Tom Smith: Here's an essay dealing with permaculture, civilization, agriculture and the ancient Chinese philosophy of daoism (commonly known as Taoism in the West). Notes and bibliography are found right at the bottom.
The links between these areas and a critique of civilization are, in my opinion, very real. For example, John Zerzan has referred to Permaculture as one possible transitional tool in the move away from civilization, while he has also spoken of Daoism not unfavourably, as the essay below will show.
The links between these areas and a critique of civilization are, in my opinion, very real. For example, John Zerzan has referred to Permaculture as one possible transitional tool in the move away from civilization, while he has also spoken of Daoism not unfavourably, as the essay below will show.
Self-So and
Self-Sow: An Exploration of the Parallels between Permaculture and Daoism
“The
increasing desolation of nature, the exhaustion of resources, the uneasiness
and disintegration of the human spirit, all have been brought about by
humanity’s trying to accomplish something. Originally there was no reason to
progress, and nothing that had to be done. We have come to the point at which
there is no other way than to bring about a “movement” not to bring anything
about.”
Masanobu
Fukuoka (1978: p.158)
Daoism, according to Nelson (2009:
p.294), “offers a philosophical basis for a non-reductive naturalistic ethics
in the widest sense of these words.” However, Wawrytko (2005) points out that
philosophical daoism, even when deemed to be of ecological relevance[1], suffers
consistent denials that its principles can be implemented in practice. Using core tenets of daoism, such as wu wei and ziran, this essay shall argue that permaculture – first established
in Australia but now with a worldwide presence – is a transformative practice
with its roots found firmly in daoist thought. Initially, some reasons for arguing that
permaculture is not an adequate
reflection of dao, are discussed and
problematised. Then, reasons are outlined for arguing that permaculture is in
fact a remarkably widespread expression of (daoist) philosophy as a way of life
in the 21st century.
---
Permaculture, somewhat like dao, is a non-static concept which is
difficult, to the point of being impossible, to define in text [2]. It was,
however, founded in the 1970s by two Australians, Bill Mollison and David
Holmgren, as “an integrated, evolving system of perennial or self-perpetuating
plant and animal species useful to man” (Holmgren, 2002; p.xix).
The term itself was initially a
contraction of permanent agriculture,
indicating a new[3]
perennial polycultural form of food production[4],
contrasted with the short-lived, core annual crops such as wheat, rice and
corn, the big three which now comprise the majority of the world’s calorific
intake (Bruinsma, 2003).
Conventional annual-based
agriculture (be it organic or chemical-based), is posited in permaculture thought
to be a leading historical cause of ecological destruction and civilisational
collapse, depending as it does on anthropocentric subjugation of the natural
world, natural habitat destruction and expropriation, de-forestation, release
of soil carbon through ploughing, leaching of soil nutrients from exposed
topsoil and other impacts (Diamond, 2006; Dale & Gill Carter, 1955;
Ponting, 1991; Holmgren, 2011). As Dale and Gill Carter (1955:p.3) state, “with
the progress of civilization, man has learned many skills, but only rarely has
he learned to preserve his source of food. Paradoxically, the very achievements
of civilized man have been the most important factors in the downfall of
civilizations.” Along this line of thought, leading permaculture writer and
teacher, Toby Hemenway (2006), provocatively titled one of his essays with the
question “Is Sustainable Agriculture an Oxymoron?”
The growth in permaculture, as a
grass-roots ecological movement, since its foundation has been rapid, with one
of the few academic papers engaging the concept (Veteto & Lockyer, 2008)
citing estimations that there are now 100,000 trained permaculture
practitioners around the world. It has now also expanded as a concept, broadly symbolising
permanent culture, rather than just permanent agriculture (Holmgren, 2002). In
this latest formulation, it is has become a holistic design system for
sustainable human settlements, comprising food, fibre and energy provision for
local needs (Ibid.).
With the fundamental concept of
permaculture outlined, it’s apt to now explore (and ultimately negate) two evident
reasons for positing that permaculture is not, in fact, a grassroots expression
of daoist philosophy in practice.
