Difference between revisions of "APR 22"

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==28: APR 22==
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==24. APR 22==
  
===Assigned===
+
===Assigned Work===
  
:*No readings today. I will give you some lecture material on Dennett's view of Freedom
+
:*Montgomery, David. Chapter 2: "Skin of the Earth" ''Dirt''(pp. 9-25); (16)
 +
:*Montgomery, David. Chapter 3: "Rivers of Life" (pp. 27-47) (20)
  
===PP2: Free Will, Moral Responsibility, and Punishment Position Paper===
+
===In-class===
  
:*'''Stage 1''': Please write an 1000 word maximum answer to the prompt by '''April 27th, 2021, 11:59.'''
+
:*Documentary reports:
 +
::*Island of the Whales
  
::*Topic: In this unit, we have explored different ways to think about free will, moral responsibility and punishment. We've looked at arguments (from philosophy and the law) for "moral responsibility skepticism," critiques of our ordinary ideas about free will, and the justification of our culture's approach to punishment. Select and respond to some of these challenges as you ''provide your own view, with supporting reasons, of free will and responsibility and how we should approach crime and punishment''.   
+
===Montgomery, David. Chapter 2, "Skin of the Earth"===
  
:*'''Advice about collaboration''': For this assignment, we need to modify our collaboration adviceYou will have access to all of the rough drafts (with all new animal pseudonyms) and you will have read and commented on four of them before finishing your ownYou are welcome to cite any ideas from any of the papers. If you borrow ideas from another author, give credit to the author by citing the animal name in your text. This again is what we do in an academic research community (only we don't use animal names).  
+
::*Darwin's studies of worms.  Worms are moving a heck of a lot of dirt. 10-20 tons per acre per year. digestive juices.
 +
::*Note the recentness of our lack of knowledge of this.  Also why antiquities sink.
 +
::*Darwin's calculations were off: underestimated the time scale for effects.  Didn't know about '''isostasy''' - a process which lifts rock as well.  But did understand soil formation as breakdown of minerals. 
 +
::*15: overview of soil ecology relationships.  read.  even theories that soil formation was involved in first forms of organismic life. 
 +
::*guanine and cytosine in clay-rich solutions.   
 +
::*15-16: overview of plant colonization of cooling earth (350 mya).  earth plant life accelerated soil formation.  lots of other physical and chemical processes (17). Gophers, roots, termites, ants….  
 +
::*nitrogen fixation (18): note mechanism. "nitrogen fixing plant" a misnomer. 
  
:*Prepare your answer and submit it in the following way:
+
::*effects of agriculture:
::# '''Do not put your name in the file or filename'''.  You may put your student id number in the file.  Put a word count in the file.
+
:::*tilling releases nutrients, but also disrupts soil life, short-rotation farming reduces soil diversity, increases vulnerability to parasites,  
::# In Word, check "File" and "Options" to make sure your name does not appear as author.
 
::# Format your answer in double spaced text in a 12 point font, using normal margins. 
 
::# Save the file in the ".docx" file format using the file name "MoralResponsibility".
 
::# Log in to courses.alfino.org.  Upload your file to the '''"'Position Paper 2' dropbox'''. 
 
  
:*'''Stage 2''': Rough Draft Review.  Please review '''four''' student answers and provide brief comments and a score. We will use our regular assignment rubric, but rather than producing a score for the paper I will ask you to evaluate three specific items in the prompt as you find them in the rough drafts you review.  Complete your evaluations by '''April 30, 2021, 11:59pm.''' 
+
:::*p. 20Connection bt farming methods and soil erosion and soil health.   
::*Use [https://forms.gle/LbJGQ2WHvS4iurgC6 this Google Form] to review '''three''' peer papers. 
 
::*Some papers may arrive late. If you are in line to review a missing paper, allow a day or two for it to show upIf it does not show up, go ahead and review the next animal in the list until you have four reviews. You will receive 10 points for completing 4 rough draft reviews.
 
  
:*'''Your final paper is due on May 5, 2021, by 11:59pm'''. Please upload it to the "Position Paper 2" dropbox, the same as for the rough draft.
+
:*Note how starting your account of food (vs. “Agriculture as Human Innovation”) from soil gives you deeper sense of your trophic relationships.
  
===Dennett's Naturalist view in ''Freedom Evolves''===
+
::*You are what you eat. You are what you eat eats.
  
