Thursday, August 29, 2013

Recently on Dude, Sustainable!

Hi Everyone! From time to time, I like to talk about what we've been doing at Dude, Sustainable! Lots of good stuff, including Green Living Thursdays! Linky Party. This, our 17th edition, features a quick and easy guide to roasting garlic as well as great posts from across the blogosphere. If you'd like to stop by and share your favorite posts, we'd love to have you!

On Facebook, we asked bloggers to weigh-in on what their favorite Reddit "subreddit" for the environment was. The answer, at least according to me, was the /r/environment page for its scope and diversity.


Today's a good day, and with a visit from the family this weekend, we'll be busy. Hope you have a great weekend and if you're reading this from the Bay Area, avoid your car at all costs!


Robert Nelson is blogger-in-chief at Dude, Sustainable!. Find us on Google+ or on Facebook.

Wednesday, August 28, 2013

Sustainability Degrees at Harvard Online College

Harvard Extension School - Online Degrees in Sustainability (via Online Degrees in Sustainability)

As part of our ongoing effort to identify, evaluate and publicize online degree programs in sustainability, today we will be looking at the Harvard Extension School Sustainability and Environmental Management Graduate Degree Programs. The Harvard Extension…

Tuesday, August 27, 2013

Is Dentistry a Medieval Practice?

I've often wondered why, in the age of flouride-enriched water, people still go to the dentist. In my case, it's because my wife said "We have dental coverage and you need to go." Case closed, I suppose. Anyway, I've always equated dentistry with medieval style torture chambers, replete with metal instruments of varying size intended to poke and prod some of the more sensitive areas of the body in a successful effort to shame you into submission. I always come back swearing that this time, I'll brush three times every day and floss twice.

At the very least, the dentist who saw me this morning was a young person who didn't try to talk to me about some TV show in which vampires and zombies travel through time fighting crime. She actually asked me about my daughter while she attacked my gums with a metal hook. But the good news...great teeth. Again. Any thoughts, let me know!

Robert Nelson is blogger-in-chief at Dude, Sustainable!. Find us on Google+ or on Facebook.

Monday, August 26, 2013

The Making of the Modern World in the Long Eighteenth Century

The Making of the Modern World

in the Long Eighteenth Century

Both The Sinews of Power, by John Brewer, and The Creation of the Modern World, by Roy Porter, are concerned primarily with exploring the development of modernity within a British context; Porter explicitly so, by defining the British Enlightenment as the precursor to a modern, western value system, and Brewer implicitly so, by exploring the behind-the-scenes development of power in the British state. Before delving into their respective arguments, it may be useful to refer back to English Society 1660-1832, by J.C.D. Clark. In English Society, Clark challenges the assumption that the eighteenth century was a foment within which a modern world was created, and to a certain degree, challenges the definition of modernity itself. This report will explore the different ways in which Porter, Brewer and Clark view the eighteenth century with respect to modernity.

Clark, as we will recall, disputes the belief that English society in the eighteenth century was conscious of a progressive drive to modernize; according to Clark, they were rooted in the present. The nexus of the belief that English society was undergoing a process of modernization was actually a nineteenth century construct that attempted to define a new social order in relation to the old (Clark 2000: 14). In breaking down the barriers to modernity, Clark is echoing Bruno Latour in his book, We Were Never Modern, by defining modernity as a break from the old. In this definition, modernity is defined through a dichotomy between what is modern on the one hand, and what is not modern on the other hand (ancient, old, etc.) (Latour 1993: 10). For this reason, Clark sees no decisive break between the old order and the new order in the long eighteenth century; the old order actually survived through religion (the “confessional state”), political theory and high politics for much longer than has been traditionally perceived (Clark 2000: 2, 18).  Furthermore, Clark disputes that there was ever a coherent English Enlightenment, because English society in the eighteenth century could not possibly have perceived a coherent intellectual movement whose aim it was to break down the old order (Clark 2000: 9-10)