Anthropocentrism
The discussion of permaculture above
could be deemed anthropocentric on initial examination, contrasting with the
firm non-anthropocentrism of Daoism seen, for example, in chapter 5 of the Daodejing:
Heaven
and earth are not humane.
They regard the ten thousand things as
straw dogs.
The
sage is not humane.
He regards all the people as straw dogs.
The early definition of
permaculture, citing the utilisation of species “useful to man”, and discussing only human
settlements, appears barely removed from ‘natural’ or organic agriculture and
sustainable planning approaches. This however, is to do an injustice to
concept’s deeper significance which, when carried out correctly, allows us to “withdraw
from much of the agricultural landscape, and allow natural systems to flourish”
(Mollison, 1988: p.7).
Indeed, the zoning approach in
permaculture design (fig. 1) is less about an entire “withdrawal” and rather
about cultivating and re-establishing tangible relationships between human
settlements and non-human nature, blurring the nature/human dichotomy which has
been so prevalent in Western philosophy going back at least to ancient Greece
(e.g. see Plumwood, 1993), but absent in daoist thought. “Nature and society,”
adds Nelson (2009: p.305) on this topic, “are not divided into unconnected
opposites, and their mutuality implies that harming one equally harms the
other.”

Fig. 1 – The Permaculture Zoning Approach
In one of the first systematic
texts on forest gardening[5], written
by leading permaculture instructor Patrick Whitefield (1996), the
non-anthropocentricity inherent in permacultural methods becomes explicit:
We have
no right ever to design a garden without making provision for wild plants and
animals. We humans are only one species on the earth, and all the others have
as much right to thrive and prosper as we do (p.9).
Permaculture also draws on
indigenous Australian knowledge as a “primary source” (Holmgren, 2011), coming
to many conclusions regarding the place of Homo
Sapiens in nature which are starkly reminiscent of daoist thought:
For
every scientific statement articulated on energy, the Aboriginal tribespeople
of Australia have an equivalent statement on life. Life, they say, is a
totality neither created nor destroyed. It can be imagined as an egg from which
all tribes (life forms) issue and to which all return. The ideal way in which
to spend one’s time is in the perfection of the expression of life, to lead the
most evolved life possible, and to assist in and celebrate the existence of
life forms other than humans, for all come from the same egg (Mollison,
1988: p.2).
For Fukuoka (1978), author of one
of the foundational texts of the permaculture movement, The One-Straw Revolution[6],
the form of cultivation he developed was a negation of the common belief that “there
is nothing more splendid than human intelligence, that human beings are
creatures of special value, and that their creations and accomplishments as
mirrored in culture and history are wondrous to behold” (p.4). Thus, while focusing
on sustainably feeding and housing humans, permaculture is so practically and
philosophically qualitatively distinct from agriculture, that to deem it
anthropocentric is as grave a misunderstanding as those who reduce daoism “to
calculations and techniques of longevity and self-perfection reflecting in the
end an anthropocentric and egotistical self-interest oblivious to plants and
animals and the environment” (Nelson, 2009: p.295)
On Ethical Stringency
In one of the few overt statements
of daoist influence, Bill Mollison (1988: p.3) says that, “for the sake of the
earth itself,” in permaculture he “evolved a philosophy close to Taoism” from his
“experiences with natural systems.”
Despite this, a legitimate
objection could be posed that, as a conscious design system premised
increasingly on design principles (most commonly used are the twelve principles
formulated in David Holmgren’s Permaculture)
and the core permaculture ethical norms of Earth Care, People Care and Fair
Share[7],
permaculturists are drowning under normative prescriptions which the Daoist
sage would surely balk at. After all, as stated by Nelson (2009), “classical
Daoist texts seem to reject “ethics,” provided that ethics consists of rules,
norms, and conventions organizing hierarchical and authority-driven social
relations.”As opposed to taking inspiration from the preconscious state of the
infant, a metaphor seen in the Daodejing
and Chuang-Tzu’s Inner Chapters, permaculture
instead ostensibly aims to cultivate “mature ethical behaviour” (Mollison,
1988: p.3)[8].
