Difference between revisions of "APR 27"

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==29: APR 27==
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==26. APR 27==
  
===Assigned===
+
===Assigned Work===
  
:*Susan Blackmore, "Living Without Free Will"
+
:*Pinker, "Sustenance" (68-78) (10)
 +
:*Montgomery, ''Growing a Revolution,''"Green Manure" (90-114) (24)
  
===Debriefing on PP1: What do we owe strangers?===
+
===In-Class===
  
:*Favorable distribution overall (high percentage of A/A-, high prompt attention), though I felt I had to anchor on B-.
+
:*Examples of [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0XfFNPedsxE Precision Agriculture] and [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z-np9HSfk4c Post-Organic Industrial hydroponics].
:*Some patterns in the distribution.
 
:*There have been some instances of incongruous results between SW1-2 and PP1.  I am particularly interested in those cases so please come forward to discuss.
 
  
:*Focusing on PP2: FW, MR, and Punishment Postion Paper
+
:*Course Conclusion
:*Follow the template.  Select from course resources (and other sources, if you wish) to develop your position.  Note italicized part of the prompt.  Doing this should guarantee a B or better.
+
::*Your food future.
:*Please read successful papers from PP1 and note writing, organization, and thesis clarity.
+
::*Your future as intellectuals.
  
===Blackmore - Living Without Free Will===
+
===Pinker, Enlightenment Now, Ch. 7, "Sustanance"===
  
:*Thesis: Free will is an unnecessary illusion that you might be better off getting over. SB grants that many find this an impossible view.
+
:*[https://stevenpinker.com/reviews-enlightenment-now some reviews].
  
:*Cites Wegner (2002): research suggesting that the feeling of agency ("I did it!") might be "post-hoc" attribution.   
+
:*nice evocation of the history of famine in human condition
 +
:*examples of famine leading to consumption of human flesh and viscera.   
  
:*Blackmore agrees with Dennett's analysis (but thinks his book should be called "Choice Evolves"), but thinks FW is an illusion.
+
:*Good News
 +
::*Calories up globally as well as US.
 +
::*Stunting down, undernurishment under 5% globally, 13% in dev. world.
 +
::*Famines down
  
:*She considers two possibilities: "Living 'as if'" and "Rejecting the Illusion" - favors the latter.
+
:*Reviews 70's era population bomb literature.  Malthus assumed the population curve wouldn't change as family wealth increases.  Also, underestimated increases in the food supply. Dates that to Enlightenment knowledge.
  
:*'''Living "as if"'''
+
:*Food claims
 +
::*The food supply can grow geometrically with knowledge (74) ?
 +
::*Food prices in relation to wages are historically low.  T
 +
::*GMOs and transgenic crops are ready to go but opposed by fanatical environmentalists.  Hmm. Y & N
  
::*Wegner quote: "virtual agency" is part of a useful mental accounting system.  But virtual agency is an illusion created by our brains.   
+
::*Account of Haber-Bosch method for syn N, and Green Revolution (notice detail in what makes for a high yield grain)
::*Patricia Churchland: It's a "user illusion" that you make an uninfluenced, self-conscious choice.
+
::*Critical point: Green Revolution is very important; part success of plant breeding (landrace system), part extension of industrial fertilizer and mechanical inputsNot clear there is another Green Revolution out therePlant breeding is as old as agriculture, but here it is recruited as part of the Enlightenment narrative.   
::*"Illusionism" can be defended.  If you believe bad consequences follow from giving it up....
 
::*Criminal Justice system would be fairer without the illusion of FWNo retribution. 
 
  
::*Stronger position: You can't get rid of the illusion even if you wanted to"I'm determined to believe in FW."
+
::*Closing statement, importantly identifies major causes of famines in political organization and war rather than agricultural efficiencyMost 20th century famines in autocratic communist countries.
  
:*'''"Rejecting the Illusion"''' -
+
::*Pinker makes many very persuasive points, especially related to population dynamics (see chart in Chapter 10, also in links)If population stops growing, or declines, then declines in soil productivity might be offset by increases in yields from plant engineering and sustained high levels of chemical fertilizers.]
::*166: "sitting by the fire" example
 
::*William James - getting out of bed on cold morningAnalyze that feeling of "indecision".
 
::*Blackmore 167: going out on a cold night. "...not because "i" made the decision of my own free will.  It is because this is the decision that the whole universe came up with for this person under those circumstances."
 