Roy Porter agrees with Clark in that there was no monolithic intellectual movement during this time; however, Clark posits that there was a “British Enlightenment”  that was a collection of diverse scientific, social and political theorists whose aim it was to modernize British Society (Porter 2000: 48). For Porter, it was these people who provided the great breaking point with the old order, for “the world they were making is the one we have inherited.”  (Porter 2000: xxii). Porter defends the idea of a British Enlightenment by pointing both outward, to the respect given to British thinkers of the time, and inward, to the diffusion of ideas through collective conversation and the print media. The British Enlightenment was first and foremost a defense of 1688 against its critics, but this defense was also instrumental in the permeation of ideas like “basic personal freedoms, and the worth of tolerance, knowledge, education and opportunity”  (Porter 2000: xxii). Furthermore, it was not merely theoretical, but practical in that it encouraged “ schools, hospitals, urban renewal, communications, print media, commercialism and consumerism” (Porter 2000: 14). One can see here the importance of science in the Newtonian and Baconian senses. The development of a market economy and consumerism is of central importance to enlightened thinkers in Britain, who adamantly defended individualism and with it, the pursuit of private property, private pleasures and social advancement. It this individualism and consumerism that was the impetus for reform and the desire to modernize (Porter 2000: 17, 384). Porter’s book is extraordinarily optimistic in the sense that, contrary to what is put forth by Clark, the result of the work enlightened minds who engaged themselves in a systematic, spirited, and practical defense of the new liberties against the darkness of the “Old Corruption,” is the emergence of a modern world with which we associate.

John Brewer is slightly more subtle in stance in that he avoids using the words modern or modernity, presumably to avoid becoming embroiled in this conflict; however, The Sinews of Power is written in the same tradition as Porter’s The Creation of the Modern World in that it attempts to define the development of a different British State. Brewer attempts to define the emergence of a strong, centralized and efficient British state as the rational response to the cataclysmic upheavals of the late seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. This response was the development of a bureaucracy that was capable of supporting ever-larger military and imperial ambitions through the mundane work of clerks, tax collectors and bankers (Brewer 1988: 27). In this manner, it was taxation and collection, public deficit finance, civil administration and the diffusion of public knowledge which created the order which was to last at least until 1945, if not to the present day. Although he is never explicit in terming this order a modern one, the structure of his argument suggests the emergence of a nascent modernity during the long eighteenth century.

Brewer and Porter both see the emergence of modernity as a direct response to the political, social and cultural changes of the long eighteenth century. For Brewer, the change was most importantly one that was a fiscal and organizational response to upheavals, war and a changing global climate. For Porter, the change was intellectual and personal, and had everything to do with practical innovations in science and communication.  Both start with very clear superstructures; Porter’s is the belief in liberalism, freedom, education and individualism, while Brewer’s is the powerful, efficient and centralized British states. Both historians make remarkably parallel arguments, and therefore, are subject to the same criticisms; namely, that their positive outlook on the development of ideas and institutions are naïvely anachronistic, and that they obscure the complex countercurrents of history (Porter, nevertheless, acknowledges his anachronism and seems to delight in it).

When seen in relation to their mentor Jack Plumb, both John Brewer and Roy Porter can be identified as liberal and modern, in contrast to the conservative post-modern (or anti-modern) leanings of J.C.D. Clark who forms a powerful opposition to Brewer and Porter. Both seem to be largely constructionist, as opposed to Clark, who tends towards a deconstruction of any idea of a coherent modernity, attempting to replace it with a panoply of different, fundamentally opposed perceptions of modernity (Joyce, 214). There seems to be no question as to the classification of the Brewer and Porter, but as for Clark, the question remains as whether he could be a post-modernist if he does not believe in modernity as such in the first place. Should one then, as Bruno Latour suggests, refer to him as an anti-modern (Latour)? This further raises the question of whether labels of this sort are useful or whether they actually obscure fundamental differences within the groups.

Although I have attempted to define the central arguments of these books many important questions exist and will be useful to anyone who wishes to pursue this topic any further. So, for your reading pleasure I have included a set of guide questions that I believe are important to understand the books in their individual and comparative sense.

  • What is modernity, and did it ever exist?
  • If so, is it a teleological error to look for the roots of modernity in any particular time frame, especially in an age that was in many ways unlike our own?
  • Furthermore, given that both Brewer and Porter have a relatively narrow focus of what created the modern world and broke from the old, what then is the significance of other developments, such as the economic developments associated with capitalism or the development of industry?
  • Is the upheaval of the long eighteenth century described by Porter and Brewer sufficient as a prologue to the development of modernity?
  • Both Clark and Porter believe that enlightened thinking in Britain largely proceeded within the framework of the Protestant church; how then, do Porter and Clark reconcile their differences with respect to the British Enlightenment? Is Clark’s “confessional state” and Porter’s British Enlightenment mutually exclusive?
  • Was there such a thing as the British Enlightenment?  
  • Does Porter’s generally positive treatment of enlightened thinkers gloss over potentially negative consequences of the Enlightenment?
  • Does Porter overestimate the degree to which the British polity were aware of the intellectual developments of their day?
  • How does Porter’s practical and pragmatic Enlightenment compare to the more theoretical Enlightenment of the continent?
  • Does Brewer adequately differentiate institutional change in Britain with institutional change on the continent?

