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Aural Traditions
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An anthology program of interesting sound files from around the Internet. Lots of history, documentaries, and interviews with the occasional radio drama thrown in for good measure.
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| Date Added |
12-Mar-2005 |
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Aural Traditions Episodes - | Climate Wars - Part One | http://podcast.cbc.ca/mp3/ideas_20090119_10989.mp3Climate Wars - Part One
from The Best of Ideas: CBC Radio
Global warming is moving much more quickly than scientists thought it would. Even if the biggest current and prospective emitters - the United States, China and India - were to slam on the brakes today, the earth would continue to heat up for decades. At best, we may be able to slow things down and deal with the consequences, without social and political breakdown. Gwynne Dyer examines several radical short- and medium-term measures now being considered?all of them controversial. | Get at Short URL | Download Climate Wars - Part One | Play in Popup.
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| Pond Scum Power | http://www.cbc.ca/quirks/media/2008-2009/mp3/qq-2008-10-04_01.mp3
Pond scum may not be pretty to look at, but some scientists think it may be a beautiful solution to our energy needs. Over the past few years, we've devoted a lot of effort to developing biofuels from plant crops like corn and soy. But these crops take up lots of land and use a lot of water - resources we need for food production. It also takes a lot of fossil fuels to farm biofuels, so they're not nearly as green as we once supposed. Now the challenge is to find plants that don't need prime agricultural land and heavy irrigation to thrive.
Not a lot of plants are up to the challenge -- except perhaps for humble algae, better known as pond scum. Despite their diminutive size, some species of algae can turn sunlight and carbon dioxide into oil, which they store as fat reserves in their tiny bodies. This oil, in turn, can be processed into a biodeisel we can use in our cars. It sounds like a great idea and some scientists are convinced we can replace the fossil fuel we use with algal biofuel. But there are plenty of challenges before we start running on pond power. Researchers have only just begun to identify which species produce high amounts of oil and, then, getting them to do it reliably turns out to be kind of tricky. As well, designing large-scale algal farms turns out to be harder than it might sound. So, producing algal biofuel in the kind of volume that can satisfy our unquenchable thirst for fuel may still be a long way off.
Dr. Kirsten Heimann is the Director of the North Queensland Algal Identification and Culturing Facility at James Cook University in Australia. She and her colleagues are sifting through innumerable algal species in order to find which ones pump out the most oil. Dr. Heimann is particularly encouraged by one species she's found that produces 30 percent of its body weight in oil.
Dr. Al Darzins oversees the U.S. Department of Energy's National Bioenergy Center in Golden, Colorado. Dr. Darzins and his colleagues have recently re-started a U.S. government research program identifying oil-producing algae and trying to grow it on a large-scale.
Dr. Andres Clarens is an an Assistant Professor and an Environmental Engineer at the University of Virginia. He's interested in using waste CO2 from coal factories as a way of super-charging algal growth. As hopeful as he is that we'll be able to develop algal bio-fuel, he thinks, in the short term, large-scale algae farms will be best suited for sequestering carbon dioxide.
Dr. John Benemann is an independent consultant and research scientist who is somewhat skeptical that we'll ever produce algal biofuels in significant enough quantities that it will ever be a viable fuel alternative. However, like Dr. Clarens, he feels it has tremendous potential to act as an environmental sponge, not just for cleaning up the air, but as an efficient filtering system for sewage and waste water. | Get at Short URL | Download Pond Scum Power | Play in Popup.
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| Fred Turner of Stanford University on “From Counterculture to Cyberculture: the Rise of Digital Utopianism.†| http://media-cyber.law.harvard.edu/AudioBerkman/fred_turner_2006-12-01.mp3mediaberkman - December 1, 2006 @ 3:33 pm · Berkman Center, Digital Identity, Education, Fred Turner, Governance, Imaginify, Internet, Politics, Science, Software, audio
Fred Turner of Stanford University on ?From Counterculture to Cyberculture: the Rise of Digital Utopianism.?
(time: 1:28:32).
In the early 1960s, computers haunted the American imagination. Bleak tools of the cold war, they embodied the rigid organization and mechanical conformity that made the military industrial complex possible. But by the 1990s?and the dawn of the Internet?computers represented a very different kind of world: a collaborative and digital utopia modeled on the communal ideals of the hippies who so vehemently rebelled against the cold war establishment in the first place.