  
::*Thought experiment to her students: "But if I don't have free will why would I get up in the morning? Why would I do anything?"  Go ahead try it!
+
:*Demographic Transition excerpt:
  
:*Blackmore thinks of consciousness more as events than a place in your head where things "enter into conscious awareness".  Likewise, maybe, with free will. [Possible criticism: Just because it would be mistaken to believe in the homunculus, it doesn't mean that there are no neural processes that imitate some of it's less exotic functions (like updating us by making this conscious to us - "Oh right, I have a paper to write.").
+
===Montgomery, David. Chapter 6: Green Manure===
  
:169: Some of the exercises she asks her students to do"Am I conscious now?" Sometimes primes them to be more conscious.  (related to mindfulness).
+
:*Primary story: Dwayne Beck, [http://www.dakotalakes.com/ Dakota Lakes Research Farms].  Beck has chemistry background and Ph.D. in agronomy and is a farmer.  Many success stories of farmers using his soil conservation methods:
 +
::*problem of water runoff in plough vs. no till fields.
 +
::*92: competitive wheat yields vs. high-disturbance input intensiveBig effect on South Dakota. Conservation farms had new everything.
 +
::*96: Critique of ag extention system for keeping farmers in intensive industrial ag.
 +
::*99: Conference incident: Beck challenged by chemical company demand for retraction on statement weedsSet up test.
 +
:::*Glyphosate problem digression 99-100 (bring in GMO connection, v2, cancer suit judgements). Using continuous ground cover with no till keeps weeds out. 
  
:*'''Morality and Responsibility'''
+
:*Grow it yourself fertilizer
:*You might think that you would have more regrets giving up FW, but no.
+
::*Value of cover crops. multiple crops in a field. 
:*Wegner: knowing its an illusion gives him a sense of peace. quote 171.
+
::*102: on site wind powered small scale fertilizer production.  '''Very cool in light of today’s food news!!'''
:*Conversation with her DadMaybe FW (or belief in it) makes us "want to be good"  (recall Henrich)
+
::*Precision ag. [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0XfFNPedsxE Precision Agriculture]
 +
::*Using mycorrhizal fungi to release phosphorous instead of applying synthetic phosphorous103
  
:*SB's point: All of your motivations to be good (self-interest, reputation, altruism) will still be there after you give up FW.
+
:*Pest self-management
 +
:*examples of unintended effects of herbicides that throw off insect ecology 104 106: corn rootworm experiment.
  
:*'''Paying Attention'''
+
:*High Tech No Till
::*In meditation, a great deal of "quieting the mind" is about getting the self to shut up so you can pay attention to the mind.
+
:*Story of Cronin Farms - economics of no till, biodynamics -- 108
 +
::*109: looking at carbon in soil as stored fertilizer worth $600/acre.
 +
 
 +
:*end of chapter
 +
 
 +
:*Reorg of some themes to make broader point:
 +
 
 +
:*Pest ecology stories
 +
::*105: corn rootworm beetle and crop rotation
 +
::*BT corn eliminated one pest (earworm), but earworms eat be cutworms.  demonstration project showing resistance to root worm in no till field
 +
 
 +
:*Some analogies between healthy soil and a healthy microbiome!
 +
::*best weed control is a canopy of well nurished crop.  reducing opportunities for weeds.  99: incident Beck asked for retraction.
 +
::*herbicide resistance (like germ resistance from anti-biotic use)
 +
::*103: broad spectrum pesticides like antibiotics in microbiome
 +
 
 +
:*Technology of soil conservation
 +
::*95: on-site processing of residues for fertillizer and animal feed. 
 +
::*avoids compaction of heavy machinery.  uses low psi equiptment.
 +
::*note: the research farm uses some (a "fraction" of normal) glyphosate.
 +
::*importance of leaving crop residue on the ground. 
 +
::*complex rotations - for soil health and to defeat complex pests.
 +
::*mixed cropping 101
 +
::*locally produced Nitrogen fert from wind. 
 +
::*phosphorous management easier without tillage that breaks up mycorrhizal fungus. 
 +
::*103: worms, lots of worms
 +
 
 +
::*Precision agriculture:
 +
:::*no-till planters, small dosing of fertilizers,
 +
:::*108: example on Cronin Farm of no-till planter using precision fert. good yields with lower inputs.
 +
:::*110: disc planters
 +
:::*GPS based data system for precision ag.