A possible pathway beyond this
problematization is contained, however, in David Holmgren’s (2002, p.xxvi)
assertion that “Permaculture principles, both ethical and design, may be observed
operating all around us.” The promethean culture of civilization, which now
dominates well over half the world’s land area[9] (Kareiva
et al, 2007) exclusively for human
ends, must be mitigated, if just for the sake of the 150-200 species going
extinct every day according to UN estimates. Lives, both human and non-human
are being lost, the ecosphere degraded, and permaculture principles are perhaps
a mere urgent expression of what would be hoped to become pre-conscious[10] processes
in a world embodying dao.
This, in some ways, is analogous to
the writing of that which cannot be expressed in writing - the Daodejing itself. John Zerzan’s interpretation (2008) tells us
that in the “context of severe technological and political change...Taoism was
an activist religion...on a collision course with the demands of higher
civilization in China”. It was thus written as an urgent response to the
transgressions of its day, in a similar fashion to that in which permaculture
is formulated today.
According to John Gray (2002:
p.113), “in Taoist thought, the good life comes spontaneously, but spontaneity
is far from simply acting on the impulses that occur to us...It means acting
dispassionately, on the basis of an objective view of the situation at
hand...Seeing clearly means not projecting our goals into the world; acting
spontaneously means acting according to the needs of the situation.” Indeed,
the principles themselves when analyzed closely are expressions of this
interpretation of the Dao: primarily, observe and interact. Then apply
self-regulation and accept feedback, produce no waste, design from patterns to
details, integrate rather than segregate, use small and slow solutions, use and
value diversity, use edges and value the marginal, creatively use and respond
to change.
Critically, permaculture doesn’t
create exogenous moral codes to be imposed by some external force, instead
obeying patterns seen, from extended observation and contemplation, to be
immanent in the natural world. These patterns are deemed useless if merely
theorised, and permaculture is about applying principles immanent in nature as
a way of life. Holmgren (2002: p.xxv) argues forcefully, and in a way analogous
to the embodied practice of eastern philosophies, that it is “hard for us to
proceed very far with ethical frameworks without at the same time acting in the
real world to develop ourselves as whole persons. The dangers of isolation of
philosophical thought from an integrated existence are as great as the dangers
of ignorance of the history of philosophy and ethics.”
Now, having put these two misgivings – on
anthropocentrism and ethical prescriptions – aside, it’s time to examine some
core daoist ideas which relate permaculture to some of the oldest philosophical
texts in Chinese thought: ziran, wu wei
and the question of permanence.
Ziran (自然)
The
Dao generates them,
Nourishes
them,
Lets
them grow,
Accompanies
them,
Rests
them,
Secures
them,
Fosters
them,
Protects
them.
Generating
without possessing,
Acting
without depending,
Rearing
without ordaining:
This
is called dark efficacy.
Daodejing, Chapter 51
A plethora of translations of ziran exist, including “so on its own,”
“so of itself,” what is spontaneously so,” “that which is naturaly so,” (Yu,
2008) and “self-so” (Moeller, 2007). The “central importance” (Ibid: p.62) of
this concept is seen in Chapter 25 of the daodejing:
Humans
follow the earth as a rule.
The
earth follows heaven as a rule.
Heaven
follows the Dao as a rule.
The
Dao follows its self-so as a rule.
Moeller’s commentary suggests that
“there is nothing “behind” the Dao. The Dao is simply the course of nature that
goes on by itself.” Such a characterisation is the antithesis of agriculture,
which has always had fragmentation of any spontaneous, naturally-occurring
landscapes as its driving force, replacing them with non-naturally occurring
species, and in its latest manifestation, has had the overwhelming energy of
fossil fuels “behind” it to aid the advance of civilization to a global scale.
Permaculture, in contrast, takes this “most fundamental operational principle
of the natural world” (Yu, 2008: p.4) – the principle of self-transformation
and spontaneity - as the desideratum.