Fred Turner explores this extraordinary and ironic transformation by tracing the previously untold story of a highly influential group of San Francisco Bay?area entrepreneurs who made the connections between San Francisco ?flower power? and the emerging technological hub of Silicon Valley. Thanks to their vision, counterculturalists and technologists alike joined together to reimagine computers as tools for personal liberation, the building of virtual and decidedly alternative communities, and the exploration of bold new social frontiers. | Get at Short URL | Download Fred Turner of Stanford University on “From Counterculture to Cyberculture: the Rise of Digital Utopianism.†| Play in Popup.
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| Humanure Composting | Title: Humanure Composting
Producer: Stephanie Potter
Length: 26:39 minutes (24.41 MB)
Format: MP3 Stereo 44kHz 128Kbps (CBR)
On the Recovery Zone, June 7th, Stephanie Potter featured Ole & Maitri Ersson who use humanure compost on their garden plants--including their fruits and vegetables. All they need is a bucket, wood chips and a compost bin. They have safely been doing this for 15 years.
http://kboo.fm/audio/download/3348/0607+humanure+narration+final.mp3 | Get at Short URL | Download Humanure Composting | Play in Popup.
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| Horticultural Consciousness | http://c-realmpodcast.podomatic.com/enclosure/2008-10-29T19_07_07-07_00.mp3What is Thinkism? And what does it have in common with Peak Oil Doomerism? Was agriculture a good idea? What are the prosepects for giving it up? KMO discusses these and other burning questions with Toby Hemenway and Eric Boyd in this week's installment of the C-Realm Podcast. Show notes: http://kmo.livejournal.com/378511.html | Get at Short URL | Download Horticultural Consciousness | Play in Popup.
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| Ecotopia Revisited | http://media.podcastingmanager.com/5/4/3/9/2/138389-129345/Media/CALLENBACH%20ECOTOPIA%20Hi%20Qual.mp3Ernest Callenbach,
Author and Visionary
"Ecotopia Revisted"
Saturday, June 14, 2008
Alameda Free Library, Conference Rooms A&B
1550 Oak Street, Alameda, CA
Today everyone knows that the future of human society is threatened by global warming and other environmental disasters. Imagine a society where community consciously makes ecological choices over profit! Bay Area author Ernest Callenbach's seminal novel, Ecotopia (1975), does imagine such a world. Ecotopia, the portrait of an ecologically sustainable society in a future ages, was initially rejected by virtually every publisher in New York. Callenbach then self-published the book. It went on to become an underground classic, was ultimately issued in mass-market paperback by Bantam, and is still used in classrooms all over the country. It has sold over a million copies, has been translated into nine languages, including Japanese, and was influential in Germany at the time their Green Party emerged. In 1981, Callenbach published a prequel, Ecotopia Emerging, which tells how 'Ecotopia' comes into being. | Get at Short URL | Download Ecotopia Revisited | Play in Popup.
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| http://www.anu.edu.au/mac/podcasts/Audio/woods0307.mp3It?s Every Monkey for Themselves
07 March 2007
Vanessa Woods
Writer, researcher, freelance journalist
Taking off to mend a broken heart, Vanessa Woods left safe, suburban Canberra and headed for the remote, wild and distinctly unsafe jungles of Costa Rica. She was stung so often by killer bees she developed a lethal allergy, and the monkeys she was to study were evasive, mean and aggressive. The only difference between them and her housemates was that at least she could tell her housemates apart.
In this talk, science writer Vanessa Woods will explain how to survive a year in the jungle: a world of love, loss, bitter rivalry and vicious battles ? and that?s just the monkeys. | Get at Short URL | Download | Play in Popup.
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| James Lovelock | http://podcast.cbc.ca/mp3/thinkaboutscience_20080103_4325.mp3Forty years ago, British scientist James Lovelock put forward the first elements of what he would come to call the Gaia theory. At first many biologists scoffed. Today, Lovelock?s ideas are more widely accepted, even in circles where he was initially scorned. Last year, he published "The Revenge of Gaia", and in this week's podcast, we present a profile of James Lovelock. | Get at Short URL | Download James Lovelock | Play in Popup.
