12. Opposing Scale: Spiritual Practices and Small Communities - a podcast by CDK

from 2020-12-17T15:27:18

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In this episode, our deep dive into the Axial Age meets the podcast theme of the importance of scale.  The themes of thinking at different time scales, our effort of following a "thoughtline" through changing historical scales, is provided its psychological underpinning: scaling up is an identity-project undertaken by the human ego.  To shift away from operating at global industrial scale, which operates above all through a consumptive appeal to the ego, towards instead thinking, living, and investing in our local communities, requires massive political reorienting premised on a deep economic transformation away from consumption. Beneath these massive changes, is a correspondingly powerful spiritual and psychological challenge to deny ourselves – a challenge which makes the inward turn of spiritual practice and its transformative potential indispensable.


References:


Alternative economic models were mentioned, Schumacher’s “Small is beautiful” explicitly:


Schumacher, E. F. (1973) Small Is Beautiful: Economics as if people mattered. http://www.smallisbeautiful.org/


A contemporary proposal is Kate Raworth’s “doughnut economics”:


https://www.kateraworth.com/doughnut/


Samuel Alexander has done a great amount of work on “degrowth” and “sufficiency economy”:


http://samuelalexander.info/


Helena Norbert-Hodge has articulated a powerful defense of “local futures” and a focus on the “economics of happiness” (along with a 2011 film of that name)


https://www.localfutures.org/


“Voluntary simplicity” is a theme that interweaves all of the above; see http://simplicitycollective.com/or the 1981 book of the same name by Duane Elgin.

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