Doug Tompkins: Technology & Nature/Clash of Concepts

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  • Опубликовано: 19 ноя 2024
  • Douglass Tompkins was one of 45 leading scholars, authors and activists who convened at The Great Hall of Cooper Union, New York City, on October 25-26, 2014, for the public presentation: "Techno-Utopianism and the Fate of the Earth." Speakers discussed the profound impacts-environmental, economic and social-of runaway technological expansionism and cyber immersion; the tendency to see technology as the savior for all problems. For more info, see ifg.org/techno-... .
    Doug Tompkins is longtime wilderness advocate, mountaineer, organic farmer, activist, and philanthropist. He grew up in Millbrook, New York but headed west at 17 to ski race and climb. In 1964, he founded The North Face to make and sell outdoor equipment. A few years later, he headed south on a road trip to Patagonia to climb Mt. Fitzroy, surfing, skiing, and climbing along the way, an adventure documented in the film Mountain of Storms. Upon returning, he co-founded Esprit clothing company with his first wife, Susie. Under their leadership, Esprit grew into a multinational company with over $1 billion in sales. In the late 1980s, he became increasingly interested in environmental activism (and disenchanted with promoting a consumer culture), leading him to sell his share of Esprit. He created the Foundation for Deep Ecology, and soon afterwards moved to south Chile to focus on conservation. Since moving to South America in 1990, he has worked to create large-scale protected areas in Chile and Argentina. Tompkins has supported activist groups in North and South America, and he has helped produce numerous campaign-related books on topics such as industrial forestry, factory farming, and coal mining.

Комментарии • 4

  • @VirgilDavis
    @VirgilDavis 9 лет назад +3

    RIP Mr. Tompkins. Well Done.....

  • @chezruss
    @chezruss 8 лет назад +2

    The best state is small,
    without too many people,
    who have every tool they might need
    and don't use much,
    have good transportation
    and prefer to walk,
    can defend themselves
    and aren't aggressive.
    Their food, their dress,
    their homes and ways
    are simple and individual
    in grace. They cherish their
    traditions, revive old crafts,
    satisfy the generations:
    their children stay on,
    with other states like this so near
    that one can hear the barking dog,
    the crowing cock across the way,
    yet never get round to visiting,
    content. tao te ching

  • @icarus8000
    @icarus8000 9 лет назад +2

    RIP

  • @chezruss
    @chezruss 8 лет назад

    I couldn t find the translation Doug Tompkins recites, so I ve put another translation of the number 80 poem by Tao Te Ching below for those who are interested