:*Our folk psychological idea of Free will.  The homunculus or soul or real self is somehow independent of influences. In philosophy, this is "Libertarian Free Will".  Not well supported.
+
===Montgomery, Dirt, Chapter 3, "Rivers of Life"===
::*Examples of decision making for us to pay attention to:  Make a decision in response to the following prompts. 1, 2.  Did the decisions feel free? Did you feel absolutely free of influences or did you feel like you
 
::*Rethinking your concept of free will doesn't require you to deny anything about your "agency" - Your actual capabilities for decision making, reasoning, understanding the world, etc.  In fact, it helps to have evidence of this to challenge your folk psychology.
 
  
:*'''The Standard Argument for Incompatibilism''' that our Folk Psychology encourages.  (Should we resist?)
+
::*connection between humanity and soil in language: adama (earth) hava (living).  We are living earth.  In Latin "homo" from "humus", living soil.
::*If Determinism is true, everything is inevitable. (recall physics consult)
 
::*If everything is inevitable, the future has no real possibilities(No "open futures")
 
::*If everything is inevitable, you can't blame someone for not doing otherwise than they did. (No "alternative possibilities.")
 
::*If you can't blame someone for their actions, then there is no MR and retributive punishment is unjust.
 
  
:*If you are like most people, you will not accept this argument. And you shouldn't. The question is, who has a better solution?  Naturalists suggest that our folk psychology confusing us about the consequences of determinism, maybe because it wasn't designed for these kinds of questions.  So their solution is to give an analysis of the implications of determinism that makes room for free will and to show how "freedom and free willing" might arise from nature.  (If this seems like a stretch, philosophers have been here before. Mind from matter? Surely, you jest!)
+
::*suggest myth of the garden represents transition to agriculture, climate change.
  
::*Digressive note: It doesn't really help to imagine an indeterministic world to solve the problem.  There would be no prediction in a world without (causal) regularities.  It would at least be a very annoying world, and not obviously "free."
+
:*Long history
  
:*'''Rethinking Determinism'''Here are three key challenges to the standard argument for incompatibilism (above) from naturalists:
+
::*20,000 years ago - last major glaciation (though not a single event).  Europe freezes, Africa dries.   
::*1. Determinism doesn't make things inevitable.
+
::*2 million years ago - earliest evidence of migration of homo erectus from Africa. separation from Neanderthal (note some evidence that we ate 'em [https://www.theguardian.com/science/2009/may/17/neanderthals-cannibalism-anthropological-sciences-journal]),  
::*2. There are real present and future possibilities in a determinist world, just not the "open futures" of folk psychology.
+
::*300,000 year ago - first modern humans.   
::*3. Freedom evolved in us in nature.   
+
::*45,000 years ago - another wave of migration from Africa (movement occurred in both directions).
:*In other words, the naturalist thinks free will and freedom (and some version of responsibility, if not punishment) are possible in a deterministic world with no "open futures".  As we will see, part of the strategy is to show just how complicated we are, to be creatures who engage in inquiry and use knowledge to avoid back outcomes and create good ones.  So, we might be "Determined (by nature) to improve the future!".
+
::*30,000 years ago - sharp stone tools (much later than the handaxe .5 mya) and at 23,000 yrs bows and arrows
:*Where does all that improvement show up?  In culture, but only if things go right (remember Rapa Nui!).  As we know from our studies this semester, "going right" in culture means benefiting from cooperation and acquiring cultural "packages" of mental adaptations that address the basic dilemmas of social creatures like us. Ultimately, surviving and thriving.  
+
::*[https://www.newscientist.com/article/dn9989-timeline-human-evolution/ Human Evolution Timeline]
  
:*So that's where we're headed. Now let's look at the naturalist's analysis in a little detail.   
+
::*modifications in skin color and other features a response to UV radiation and Vitamin D production, selection effect.   
  
:*'''1. Determinism doesn't make things inevitable.'''
+
:*Emergence of agriculture
::*Artificial Life research models how design can emerge from a set of artificially defined "creatures" moving in a completely deterministic manner, as in a video game.  (Nerdy digression: Artificial life models can create "touring machines," which means they can solve computational problems.)  Some creatures could develop "avoidance capabilities".  '''The birth of "evitability"!'''  You could imagine the computer programmers are acting as "hacker gods" to add design (they don't have to), but imagine instead that the creatures develope R&D capabilities, as we have.  Not so implausible that nature designed us to be good "avoiders".  We also have circuits for rewards and searching! 
 