Revision as of 20:53, 27 April 2022

26. APR 27

Assigned Work

  • Pinker, "Sustenance" (68-78) (10)
  • Montgomery, Growing a Revolution,"Green Manure" (90-114) (24)

In-Class

  • Course Conclusion
  • Your food future.
  • Your future as intellectuals.

Pinker, Enlightenment Now, Ch. 7, "Sustanance"

  • nice evocation of the history of famine in human condition
  • examples of famine leading to consumption of human flesh and viscera.
  • Good News
  • Calories up globally as well as US.
  • Stunting down, undernurishment under 5% globally, 13% in dev. world.
  • Famines down
  • Reviews 70's era population bomb literature. Malthus assumed the population curve wouldn't change as family wealth increases. Also, underestimated increases in the food supply. Dates that to Enlightenment knowledge.
  • Food claims
  • The food supply can grow geometrically with knowledge (74) ?
  • Food prices in relation to wages are historically low. T
  • GMOs and transgenic crops are ready to go but opposed by fanatical environmentalists. Hmm. Y & N
  • Account of Haber-Bosch method for syn N, and Green Revolution (notice detail in what makes for a high yield grain)
  • Critical point: Green Revolution is very important; part success of plant breeding (landrace system), part extension of industrial fertilizer and mechanical inputs. Not clear there is another Green Revolution out there. Plant breeding is as old as agriculture, but here it is recruited as part of the Enlightenment narrative.
  • Closing statement, importantly identifies major causes of famines in political organization and war rather than agricultural efficiency. Most 20th century famines in autocratic communist countries.
  • Pinker makes many very persuasive points, especially related to population dynamics (see chart in Chapter 10, also in links). If population stops growing, or declines, then declines in soil productivity might be offset by increases in yields from plant engineering and sustained high levels of chemical fertilizers.]
  • Demographic Transition excerpt:

Montgomery, David. Chapter 6: Green Manure

  • Primary story: Dwayne Beck, Dakota Lakes Research Farms. Beck has chemistry background and Ph.D. in agronomy and is a farmer. Many success stories of farmers using his soil conservation methods:
  • problem of water runoff in plough vs. no till fields.
  • 92: competitive wheat yields vs. high-disturbance input intensive. Big effect on South Dakota. Conservation farms had new everything.
  • 96: Critique of ag extention system for keeping farmers in intensive industrial ag.
  • 99: Conference incident: Beck challenged by chemical company demand for retraction on statement weeds. Set up test.
  • Glyphosate problem digression 99-100 (bring in GMO connection, v2, cancer suit judgements). Using continuous ground cover with no till keeps weeds out.
  • Grow it yourself fertilizer
  • Value of cover crops. multiple crops in a field.
  • 102: on site wind powered small scale fertilizer production. Very cool in light of today’s food news!!
  • Precision ag. Precision Agriculture
  • Using mycorrhizal fungi to release phosphorous instead of applying synthetic phosphorous. 103
  • Pest self-management
  • examples of unintended effects of herbicides that throw off insect ecology 104 106: corn rootworm experiment.
  • High Tech No Till
  • Story of Cronin Farms - economics of no till, biodynamics -- 108
  • 109: looking at carbon in soil as stored fertilizer worth $600/acre.
  • end of chapter
  • Reorg of some themes to make broader point:
  • Pest ecology stories
  • 105: corn rootworm beetle and crop rotation
  • BT corn eliminated one pest (earworm), but earworms eat be cutworms. demonstration project showing resistance to root worm in no till field
  • Some analogies between healthy soil and a healthy microbiome!
  • best weed control is a canopy of well nurished crop. reducing opportunities for weeds. 99: incident Beck asked for retraction.
  • herbicide resistance (like germ resistance from anti-biotic use)
  • 103: broad spectrum pesticides like antibiotics in microbiome
  • Technology of soil conservation
  • 95: on-site processing of residues for fertillizer and animal feed.
  • avoids compaction of heavy machinery. uses low psi equiptment.
  • note: the research farm uses some (a "fraction" of normal) glyphosate.
  • importance of leaving crop residue on the ground.
  • complex rotations - for soil health and to defeat complex pests.
  • mixed cropping 101
  • locally produced Nitrogen fert from wind.
  • phosphorous management easier without tillage that breaks up mycorrhizal fungus.
  • 103: worms, lots of worms
  • Precision agriculture:
  • no-till planters, small dosing of fertilizers,
  • 108: example on Cronin Farm of no-till planter using precision fert. good yields with lower inputs.
  • 110: disc planters
  • GPS based data system for precision ag.