Understanding How Trophic Cascades Shape our World

Trophic cascades are powerful indirect interactions that can control entire ecosystems, occurring when predators in a food web suppress the abundance or alter the behavior of their prey, thereby releasing the next lower trophic level from predation (or herbivory if the intermediate trophic level is a herbivore). For example, if the abundance of large piscivorous fish is increased in a lake, the abundance of their prey, smaller fish that eat zooplankton, should decrease. The resulting increase in zooplankton should, in turn, cause the biomass of its prey, phytoplankton, to decrease.

The trophic cascade is an ecological concept which has stimulated new research in many areas of ecology. For example, it can be important for understanding the knock-on effects of removing top predators from food webs, as humans have done in many places through hunting and fishing.

A top-down cascade is a trophic cascade where the food chain or food web is disrupted by the removal of a top predator, or a third or fourth level consumer. On the other hand, a bottom-up cascade occurs when a primary producer, or primary consumer is removed, and there is a reduction of population size through the community. Predator removal can affect the ecosystem at either the population level (keeping the ecosystem functioning despite a shift in species composition) or the community level (in which case there is a risk of loss of ecosystem functioning and thus ecosystem service delivery).

– from https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trophic_cascade

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Selected Presentations on the Anthropocene and the Sustainable Development Goals by Professor Johan Rockström

EAT Published on Jun 11, 2018 Amid increasing willingness to transform the global food system and the capacity to feed a growing world population edging towards 10 billion people, Johan Rocsktröm and Sania Nishtar warn of troubling trends. Johan Rockström’s struggle with a hoarse and much reduced voice became a fitting reflection of the state… Read More

Music Festival: Not For Children! by Dr Patrick Martin, MD

Music Festival: Not For Children! Patrick Martin, MD June 28th 2018 It is high time the hazardous practice of exposing the Federation’s youngest to adult entertainment be interdicted. Kudos to the Music Festival Committee for daring to be different and issuing sage advice to parents to keep their children out of the party. The perils… Read More

Xin (The Heart-Mind) and Feeling Tones: A Unifying Systems Theory Framework

“In Chinese philosophy, xin can refer to one’s “disposition” or “feelings” (Chinese: 心; pinyin: xīn), or to one’s confidence or trust in something or someone (Chinese: 信; pinyin: xìn). Literally, xin (心) refers to the physical heart, though it is sometimes translated as “mind” as the ancient Chinese believed the heart was the center of human cognition. For this reason, it is also sometimes translated as “heart-mind”. It has a connotation of intention, yet can be used to refer to long-term goals.[1] Xunzi, an important early Confucian thinker, considered xin (心) to be cultivated during one’s life, in contrast to innate qualities of xing (Chinese: 性; pinyin: xìng), or human nature.[2]

A Daoist view, specifically from the philosopher Zhuangzi, understands xin (心) as being socialized, with environmental pressures influencing personal intentions, sometimes in such a way that can provoke disagreements and conflict. While a Confucian might take heart that xin (心) may be cultivated in order to develop de, or moral virtue, Zhuangzi considered this socialization as detrimental to one’s personal nature, somewhat along the lines of the later French philosopher, Jean-Jacques Rousseau. However, unlike Rousseau, René Descartes and many other Enlightenment-era European philosophers following the classical example of Plato, emotion and reason were not considered separate entities, but rather as coextensive; xin (心) itself is a concept that is as much cognitive as emotional.[3][4] Read More

WAYS OF UNIVERSAL LIFE: THE TAO, HUMAN HEARTEDNESS, ZEN and JESUS by Prof John McMurtry

Summary: This philosophical analysis lays bare the defining and transformative principles of Taoism, Confucianism, Mohism, and Zen Buddhism as spiritual philosophies with contrasts and comparisons including the original Jesus. Explanation focuses on primary sources, principled capacities to relate to the eco-social life-ground, and implied ways of universal life.

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Are there alternatives to our present theories of physical reality? by Peter Rowlands

Our notions of what is physically ‘real’ have long been based on the idea that the real is what is immediately apprehended, that is the local or observable, the physically tangible, though there has always been an alternative philosophical notion that the ‘real’ is some kind of ontological structure beyond immediate apprehension, and so inaccessible through physics. However, quantum mechanics, with its intrinsic nonlocal correlations, has seemingly left us with a dilemma by showing that fundamental physical theories cannot be both real and local. Reality cannot be reconstructed as a deterministic projection from physical observations. Many people think that the problem lies with quantum mechanics, but, in fact, it is more likely to be a result of unrealistic expectations. We have assumed that fundamental physics ought to be compatible with normal (macroscopic) experience. If, however, we go beyond our current high-level physical theories to the basic elements from which they are constructed, we see that a pattern emerges that gives us a very different and much more coherent understanding of what is meant by physical ‘reality’. Read More

Resetting to the Cosmological Life-Ground via Subquantum Kinetics of the Transmuting Ether

“The time will inevitably come when mechanistic and atomic thinking will be put out of the minds of all people of wisdom, and instead dynamics and chemistry will come to be seen in all phenomena. When that happens, the divinity of living Nature will unfold before our eyes all the more clearly.” Johann von Goethe,… Read More

In Conversation: Jeremy Lent and David Korten

Reproduced from: http://davidkorten.org/in-conversation-jeremy-lent-and-david-korten/ This conversation was recorded on Feb. 25, 2018, at Eagle Harbor Book Company on Bainbridge Island, WA. Jeremy Lent is the author of The Patterning Instinct: A Cultural History of Humanity’s Search for Meaning (Prometheus Books, 2017). The video has been organized as a series of 13 short, 2- to 6-minute clips, with… Read More

‘Finding Prosperity’ by John Fullerton

Reproduced from: http://capitalinstitute.org/blog/finding-prosperity/ May 8, 2018 With the tenth anniversary of Lehman Brothers’ collapse around the corner, economists are talking again about a “Goldilocks” economy – just right. Employment statistics appear strong, reported inflation remains in check, and the stock market is near all-time highs. Yet America is in the grip of despair, with ever clear… Read More

‘Introduction to Liology’ by Jeremy Lent

Reproduced from: http://www.liology.org/presentations.html Introduction to Liology This presentation was given by Liology Institute founder, Jeremy Lent, to a Liology Gathering in Nicasio, CA, in September 2013.  It’s a great way to get an a basic understanding of liology in less than half an hour. The Principles of the Practice of Liology This video offers a deeper… Read More