::*In evolutionary theory, we describe the emergence of multi-cellular organisms as solving problems of parasitic genes and achieving a stable organism that persists....  Nature is full of "evitability" -- ways organisms avoid harm.
 
  
:*'''2. There are real present and future possibilities in a determinist world''', just not the "open futures" of folk psychology.  
+
::*'''oasis and cultural evolution theories'''.
::*If something can be "determined to change" then it has, in a sense, an "open future." (Still not the folk psychological one exactly.)  In us, meta-cognitive and social processes feed into our decision making, allowing us to re-evaluate the "weights" we give to different possibilities.
+
:::*oasis theory - post glacial drying in Middle East restricted food sources to wetter flood plains.  
::*The way we actually think about possibility ''when we are engaged in inquiry'' is compatible with determinism.  Analysis of: "I could have made that putt."  Makes sense if you mean "If the world hade been slightly different.  In inquiry, and with our big brains, we imagine possible worlds in which the wind didn't blow or I wasn't thinking about my taxes while making the putt. But it doesn't make sense to say, "No, I mean that I could have made the putt in this world!", because you didn't.
+
:::*cultural evo thesis - agricultural innovation independent of environmental change.
::*We create real possibilities in the present and future by using reason to replay scenarios and approach them differently.  Examples: Improving your social skills, academic skills.  If it feels like your "in charge", well, you are.  All of these causal forces intersect with you and you happen to have a brain.  
+
::*problem with oasis theory - food variety in mid-east expanding at time of agriculture, esp from N. Africa - seeds.  
 +
::*problem with cultural evolution theory -- not everyone adopted ag (though in other examples, like hand axes, everyone does adopt).  
  
:*'''3. Freedom evolved in us in nature.'''
+
::*3rd possibility: increasing population density -- '''agriculture a forced option'''.  Note climate of the Levant 13 - 11,000bc - major food abundance.  could have supported population explosion. 
::*If freedom means avoiding bad outcomes and having lots of real possibilities in your life, then it might be possible to account for that in a deterministic world.  
+
 
::*The evolution of freedom happens through the evolution of the socially evolved behaviors and structures we've been studying(Dennett's research based isn't as up to date as ours!) Cooperation, culture, accumulated knowledge, complex societies supporting lots and lots of education provide us more freedom than our ancestors.
+
::*mini-glaciation at 10,000 bc called the Younger Dryas  -- recovered pollen samples drop by 3/4 -- decrease precip.  forests recede.
::*Obvious example: Without vaccines we would be less free.
+
 
::*Contrast with traditional concept of free will: binary, metaphysically opaque. Evolved freedom admits of degreesLots of potential implications for responsibility and punishment.   
+
::*site evidence from Abu Hureyra, on Tigris -- evidence of cultivation of grains, drought tolerant ones (drought sensitive ones disappear from the record), for example. 
::*Implication: We are not all equally freeFreedom is powerful and fragile.
+
 
::*Implication: You can hold normal people responsible for their behavior, but there's no justification of absolute responsibility hereYou can hold people responsible because they are designed to be responsible.
+
::*more work to produce a calorie at start of agriculture --(recall crucial calculation here).  population grew to six thousand.  evidence of settlements chosen for ag condition.
 +
 
 +
::*note -- using evidence from burnt food remains, we can track the migration of food, independently of human migration. 
 +
 
 +
::*agriculture developed in several places, but we missed this because in some places it developed before settled towns.  Mesoamerica, China.
 +
 
 +
:*'''Spread of Agriculture'''
 +
 
 +
::*spread through Levant and Turkey.  Growth allowed defeat of nearby hunter/gatherers in contest for territory.
 +
 
 +
::*The dog - 20k. The cat 4K.  (Google “human evolution and dogs” for research on dog/human convolution.)
 +
 
 +
::*Domesticated livestock a huge leap - animal labor, fertilizer, and stored food — on the hoof. 
 +
 
 +
::*after agriculture, population doubles every 1,000 years.  200 million by 0 CE. 2,000 years later 6.5 billion.
 +
 