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| The Suspect Society Part 2 | The Surveillance Society. The Age of Paranoid Politics. These terms, and many others, have been used to describe how the political ground has been shifting under us, particularly since 9/11. Terrorism and national security have become obsessive anxieties. A world-wide initiative has developed that combines a growing machinery of surveillance, assaults on civil liberties and increasing censorship. We are living in what IDEAS producer Mary O?Connell calls ?the suspect society.?http://podcast.cbc.ca/mp3/ideas_20080922_7574.mp3 | Get at Short URL | Download The Suspect Society Part 2 | Play in Popup.
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| The Long Descent | KMO welcomes author and Archdruid, John Michael Greer, to the program to discuss his new book The Long Descent: A User?s Guide to the End of the Industrial Age and explore the possibility that Peak Oil may play out more like a fall down the stairs than like a plunge from a third floor balcony. Do the worldviews of Peak Oil aficionados, Singularitarians, and Trekkies all spring from the book of Revelations, and are modern visions concerning progress and the human future really just ancient religious myths in secular drag?http://c-realmpodcast.podomatic.com/enclosure/2008-09-17T16_54_27-07_00.mp3 | Get at Short URL | Download The Long Descent | Play in Popup.
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| The Risk Society | Ulrich Beck & Bruno Latour
Ulrich Beck talks about the place of science in a risk society. You?ll also hear from another equally influential European thinker, Bruno Latour, the author of "We Have Never Been Modern." He will argue that our very future depends on overcoming a false dichotomy between nature and culture.
http://podcast.cbc.ca/mp3/thinkaboutscience_20071227_4292.mp3 | Get at Short URL | Download The Risk Society | Play in Popup.
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| Suspect Society | The Surveillance Society. The New Authoritarianism. The Age of Paranoid Politics. These terms, and many others, have been used to describe how the political ground has been shifting under us, particularly since 9/11. Terrorism and national security have become obsessive anxieties. Fear and suspicion have become the order of the day. We are living in what IDEAS producer Mary O?Connell calls ?the suspect society.?http://podcast.cbc.ca/mp3/ideas_20080915_6828.mp3 | Get at Short URL | Download Suspect Society | Play in Popup.
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| Urban Farming | Here's a very interesting podcast from "Deconstructing Dinner" on Urban Farming. I'm very interested in this because I think it's important that urban dwellers develop a closer relationship with the people who grow their food. What better way to do it than to rent your backyard to a local farmer? As practical and environmentally friendly as growing food within a city can be, the art of gardening has seemingly disappeared in many urban settings. As current farming practices are proving to be unsustainable in the long-term, urban agriculture is looked upon by many as being a critical shift that needs to take place if we are to ensure a level of food security in the near and distant future. This broadcast marks the first of an ongoing series that will explore urban agriculture in British Columbia, Canada, and around the world. Guests Wally Satzewich - Farmer , Wally's Urban Market Garden / SPIN Farming (Saskatoon) - Gail Vandersteen and Wally Satzewich are both long-time residents of Saskatoon, Saskatchewan. They operate an urban market garden . One unique feature of the market garden is that it is located within the confines of a city. Their produce is grown on a number of residential garden plots scattered throughout the city. This allows them to practice an eco-friendly form of agriculture, one that puts less pressure on rural habitats, and fosters self-reliance in an urban setting. This form of agriculture makes it more feasible to utilise organic household kitchen wastes because much of this material can be composted and used for growing crops. Gail and Wally are also the co-creators of SPIN Farming - a business that assists others wishing to adopt a similar business model based on small-plot intensive farming. Beth Sobieszczyk - Program and Social Enterprise Coordinator, Fruit Tree Project , LifeCycles Project Society (Victoria) - The Victoria Fruit Tree Project of the LifeCycles Project Society sees volunteers and a couple a ladders turning backyard fruit trees into a valuable source of food for the community. The project harvests fruit from private trees that would otherwise go to waste. The fruit is then distributed among homeowners, volunteers, food banks and community organisations within Victoria. Jac Smit - President and CEO , The Urban Agriculture Network (TUAN) (Washington D.C.) - This information and consulting organization was founded in 1992. It has visited over 30 countries in its advocacy. The urban agriculture book they wrote for the United Nations is the 2nd best selling book ever published by the UNDP. TUAN operates in all media. It is engaged frequently in workshops and conferences. Jac is a regular contributor to the Vancouver based City Farmer web site - an extensive Canadian resource for urban agriculture information. | Get at Short URL | Download Urban Farming | Play in Popup.
