INQUISITIVE NATURE

Thoughts and questions on consumerism, systems thinking, and regenerative design.

THE WORLD IS ALREADY INTELLIGENT
Nature, Natural Intelligence Chris Fano Nature, Natural Intelligence Chris Fano

THE WORLD IS ALREADY INTELLIGENT

It is hard to process how quickly the world is changing. I think we all sense, to varying degrees, in some visceral part of our psyche that things just don’t feel the same, even if they may look it. And this is not just in terms of climate or political discourse but also in terms of human agency. With each passing year it seems the exponential rate of technological advancement floods our lives with new conveniences, possibilities, efficiencies, and distractions, which are as wonderful as they are frightening. Artificial intelligence is just the next and perhaps most consequential leap, and I cannot help asking myself why it feels so disruptive. And that is not to say that its arrival portends some dystopian future where humanity is enslaved by machines to save us from ourselves, but more that it feels like another wedge in an already fragmented world; disconnecting us further from each other and our surroundings. Moreover, it is another form of consciousness emerging in an already conscious world; one that has existed since time immemorial. One that has spent the last 3.8 billion years perfecting itself, and thrives in equal measure in the cells of our bodies as in the stars above. That being, of course, natural intelligence.

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WHY WE WASTE
Waste, Consumerism, History, Social Change Chris Fano Waste, Consumerism, History, Social Change Chris Fano

WHY WE WASTE

I’ve recently been reflecting on why it feels so good to throw things away. There’s an element of freedom in it I think, lightening a burden, even a sense of relief we are no longer responsible for something that was in our charge. Out of sight, out of mind. But it’s well documented that away does not mean gone. There are many statistics out there that quantify the consequences of this freedom over the last few decades, but they are just numbers1. For most, myself included, they mean very little beyond a sobering statistic we can’t really wrap our heads around and therefore have little interest in dwelling on. What I want to focus on instead is not the statistical side of this trend, but the behavioral one, and how it came to be.

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THE LIFE AND TIMES OF A CEREAL BOX
Waste, Consumerism, Gratitude, Nature Chris Fano Waste, Consumerism, Gratitude, Nature Chris Fano

THE LIFE AND TIMES OF A CEREAL BOX

Every time I’m in a grocery store, I look down the full length of an aisle, usually near the middle of the store, and am immediately overwhelmed with the sheer volume of stuff lining the shelves. What I used to perceive as food has become cardboard boxes, plastic bags, aluminum cans, glass bottles with plastic lids, plastic bottles with plastic lids, aluminum lined plastic bags, cardboard boxes full of aluminum lined plastic bags, boxes full of bags WRAPPED IN PLASTIC, and every other permutation therein.

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