 +
:*'''Sumeria / Mesopatamia'''
 +
 
 +
::*by 5,000 bc, evidence of overcultivation in Tigris valley, hillside erosion.  emergence of irrigation.  37
 +
 
 +
:*Also, early agricultural infrastructure and control by governing elites. Emergence of class, armies, fight for territory.
 +
 
 +
::*very interesting: Mesopotamian religious elite controlled food production and distribution.  (Later we'll see that Jewish authorities do the same in the Levant).  More population growth.   
 +
 
 +
::*Uruk grows to 50,000.  agriculture brings property, inequality, class, gov't administration, (philosophers). Writing 3,000 bc - (mention Field Museum in Chicago - a “must see”).
 +
 
 +
::*back to the environment -- Babylonian Empire emerges from Sumerian cities around 1800bc.  But irrigation led to salination of the soil, silting of rivers -- 39-40 evidence of lack of understanding of soil.  Babylon falls!  Pop peaks at 20 million. Temple records tell the story.  
 +
 
 +
:*'''Egypt'''
 +
 
 +
:*story in Egypt - p. 40 on: short story, the Nile fed civilizations for 7,000 years in rough sustainability, ideal combination of new silt and humus (Blue Nile and While Nile).  Harvests increase over time.
 +
:*But, desire to '''grow grain for export''' led to year round irrigation. 1880's salination extreme.  Then Nasser damn.  (Thinking about the logic of export crops for maximizing revenue.  Very similar to situation of local over population leading to exploiting the soil.)
 +
:*Irony of Nasser dam producing electricity to make synthetic fertilizers that are now needed because of the dam and poor soil management.  Read at 42.
 +
 
 +
:*'''China'''
 +
 
 +
::*story in China - interesting, administration of ag recognized many grades of soil.  Yellow River (name from mineral erosion upstream) damned and diverted starting 340 bc. Process of raising levees around the river led to 30 foot levies by 1920s19th century floods killed millions.  Also .5 million in early 20th century.   
 +
 
 +
::*story of Walter Lowdermilk -- 1922 - working on famine prevention.  First to write about soil management and civilizationFollows major river up stream documenting 400 miles of levies and evidence of ancient mismanagement of early ag sites. Erosion from farming steep grades.  
 +
 
 +
::*'''thesis going forward''': Civilizations are defined by their management of soilAnd, everyone has messed it up eventually, even the Egyptians.

Latest revision as of 17:15, 22 April 2024

24. APR 22

Assigned Work

  • Montgomery, David. Chapter 2: "Skin of the Earth" Dirt(pp. 9-25); (16)
  • Montgomery, David. Chapter 3: "Rivers of Life" (pp. 27-47) (20)

In-class

  • Documentary reports:
  • Island of the Whales

Montgomery, David. Chapter 2, "Skin of the Earth"

  • Darwin's studies of worms. Worms are moving a heck of a lot of dirt. 10-20 tons per acre per year. digestive juices.
  • Note the recentness of our lack of knowledge of this. Also why antiquities sink.
  • Darwin's calculations were off: underestimated the time scale for effects. Didn't know about isostasy - a process which lifts rock as well. But did understand soil formation as breakdown of minerals.
  • 15: overview of soil ecology relationships. read. even theories that soil formation was involved in first forms of organismic life.
  • guanine and cytosine in clay-rich solutions.
  • 15-16: overview of plant colonization of cooling earth (350 mya). earth plant life accelerated soil formation. lots of other physical and chemical processes (17). Gophers, roots, termites, ants….
  • nitrogen fixation (18): note mechanism. "nitrogen fixing plant" a misnomer.
  • effects of agriculture:
  • tilling releases nutrients, but also disrupts soil life, short-rotation farming reduces soil diversity, increases vulnerability to parasites,
  • p. 20: Connection bt farming methods and soil erosion and soil health.
  • Note how starting your account of food (vs. “Agriculture as Human Innovation”) from soil gives you deeper sense of your trophic relationships.
  • You are what you eat. You are what you eat eats.

