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Towards a Commons culture

Towards a Commons culture

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Paul Krafel, author of Shifting, Nature's Way of Change, teaches about a dimension of possibilities for life, a space of positive and negative feedback loops. A naturalist, educator and charter school founder, Paul Krafel explains how this dimension of possibilities for life can help us navigate dread and avoid time lag traps. His decades of careful observation reveal deep natural patterns that can help us navigate the fog of present times.The Interview was inspired by Krafel’s article Toward a Commons culture. Watch this episode on YouTubeListen to this episode:Apple PodcastsSpotifyPocket CastsRSS FeedThemes:Rain Walks & Upward Spirals: Paul’s practice of small landscape interventions to slow water runoff and regenerate land.The Commons Culture: How natural systems, from soil formation to beaver dams, create shared abundance.Thermodynamics & Life: Understanding how energy and flow shape ecosystems and human societies.Decentralization & Resilience: Why smaller, self-organized systems often outperform large, centralized ones.Hope as a Strategy: The psychological and systemic shifts needed to counter societal dread and build a future of shared possibility.Timestamps:• 00:00 — Opening & Welcome• 00:33 — Sponsor & Host’s Backstory• 01:49 — Introducing Paul Krafel & The Vision of the Commons• 03:09 — The Raindrop Metaphor• 05:00 — Rain Walks & Shifting Mindsets• 11:06 — Life Lessons from Rain Walks• 14:54 — Work as Joy & The Second Law of Thermodynamics• 18:14 — Defining the Commons• 21:10 — Feedback Spirals vs. Feedback Loops• 24:37 — Four Strategies to Increase Life’s Possibilities — Part 1• 33:24 — Four Strategies — Part 2• 37:16 — Work, Play & Commons Culture• 41:37 — Hope vs. Dread & Shifting Orientation• 47:02 — Decentralization & Local Empowerment• 51:09 — Time Lags in Systems Change• 55:28 — Design Patterns for Managing the Commons• 57:28 — Consequences Awareness & Education• 59:05 — The Staten Island Ferry Metaphor & Enoughness• 01:00:51 – ClosingResources & References:📖 Shifting: Nature’s Way of Change – Paul Krafel:https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/2876220-shifting📜 Toward a Commons Culture – Paul Krafel’s essay on shifting systemic patterns:https://roamingupward.net/toward-a-commons-culture/#Toward-a-Commons-culture📚 Elinor Ostrom – Nobel Prize-winning economist on commons governance:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elinor_OstromTranscript Paul Krafel (00:00.088)For me, the commons is anything that did not exist before life appeared that has now an existence partly through the efforts of life and that helped make more possibilities for life.Narrator - Clara CheminWelcome to Entangled Futures with Lucas Tauil, where we explore mutuality and conversations towards a world that works for everyone.Lucas Tauil (00:33.602)This episode is brought to you by the Holochain Foundation. Holochain is creating technology that allows people to team up, share information and solve their own problems without needing a middleman. Creating carriers that cannot be captured, Holochain enables privacy and holds space for innovation and mutuality. I first came across the project in 2018.during my journey into participative culture with Unsparil. My good friend, Hailey Cooperider, pointed me to the green paper and I was blown away by the vision of a local first decentralized internet. I worked for five years on the project and feel very grateful for the support with the show. Enjoy it.Lucas Tauil (01:49.4)Today we welcome Paul Krafel, a naturalist, educator, and charter school founder. Krafel is the author of Shifting, Nature's Way of Change. His decades of careful observation reveal deep natural patterns that can help us navigate the fog of present times. Paul Krafel teaches about a dimension of possibilities for life, a space of positive and negative feedback loops that either increase or deplete life's potential. Acknowledging this dimension and being intentional about it can help us navigate complexity and foster a commons culture, a collective ethic that might turn the tide and heal the pervasive dread and lack of hope we experience in the face of systemic challenges. Welcome, Paul.I'm honored to have you with us.Paul KrafelI'm looking forward to this. Thank you for inviting me.Lucas TauilSuch a treat to have you here. Paul, if you had to choose one image that best expresses your vision of a common sculpture, what would it be?Paul Krafel (03:09.6)It would be the moment that raindrops touch the ground. There's two paths open to that raindrop. One is to soak into the soil, later be pulled up through the roots and contribute to photosynthesis that would create more leaf surface area to absorb more of the sun's energy. And also some of that water would be transpired back into the sky.fall again as rain or settle each night as dew, increasing the amount of water that's available for life. And when the plant ...
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