • To answer this question we need to first consider the issue

  • of human need itself.

  • For eons now, philosophers have contemplated the nature of mankind

  • trying to find those 'human universals' we all share.

  • This of course, is an ongoing debate with many speculations

  • yet when it comes to the arena of human needs

  • we do find a virtually universal set of commonalities

  • amongst the entire species.

  • Needless to say, if we do not get proper nutrition

  • food, air and water we will cease to exist over time.

  • If we are exposed to substances which are chemically toxic to our biology

  • such as ingesting mercury or the like, we will likely get very sick.

  • If we suffer serious vitamin deficiency as a child

  • there is a predictable detrimental outcome for one's personal health

  • such as stunted growth or immunity problems.

  • But as human sciences have progressed we find that

  • human needs do not stop at this basic, commonly observed level.

  • Humans are bio-psycho-social organisms

  • meaning we are affected by our environment symbiotically

  • in many subtle and often complex ways.

  • For instance, if a mother in the late stages of pregnancy

  • suffers extreme emotional stress

  • flooding her system with cortisol (a stress hormone)

  • the nervous system of that unborn child

  • could be predictably compromised

  • in a negative way for the rest of his or her life

  • for the fetus itself technically is learning

  • about what the world is going to be like.

  • This also goes for infancy and early childhood as well

  • a critical developmental period where the organism is literally

  • being programmed or adapted

  • to the possible nature of the world they exist in -

  • an impression which has been found to carry over

  • for the entire life of that person in many ways.

  • And if that critical period is met with

  • negative stress, suffering and pain

  • that child's development could possibly evolve

  • into predictable tendencies of behavior

  • including propensities for addictions and violence in later life.

  • The point here with respect to human need

  • is that the physical, mental and emotional health of a person

  • can no longer be considered an isolated or temporal affair.

  • We are socially and environmentally connected

  • in a very real and multi-faceted way

  • and if our intent as a society is to produce

  • psychologically and physically balanced human beings

  • the whole of society must be designed to meet those needs -

  • not to mention adapt as our understandings change

  • and knowledge progresses.

  • So public health in the broad view

  • is really the ultimate measure of the performance of any social system

  • along with of course, the intelligent

  • sustainable management of the earth

  • which provides the core resources we need

  • coupled as well with a social arrangement

  • which is actually conducive for a healthy individual

  • to prosper and hence the health of society itself and its progress.

  • So given this basic understanding

  • how do go about designing a society that actually

  • supports the human species

  • while maintaining environmental balance?

  • This brings us to the concept of a Resource-Based Economy.

  • A Resource-Based Economy is a direct response

  • to this natural, physical, scientific understanding

  • inferentially derived to calculate how to best meet

  • the spectrum of human needs in the most efficient and sustainable way;

  • taking into account what actually supports us

  • which again, is the symbiotic relationship

  • of this delicate, providing biosphere we all share.

  • From there we are able to arrange society

  • with very little need for human opinion

  • if of course our collective goal is to maximize

  • our sustainability and economic efficiency.

  • The system that we describe is self-generating; it is self-evident

  • once these parameters are assumed.

  • There are three dominant economic considerations

  • which need to be considered immediately:

  • Resource Accounting, Dynamic Equilibrium and Strategic Design.

  • As far as resource accounting:

  • we live in a virtually closed planetary biosphere

  • with a set of mostly finite resources at our disposal.

  • Given this reality the logic becomes quite clear

  • as to our responsilbility

  • if we wish to allow our habitat to sustain itself

  • for future generations

  • and meet the needs of the current population.

  • We must organize and account.

  • Proper economic resource allocation really can not be made

  • unless we have a clear understanding of what we have

  • and where it is in a complete unified way.

  • Eventually this understanding will lead to what we could call

  • the 'Carrying Capacity of the Earth'

  • which is very important information.

  • But this accounting of course, is only the first step;

  • we also need to track the rates of change and regeneration

  • where applicable.

  • Here we have what we call 'Dynamic Equilibrium'.

  • The classic example of this issue today is deforestation.

  • Trees have a natural growth rate and cycle

  • and if our use of wood exceeds the rates of natural regeneration

  • - which is of course the case today unfortunately -

  • we have a problem. For it is, by definition, unsustainable.

  • Remember, the monetary market model

  • requires as much consumption as possible

  • to keep the growing population employed and the economy operational.

  • This is of course, simply Eco-cidal.

  • Remember, a core requirement of a true economy is to economize

  • or be strategically efficient and conservative.

  • Today we live in what could be called an 'anti-economy'

  • and this leads us to Strategic Design.

  • Efficiently meeting the spectrum of human needs

  • on a finite planet in a sustainable way

  • means resource allocation must be optimized strategically

  • and of course, conservatively.

  • Today this is, not done - or you could say, 'haphazardly done'

  • through arbitrary monetary realizations.