Fukuoka (1978: p.13) expounds his
conviction that “crops grow themselves and should not have to be grown” and
“that everything should be left to take its natural course.” Anyone who has
ever spent prolonged periods actively growing their own food (even
‘organically’) knows just how demanding it can be physically, and also
precarious regarding yield and the vagaries of pests and diseases. Incessant
weeding, for example, is necessary to protect delicate domesticates which
appear to have lost any semblance of true spontaneity. If they were allowed to
be “self-so,” they would quickly perish under a mass of ziran (in the form of ‘weeds’) and the grower would quickly go
hungry. It’s for this reason that Hemenway (2001) asks “why is gardening so
much work?” He is explicit about the ‘un-naturalness’ of even contemporary
organic horticulture:
Nature
abhors bare soil, large blocks of a single plant type, and vegetation that’s
all the same height and root depth. Nature doesn’t till, either. About the only
time soil is disturbed in the wild is when a tree topples and its upturned
roots churn the earth. Yet our gardens are virtual showcases of all these
unnatural methods. Not to mention our broad-scale pesticide use and chemical
fertilizer (p.7).
Permaculture techniques, such as
forest gardening, by way of contrast, aim for low labour intensity (to be explored
further in the next section) and work with, not against, a range of nature’s
spontaneous processes. The ecological principle of natural succession, for
example, whereby bare soil evolves in a variety of stages to climax vegetation
(e.g. mature woodland) is factored into designs of forest gardens. Temperate
forest gardening ultimately aims to mimic the structure of the climax
vegetation of specific regions (in the case of the UK and Ireland, temperate
forest) knowing that what grows naturally there will be inherently adaptable
and ecologically sensible.
Such a forest isn’t artificially
and instantaneously imposed on a landscape, either. It gradually evolves
through complex interactions and the specifics of the local bioregion - with
symbiosis, synergy and “crop guilds[11]” being
encouraged at every interval (Jacke & Toensmeier, 2005). Furthermore, the
crops used are often robust and undomesticated enough to be literally
self-sowing. ‘Weeds’ is the description usually put on such crops by the
discriminating mind[12], with
the irony being that when weeding a conventional bed, it’s often the case that
what is removed is perfectly edible[13] (e.g.
fat hen, hairy bittercress, dandelion, burdock, nettles), but is there of its
own volition, not the volition of humans.
Pruning is an example worth
dwelling on here, used to portray this principle in The One-Straw Revolution. Fukuoka recounts how his early
non-interventionist philosophy (perhaps analogous to the quietist reading of dao) led him initially to refrain from
pruning his father’s established orchard in order to allow the trees to grow
naturally. However, leaving an already un-natural setup to its own devices
ended in disaster, “the trees were attacked by insects and almost two acres of
mandarin orange trees withered and died.” Fukuoka (1978: p.16-17) uses comparisons
with contemporary society to indicate what provoked such disaster:
Doctors
and medicine become necessary when people create a sickly environment. Formal
schooling has no intrinsic value, but becomes necessary when humanity creates a
condition in which one must become “educated” to get along...To the extent that
trees deviate from their natural form, pruning and insect extermination become
necessary; to the extent that human society separates itself from a life close
to nature, schooling becomes necessary. In nature, formal schooling has no
function.
Thus, from this point forth, as
would be apt in daoist thought, he asks himself constantly “what is the natural
pattern?” After many failures, he finally started to recognize the patterning
of ziran or discovered, as Mollison
(1988: p.3) terms permaculture in a passage remarkably reminiscent of daoism, “a
philosophy of working with rather than against nature; of protracted and
thoughtless action; of looking at systems and people in all their functions,
rather than asking only one yield of them; and of allowing systems to
demonstrate their own evolutions.”
On a field trip by the author in
2011 to the Agroforestry Research Trust in Devon, UK - widely deemed to be the most
well-established contemporary example of a temperate forest garden - red
currants posed themselves as a comparable example. Normally, currant bushes are
kept neatly pruned and confined to a meticulously-weeded soft-fruit area.