Saturday, August 24, 2013

Starbucks at 6am on Saturday

Did you know that Starbucks opens at 5am? I didn't know there was such a thing as a 5 in the morning, let alone that other people knew about this. Anyhow, a chance occurrence, a noise outside my bedroom window woke me up at 545am and encouraged me to do the things I should probably be doing on Saturday anyway. Get up, grab a coffee, work and water my community garden. So here I am, checking off #2 on the list. With only a few more to go!

Hope you're all having a wonderful Saturday!


Friday, August 23, 2013

Catching Up On Last Season of "The West Wing"

One of the perks of being a stay-at-home Dad, Graduate Student and Blogger is that, from time to time, when you're just hanging around and trying to get things done around the house is that you can catch up on old TV shows you never watched through the first time. Used to be, daytime TV was a wasteland of soap operas and talk shows. Didn't have much choice. Nowadays, you can skip network and cable tv and head straight for the good stuff on Netflix!

That's right...every season of Aaron Sorkin's The West Wing is up on Netflix to be browsed at your leisure. Currently, I'm on the final season, Season 7, watching the "live" debate between Congressman Matt Santos and Senator Arnold Vinick. It's odd, because the issues they raise (healthcare, gun control, tax policy) are spoken about in terms that are still very much relevant today. It's only been six or so years since this season was released, but seriously, how many bigger issues do we have facing us today? Climate Change, to be sure, has grown leaps and bounds in the consciousness of mankind, but we're still rehearsing the same debates they were presenting so many years ago. One, it's a testament to how good of a show it was, but on the other hand, it's a little sad that we couldn't come to more definitive conclusions on the issues important during the waning years of Bush II.

Thursday, August 22, 2013

About the Sustainable Dude

Hi, I'm Robert, the editor-in-chief, blogger-in-chief, and really, the main guy behind the curtain at dudesustainable.com. I decided, as a diversion (and because I love blogging so much) that I would start my own personal blog. Hence, sustainable dude. Because it's different from Dude, Sustainable! Or is it?

Anyway, I like to blog about the environment, sustainability, global warming, alternative energy, gardening, and new, Online Colleges! Why? Because these things all have something in common...they are part and parcel of the most important issue of our day. 

We're not going to hell in a handbasket, and we're not going to make the world implode, but we have made quite a mess of it so far. The industrial revolution has done two things to our world (if you're going to boil it down). It's brought us unimaginable wealth, prosperity and material comfort, the likes of which were totally unforseen even 213 years ago, with the publication of Thomas Malthus An Essay on the Principles of Population. And while that may be the case, it's also created the present unsustainable situation; human beings are outgrowing their ability to live in their environment the way it existed in the pre-industrial era. We need solutions if we are to maintain our current standard of living, because if we allow climate change to disrupt our plantet's economic, social and political orders, then we are in trouble. 

So I have chosen my contribution to the debate. I'm going to talk about it, and I'm going to talk about it publicly (or at least as public as this blog becomes). I've been doing it for six months over at our other site, and here's what we've covered so far:
Come visit our parent site, Dude, Sustainable! We blog about green issues and topics in sustainability. The environment, global warming and online colleges who offer degrees in sustainability! Here's what's trending now!
Green living and green blogging. This is the most important thing we do! We specialize in bringing together environmentalists and social network users to share their message and network with their friends, family and colleagues on important issues! Why? Because the green movement was born of organization, and the internet has a capacity to dramatically amplify our message, but it's also atomized us to an extent. Name one environmental site with the reach of a CNN or Fox News. You can't. You can only name the thousands to hundreds of thousands of independent bloggers plugging away. Let's take a page from someone who once said, "Workers of the World Unite!" and become "Environmentalists of the World Wide Web, Unite!"

Build Your Own GreenhouseWe love to blog about gardening. We have a very special post, my own personal experience with building my own greenhouse. Helps you garden year-round, and best of all, live a sustainable life! Why? Because you should care about where your food comes from, and if it comes from your back yard, then you know exactly where it came from, how it was grown, and significantly, what's in it!

Strawberry - Inspired by an NPR story, we'd like to start hunting down heirloom fruits, starting with the little-known heirloom strawberry! Why the strawberry? Because it's delicious, that's why!

Go Green at home, on the road and everywhere you go! Use this guide to going green, our "Easy steps to go green" resource page to structure your life around sustainable practices. We're going to transform those articles into e-books within a matter of a few weeks, so stay tuned and open your wallets a little to support our cause!

Be Green with our sustainable living resources page. So my site isn't for you? These ones certainly will be! The best environmental blogs and news sites out there, green living blogs, government resources and fun things to do! Come check it out!

We'd love to have you visit Dude, Sustainable! Just one click away!

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