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| SOF: Religious Passion, Pluralism, and the Young (August 31, 2006) | Todays podcast comes form American Public Radio's "Speaking of Faith" program. "Al-Qaeda appeals powerfully, if destructively, to the need of young people to be important and make a difference in the world, says our guest Eboo Patel; he believes it is the most effective "youth program" in the world today. Eboo Patel is a 30-year-old American Muslim, a former Rhodes Scholar, who is out to change that. {This is an encore presentation of a program last broadcast in November 2005.} "Building Mutual Loyalty Among Different Religious People" So much of the news of recent years has a religious component, for good or ill, and often involving the young. Since I interviewed Eboo Patel, I watch this unfold with a Gwendolyn Brooks poem ringing in my ears — a poem that he has taken as his rallying cry. It is called "Boy Breaking Glass": "I shall create! If not a note, a hole. If not an overture, a desecration." I spoke with Eboo Patel a year ago, just before Muslim youth in suburban Paris began to set their neighborhoods on fire, and weeks after four young Muslim men walked into three subway stations and boarded one bus in London with bombs strapped to their bodies. More recently, 24 young men were arrested in Britain in the midst of plotting another devastating attack. In light of such events, Eboo Patel is puzzled by people who patronizingly describe his own projects as "sweet." He sees the work of honoring the vast spiritual longings and religious energies of the young of every faith as work of extreme urgency for us all. At 23, he founded the Interfaith Youth Core, now at work across America and in several countries. Patel himself is 30. He is ambitious, and his own energy is vast. He reminds me that heroic religious and social icons of the past century — such as Martin Luther King and Mahatma Gandhi — were in their 20's when they began to change the world. Moreover, as they transformed cultures less pluralistic than our own, these extraordinary reformers knew each other and worked together across traditions. Eboo Patel draws sustenance from "interfaith" images many of us have forgotten: Rabbi Abraham Joshua Heschel marching with Martin Luther King in Selma, saying that he felt as though his legs were praying; the Baptist minister King consulting with the Hindu Gandhi; and Gandhi sitting alongside the Pashtun Abdul Ghaffar Khan in Indian villages where Hindu-Muslim tensions threatened, reciting alternately from the Qur'an and the Bhagavad Gita, insisting that "the word of God" be heard. Yet of all the differences between Eboo Patel and his Catholic, Mormon, Hindu, and Jewish friends growing up in suburban Chicago, he says, personal religious beliefs were the most difficult to talk about. He believes there is a salutary and practical power in giving young people fluency in the depths of their own religious traditions and those of others. He does so by first engaging adolescents and young adults in ground-level interactions based on service to others. He calls this work "track two diplomacy." In many cultures, he has found, religious elders and leaders can be reluctant to engage openly with differing beliefs. But their children are open to meaningful interaction and the possibility of change. As sensible as that may sound, Eboo Patel's approach cuts somewhat against the grain of Western civic instincts and the enduring ideal of secular society. He has a great respect for evangelical Christians who want to convert him. He says educated Americans often wrongly suppose that in order to show respect for the beliefs of others, they must be discreet — even silent — about their own. In extreme measure, the French have attempted to prevent religious tensions by forbidding public expressions of religious identity. After the Paris riots began last summer, a school headmaster was quoted by the BBC as saying, "I did not want to know what their religion was — any more than I wanted them to know what mine was." Such an attitude, Patel believes, will fail us increasingly as our societies grow more pluralistic. And there is compelling global evidence that an alternative approach can yield dramatic benefit. In India, the political economist Ashutosh Varshney has studied why some cities remain relatively calm when Hindu-Muslim tensions rise and why others explode in violence. He found that the existence of civic associations to engage religious diversity could make that difference. Like other recent guests on Speaking of Faith, this young Muslim is dismayed by dismissive — even derisive — attitudes towards religious people often expressed in our most influential newspapers and journals. Eboo Patel's perspective and experience is as global as anyone I've interviewed, and he is supremely articulate on the futility of imagining that religion will somehow disappear. On the contrary, he says it will continue to play a robust role in every aspect of human endeavor. I like the language he uses to describe the world he is working for: one in which the next generation of the world's faithful are steeped in the best of their traditions and attentive to the best in others. He is committed to building not just cooperation, but "mutual loyalty," among different religious peoples. Eboo Patel convinces me that his is not an idealistic vision. It is a pragmatic and genuinely enlightened response to the world we now inhabit." | Get at Short URL | Download SOF: Religious Passion, Pluralism, and the Young (August 31, 2006) | Play in Popup.
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