However, in the forest garden, no pruning was deemed necessary (with, as in
Fukuoka’s case, no evident consequences for yield). As the forest developed and
changed, the currants spontaneously spread and moved along the edge of the
‘forest,’ adapting in relation to their surroundings over time, as they would
do in their natural forest edge environment (Fig. 2).
Fig. 2 –
Martin Crawford (author of How to Create
a Forest Garden) of the Agroforestry Research Trust explaining the spontaneity
of his red currant bushes.
Wu Wei (無爲)
“Putting
“doing nothing” into practice is the one thing the farmer should strive to
accomplish. Lao Tzu spoke of non-active nature, and I think that if he were a
farmer he would certainly practice natural farming.”
Fukuoka (1978: p.119)
Perhaps the most obvious congruence
between adherence to dao and practice
of permaculture is in the daoist principle of wu wei or ‘non-action’. Fukuoka (1978) famously termed his farming
method “do-nothing” farming, and permaculture itself seeks always to use
nature’s rhythms to lessen the burden of work which made itself manifest with
the agricultural revolution[14].
Non-action in Daoism is a nuanced
term and, like “do-nothing” farming, doesn’t mean literal exemption from
engagement and action but rather an absence of “purposeful action guided by a
certain conventional value” (Yu, 2008). As seen from Fukuoka’s orchard anecdote
above, simply withdrawing immediately, while not excluded from the range of
possibility, can often have devastating consequences. Mollison (1978) too
acknowledges the bind we’re in by saying that we could ”perish by our own
inaction” should we take the term too literally.
Chapter 29 of the Daodejing is one of the most explicit
statements of the importance of non-action[15]:
If
one wants to take hold of the world,
And
act on it-
I
see that he will not succeed.
Well,
The
world is a sacred vessel,
And
not something that can be acted on.
Those
who act on things will be defeated by them.
Those
who take things in their hands will lose them.
Rather than directly intervening,
as civilized humanity has for 10,000 years, to remake the world in its domesticated
image; Daoism advocates a radical simplification of action, and a removal of
unnecessary intervention. Daodejing
(chapter 32) clarifies this by advocating “mastery of cessation” or of “knowing
when to stop” (zhi zhi).
Seamlessly in accordance with this,
Fukuoka (1978: p.15) comes to a philosophical approach which asks “How about not doing this? How about not doing that?””When you get down to it,” he concludes, “there are few
agricultural practices that are really necessary.” This is exactly the ‘decreasing’
spoken about in the Daodejing, chapter
48:
To
decrease and to decrease even more
So
that “doing nothing” is reached.
Doing
nothing, and nothing is undone.
Daoist, and explicitly
permacultural, “negative ethics of non-action” (Moeller, 2007: p.46) are well
summarized by Wawrytko (2005: p.90) who states that “all vestiges of our
estrangement from Dao as engendered by civilization, must be removed,”
involving three successive realignments:
- It’s not what you think that matters – but what you unthink.
- It’s not what you do that matters – but what you undo.
- We can’t work against the natural flow (zi-ran), or even with that flow; rather we must participate in, play within the natural flow.
Permanence
Before concluding, it’s important
to look at one final aspect of the relationship between dao and permaculture – the question of permanence. Famously, the
concepts of impermanence and change are central pillars of much Eastern
philosophical thought (Capra, 1992:p.29). It’s thus logical that a practice
placing so much emphasis on permanence as to name itself permanent (agri-)culture is incompatible with that line of thought
which, for example, holds that “the Dao...is thoroughly within the continuous,
reproductive process of change – it is this very process” (Moeller, 2007:p.122).
Such a conclusion would be
premature, however, and the paradox of being permanent yet impermanent,
changing yet unchanging, makes sense in the context of the paradoxical thought
that is necessitated in daoism.
Chapter 16 is central to this discussion:
To
know permanence – this is clarity.
To
not know permanence – this is error.