  • It is about what could be afforded by the producer and hence the consumer

  • not what the most scientifically efficient and strategic usage actually is.

  • Not to mention the issue of longevity of a given good

  • and the method to be used for its eventual breakdown, hence recycling.

  • All of these elements need to be considered in the initial design

  • without the interference of the market system and cost efficiency

  • which serve as inhibitors to sustainable design.

  • Again, an economy is about increasing efficiency at all times.

  • It is about doing what is most scientifically correct

  • not what some company can afford in order to

  • remain competitive in the market model.

  • We need strategic accounting, allocation and design

  • as derived from proven technical parameters

  • that assure maximum efficiency and sustainability.

  • Anything less is simply negligence.

  • So, Resource Accounting, Dynamic Equilibrium, Strategic Design

  • set the basic underlay for this resource-based economic model.

  • So let's now continue this inference...

  • Building upon these we can then arrive at the following

  • more specific organizational points:

  • 1 - We need to move from a growth to a steady-state economy.

  • Dynamic Equilibrium simply cannot be maintained in a growth economy

  • for constant growth is literally impossible on a finite planet.

  • 2 - We need a collaborative system, not a competitive one.

  • Strategic design cannot be fulfilled

  • when cost efficiency is in play.

  • In fact quite simply, monetary efficiency is inverse

  • to technological efficiency.

  • 3 - We need a planned, designed system.

  • a system designed to take into account resource allocation

  • Dynamic Equilibrium and Strategic Design explicitly.

  • The dispersed, haphazard corporate system does not even come close

  • and the lack of efficiency and waste is simply, unacceptable.

  • 4 - Automation is put before human labor on all levels.

  • This falls under the component of Strategic Design once again.

  • Not only do we design consumer goods to be as efficient as they can be

  • but the very design of the production methods themselves

  • to produce these goods, needs to be equally as strategic

  • to maximize accuracy and output.

  • Unannounced to many, productivity is now

  • inverse to employment in most sectors studied

  • which means it is socially irresponsible not to automate

  • for it can help us generate an abundance.

  • And 5 - We move from a system of property to a system of access

  • and hence the removal of monetary exchange itself.

  • There is a very large difference between

  • the current state of affairs today and

  • the scarcity that was intrinsic in the past.

  • We have advanced production technology now

  • which can enable what you could term an access abundance

  • or a system of resource allocation

  • which could enable universal free access to goods and services

  • without the need for anyone to use currency.

  • Rather than having a property-based investment approach

  • value approach, which requires hoarding and protection

  • we design a system of interchangeable access

  • like a rental or library system as we might see today.

  • In a society where I, for example

  • might drive my car for only a few hours a week at most

  • does it really make efficient sense

  • for me personally to store this vehicle

  • where it will sit unused for probably 90% of the month?

  • And if you extend that idea to the whole of the goods sector

  • the realization is that we can actually reduce production

  • create more efficiency, reduce the use of resources while

  • counter-intuitively, simultaneously enabling more access

  • of goods to the population when they need it.

  • The term would be 'Strategic Access'.

  • Now I know for many it's very difficult to think about

  • an access-based society rather than a property-based one

  • given the materialism we have been groomed into

  • which serves to support the conspicuous consumption that

  • perpetuates the market system and hence

  • the demand for labor and everything else

  • but the efficiency of this concept

  • when all of those other requirements are removed

  • - those false requirements of the monetary system -

  • if done correctly, the efficiency of this approach

  • is simply unparalleled.

  • Demand could be dynamically tracked

  • to avoid access shortages and overruns

  • and using the most advanced forms of automation and distribution technology

  • the convenience could far exceed anything

  • what 99% of the world knows today

  • - not to mention a reduction in crime as we know it, by at least 90%.

  • The bottom line is that money is no longer needed in a world

  • that has an access abundance.

  • Now this concludes the basic summarization of

  • the core attributes of the resource-based economic model.

  • Is it perfect? Is it Utopia? No -

  • But it would be cataclysmically better than anything we have today

  • which is continuing to damage ourselves, our environment

  • and shows all signs of getting much worse.

  • If you would like to learn more about a Resource-Based Economy

  • along with the global organizations working to make it happen

  • please visit TheZeitgeistMovement.com and TheVenusProject.com

  • for more information. I thank you for your time.

  • [TheZeitgeistMovement.com] [TheVenusProject.com] Voluntary Transcription by Linguistic Team International

Hello, my name is Peter Joseph and welcome to

字幕と単語

ワンタップで英和辞典検索 単語をクリックすると、意味が表示されます

B1 中級

TEDx Peter Joseph: Resource-Based Economics - An Introduction [ドイツ語字幕]。 (TEDx Peter Joseph: Ressourcenbasierte Wirtschaft - Eine Einführung [deutsche Untertitel])

  • 127 11
    王惟惟 に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
動画の中の単語