Montgomery, Dirt, Chapter 3, "Rivers of Life"

  • connection between humanity and soil in language: adama (earth) hava (living). We are living earth. In Latin "homo" from "humus", living soil.
  • suggest myth of the garden represents transition to agriculture, climate change.
  • Long history
  • 20,000 years ago - last major glaciation (though not a single event). Europe freezes, Africa dries.
  • 2 million years ago - earliest evidence of migration of homo erectus from Africa. separation from Neanderthal (note some evidence that we ate 'em [1]),
  • 300,000 year ago - first modern humans.
  • 45,000 years ago - another wave of migration from Africa (movement occurred in both directions).
  • 30,000 years ago - sharp stone tools (much later than the handaxe .5 mya) and at 23,000 yrs bows and arrows
  • Human Evolution Timeline
  • modifications in skin color and other features a response to UV radiation and Vitamin D production, selection effect.
  • Emergence of agriculture
  • oasis and cultural evolution theories.
  • oasis theory - post glacial drying in Middle East restricted food sources to wetter flood plains.
  • cultural evo thesis - agricultural innovation independent of environmental change.
  • problem with oasis theory - food variety in mid-east expanding at time of agriculture, esp from N. Africa - seeds.
  • problem with cultural evolution theory -- not everyone adopted ag (though in other examples, like hand axes, everyone does adopt).
  • 3rd possibility: increasing population density -- agriculture a forced option. Note climate of the Levant 13 - 11,000bc - major food abundance. could have supported population explosion.
  • mini-glaciation at 10,000 bc called the Younger Dryas -- recovered pollen samples drop by 3/4 -- decrease precip. forests recede.
  • site evidence from Abu Hureyra, on Tigris -- evidence of cultivation of grains, drought tolerant ones (drought sensitive ones disappear from the record), for example.
  • more work to produce a calorie at start of agriculture --(recall crucial calculation here). population grew to six thousand. evidence of settlements chosen for ag condition.
  • note -- using evidence from burnt food remains, we can track the migration of food, independently of human migration.
  • agriculture developed in several places, but we missed this because in some places it developed before settled towns. Mesoamerica, China.
  • Spread of Agriculture
  • spread through Levant and Turkey. Growth allowed defeat of nearby hunter/gatherers in contest for territory.
  • The dog - 20k. The cat 4K. (Google “human evolution and dogs” for research on dog/human convolution.)
  • Domesticated livestock a huge leap - animal labor, fertilizer, and stored food — on the hoof.
  • after agriculture, population doubles every 1,000 years. 200 million by 0 CE. 2,000 years later 6.5 billion.
  • Sumeria / Mesopatamia
  • by 5,000 bc, evidence of overcultivation in Tigris valley, hillside erosion. emergence of irrigation. 37
  • Also, early agricultural infrastructure and control by governing elites. Emergence of class, armies, fight for territory.
  • very interesting: Mesopotamian religious elite controlled food production and distribution. (Later we'll see that Jewish authorities do the same in the Levant). More population growth.
  • Uruk grows to 50,000. agriculture brings property, inequality, class, gov't administration, (philosophers). Writing 3,000 bc - (mention Field Museum in Chicago - a “must see”).
  • back to the environment -- Babylonian Empire emerges from Sumerian cities around 1800bc. But irrigation led to salination of the soil, silting of rivers -- 39-40 evidence of lack of understanding of soil. Babylon falls! Pop peaks at 20 million. Temple records tell the story.
  • Egypt
  • story in Egypt - p. 40 on: short story, the Nile fed civilizations for 7,000 years in rough sustainability, ideal combination of new silt and humus (Blue Nile and While Nile). Harvests increase over time.
  • But, desire to grow grain for export led to year round irrigation. 1880's salination extreme. Then Nasser damn. (Thinking about the logic of export crops for maximizing revenue. Very similar to situation of local over population leading to exploiting the soil.)
  • Irony of Nasser dam producing electricity to make synthetic fertilizers that are now needed because of the dam and poor soil management. Read at 42.
  • China
  • story in China - interesting, administration of ag recognized many grades of soil. Yellow River (name from mineral erosion upstream) damned and diverted starting 340 bc. Process of raising levees around the river led to 30 foot levies by 1920s. 19th century floods killed millions. Also .5 million in early 20th century.
  • story of Walter Lowdermilk -- 1922 - working on famine prevention. First to write about soil management and civilization. Follows major river up stream documenting 400 miles of levies and evidence of ancient mismanagement of early ag sites. Erosion from farming steep grades.
  • thesis going forward: Civilizations are defined by their management of soil. And, everyone has messed it up eventually, even the Egyptians.