With
errors the unfortunate occurs
Indeed, the unfortunate is
occurring at an ever-quickening pace and permaculture, as well as daoism, posit
a way to bring a dynamic permanence to a world characterised by short-termism, techno-fixes
and spiritual malaise. The daoist sage, interprets Moeller (p.40), “has to
study natural cycles of permanence: the yearly “return” of the plants, for
instance, which sustains life in an agricultural society – or the returning
course of the “heavenly” (celestial) bodies that establishes the yearly
sequence of time. To know and master permanence qualifies one for being a sage
ruler.” Importantly, this concept of permanence “is different, for instance,
from the Christian notions of eternity which conceive of a dimension of the
divine that is beyond mundane temporality” (Ibid, p.120).
Fukuoka (1978: p.21), whose thought
is drenched in concepts of a humble impermanence, still argues that “Nature
does not change[16],
although the way of viewing nature invariably changes from age to age. No
matter the age, natural farming exists forever as the wellspring of
agriculture.”
The metaphor of the wheel, seen in
the Daodejing, is perhaps helpful in
clarifying this coupling of permanence and impermanence. Constant change and
return are contained in the ever-turning spokes and rim, while the hub [“the
non-moving point of origin, which lies outside the realm of relativity,”
according to Fukuoka (1978: p.20)] moves without moving, an “empty pivot of
change” (Moeller, 2007:p.6). “The sage and the Dao manifest the pivot. They are
permanent and without presence, action, or speech within the realm of
continuous change, action, and speech” (Ibid.).
Despite conflicting assertions by
outsiders that his natural farming is either primitive and backward, or the
pinnacle of innovation, “Few are able to grasp correctly that natural farming
arises from the unmoving and unchanging centre of agricultural
development“(Fukuoka, 1978: p.21).
Conclusion
The above analysis, taking in such concepts
as wu wei, ziran, ecological design and permanence, has aimed to contextualise
the now-worldwide permaculture movement, perhaps embodying the very ‘”movement”
not to bring anything about’ which Fukuoka sought in the opening quote of this
essay.
For thousands, permaculture holds a
key to making a qualitative shift away from a ‘civilized’ (agri-) culture which
subjugates the natural world, thus breaking down the oppositional logic of the
cultivated field’s boundaries and reintegrating human habitation into the
surrounding ecology.
A clear view of the demonstrated
roots of permaculture in daoist, and other, thought will allow the movement to
remain true to its founding philosophy of harmony with the natural world,
without being enfeebled into a utilitarian design system for human ends.
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[1]
Something not agreed upon by all commentators, e.g. see Goldin (2005).
[2]
As, famously, “if it can be
specified as a Dao, it is not a permanent Dao” (Moeller, 2007). Similarly,
Holmgren (2002) states that “The quest by some for a completely consistent and
logical picture of permaculture may not be useful. Rather than seeking to
define or control permaculture, I write about it as simply one more
contribution to understanding, meaning and action in a world full of
uncertainty.”
[3]
New to the West, at least. Such production systems have been in use elsewhere
for millennia [e.g. see Hemenway (2001) and Jacke & Toensmeier (2005)].
[4]
For example, a form of food production utilizing fruit and nut trees, berry
bushes, and perennial ground cover crops. Fukuoka (1978: p.44) rightly sees
such natural techniques as qualitatively distinct from agriculture: “The seeding
and harvesting so closely follow the natural pattern that it could be
considered a natural process rather than an agricultural technique.”
[5]
A technique of food production which has been central to the permaculture
movement, utilising perennial crops (such as trees and shrubs) in a design which
mimics the structure of a forest.
[6]
A text which contains explicit references to dao, and Lao Tzu in particular. Mollison has stated that their
philosophies are so similar that “Fukuoka-san and I are
basically the same person” (Mother Earth News, 1987)
[7]
An ethic also termed as ‘Share the Surplus.’
[8]
Fukuoka, however, contradicts this “maturity” in a remarkable conversation held
at the second Permaculture conference, published in Mother Earth News in 1987
and now available online. He states: “Become a
foolish man. Be like the baby who sees everything at once, holistically.”
[9]
Not only this, but also humans and their domesticates now shockingly make up
90% of total vertebrate biomass on the planet, up from an estimated 0.1% 10,000
years ago.
[10]
Or ‘post-rational’ as Yu (2008) puts it.
[11]
A grouping of species where each provides a unique function, such as nitrogen
fixation, tap roots or ground cover, forming a synergistic whole. The ‘Three
Sisters’ of corn, beans and squash are a well-known (albeit not necessarily
permacultural) example of this principle.
[12]
“Those who discriminate fail to see,” says Chuang Tzu (as cited in Cooper,
2001). “Hence to know how to stay within the sphere of our ignorance is to
attain the highest” ( Chuang-Tzu, 2001: p.57)
[13]
And, indeed, often more nutritious than domesticated crops.
[14]
Colin Tudge, for example, has stated that “to condemn all of humankind to a
life of full-time farming, and in particular, arable farming, was a curse
indeed” (as cited in Manning, 2004: p.32). Clive Ponting (1991: p.41) agrees:
“Agriculture is most definitely not an easier option than gathering and
hunting. It requires far more effort in clearing land, sowing, tending and
harvesting crops and in looking after domesticated animals.” Also see Marshall
Sahlins’ (1974) Stone Age Economics.
[16]
Juxtaposed with his assertion on p.74 that “Nature is everywhere in perpetual
motion; conditions are never exactly the same in any two years.”
2 comments:
I love this article! How right you are. If I weren't an anrchist I'd worship you! Here's a little sumpin sumpin from my blog on similar topics:
http://ouroborosponderosa.wordpress.com/2013/01/18/how-and-why-we-propagate-trees-the-life-of-johnny-appleseed/
http://ouroborosponderosa.wordpress.com/2012/02/14/daoist-writings-primitivist-ideals-pt-1-introduction-to-daoism/
Solidarity!
It is most refreshing to share perspectives around spiritual philosophy and permaculture. Thank you.
I have had many discussions with Mr Holmgren around this topic (and Su his partner) and although he implicitly draws parallels between the teachings of traditional cultures and permaculture, he has always remained a staunch atheist.
Permaculture is inherently anthropocentric, but recognition of nature/spirit connection is a primary directive ('observe and interact'). David often regards spiritual wisdom as a vital human social directive to make scientific connection through systems thinking. During a design we completed for a yoga Ashram, David wrote in the report:
"The focus on using the everyday tasks of providing for the material needs of the Ashram residents and visitors as a central spiritual practice (Karma Yoga) is arguably a perfect context for permaculture.
The basics of growing food, care of animals and maintenance of buildings and assets can bring people out of their heads and emotions to a stronger connection to the nature of the material world in both its living and non-living forms. From a permaculture perspective, awareness is a fundamental precursor to creative redesign of that world to provides for material needs in an ethical low impact way while assisting in meeting non-material needs including spiritual growth."
It can be seen that Holmgren, although arguably accepting spiritual wisdom as an imperative, still defaults to science as the ultimate teaching. Paradoxically, David is arguably one of the most nature sensitive people I know apart from some aboriginal elders), it is truly mind blowing to walk a landscape with him.
But where does that leave permaculture? Is it scientific practice (and therefore inherently anthropocentric) or are we capable of defining a new paradigm in systems thinking?
Yes, we view the world through human eyes, therefore what we see is through the human experience, but perhaps mindfulness has a part to play in the removal of barriers in our perception.
It has been suggested that people with 'genius' minds lack certain 'latent inhibition' filters, seeing the world in all its complexities. We common folk filter out detail (and therefore connections between everything we observe), arguably a mindset suited to scientific rationalism.
Spiritual study of mindfulness techniques is a path for the less 'genius' of us to begin to see and feel the connections we otherwise continually filter out.
Thanks for writing this, I always loved Daoism and I feel in many ways it led me to permaculture. Now permaculture leads me further back to the Dao.
Cheers
Hamish
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