Episode 45 - Scott Johnson w/ Ashley Colby and Dr. Josh Kearns
Doomer Optimism10 Kesä 2022

Episode 45 - Scott Johnson w/ Ashley Colby and Dr. Josh Kearns

On this episode of Doomer Optimism, first time host Josh Kearns (@HillbillyNarnia) teams up with Ashley Colby (@RizomaSchool) to discuss potential low tech futures with Scott Johnson (@Low_Techno), the founder of the Low Tech Institute in Wisconsin.


About Scott Johnson
Scott has been carrying out research into low tech since tried to build a catapult in 6th grade. He is a jack of all trades, but a master of none, including carpentry, gardening, electric, plumbing, beekeeping, brewing, butchery, baking, and more. His interest in past technologies led to a Ph.D. in anthropology (Tulane University, 2012), focusing on archaeology. He’s taught at universities across the US and Canada and led international field projects funded by the National Science Foundation and National Geographic Society. He is also the author of several books (Translating Maya Hieroglyphs, Why Did Ancient Civilizations Fail?). Today, he works at the Low Technology Institute and lives in the historic village of Cooksville, Wisconsin (just south of Madison), with his wife, kid, and dog. He enjoys a good cup of tea, aikido, running, and books. He is founder of the Low Tech Institute based in Wisconsin.


About Ashley Colby
Ashley is an Environmental Sociologist who studied at Washington State University, the department that founded the subdiscipline. She's interested in and passionate about the myriad creative ways in which people are forming new social worlds in resistance to the failures of late capitalism and resultant climate disasters. I am a qualitative researcher so I tend to focus on the informal spaces of innovation. She's the founder of Rizoma Field School and Rizoma Foundation.


About Dr. Josh Kearns
Josh is a born-n-bred Appalachian and a native of West-By-God-Virginia and damn proud of it. He studied chemistry and environmental engineering at Clemson (BS), biogeochemistry at Berkeley (MS), and environmental engineering at CU-Boulder (PhD). He's spent years bumming around rural and remote communities in Thailand, Burma/Myanmar, India, Nepal, Ladakh, Sri Lanka, and Mexico, and generally tried to make himself useful while doing so. He's the Director of Science for Aqueous Solutions, and the Chief Technical Advisor for Caminos de Agua, grassroots water and health development organizations in Thailand and Mexico, respectively. He taught environmental engineering courses at NC State University for a couple of years before returning to his roots as a freelance renegade scientist and exponent of ecological transition engineering. He lives with his wife Rachael and all their critters on a small mountaintop homestead in southern Appalachia.

Jaksot(277)

DO 246 - Metastatic Modernity with Prof. Tom Murphy

DO 246 - Metastatic Modernity with Prof. Tom Murphy

Josh catches up with Tom for a second conversation (first interview here) about two new series on Tom’s excellent Do The Math blog. Tom has produced a “Metastatic Modernity” series of 18 short (~10 min) videos accompanied by write-ups providing a succinct but comprehensive explication of the poly crises of modernity, along with a convenient index to the series. Tom also became an ad hoc demographer after examining population and fertility data and noticing anomalies in the official UN population projections for this century. Turns out, we may be facing peak population, peak energy throughput, and peak economic growth much earlier than anticipated!  Demography series: Watching Population Bomb—could we actually start to deflate before 2050? Peak Population Projections—demographic models supporting earlier peaks Whiff After Whiff—the U.N. models don’t capture/predict recent fertility declines Population “What If” Games—exploring population limiting cases Peak Population Video—why U.N. models may overestimate peak population Brace for Peak Impact—demographic driver for civilization’s peak power (soon) Peak Power Video—why we might hit peak power in the next decade Stubborn Expectations—U.N. models for fertility barely react to recent trends

17 Joulu 20241h 28min

DO 245 - Regenerative Ag Technology W/ Josh Jeske and Ashley

DO 245 - Regenerative Ag Technology W/ Josh Jeske and Ashley

DO 245 - Regenerative Ag Technology W/ Josh Jenske and Ashley

10 Joulu 20241h 15min

DO 245 - Regenerative Ag Technology W/ Josh Jeske and Ashley

DO 245 - Regenerative Ag Technology W/ Josh Jeske and Ashley

DO 245 - Regenerative Ag Technology W/ Josh Jenske and Ashley

10 Joulu 20241h 15min

DO 244 - DO + egirl crossover w/ Twitter's Audrey Horne and Going Godward

DO 244 - DO + egirl crossover w/ Twitter's Audrey Horne and Going Godward

In this episode, Going Godward guest hosts X’s Audrey Horne in a Doomer Optimist/e-girl crossover. GG and Audrey discuss how the Machine affects women and its consequences on beauty standards, self-image, and identity.

3 Joulu 202447min

D0 243 - The spiritual quality of global capitalism

D0 243 - The spiritual quality of global capitalism

In this episode I link up with my new buddy from a recent Doomer Optimism event in Margaretville NY, Travis Logan. Travis brought an essay to my attention, Techne-Zen and the Spiritual Quality of Global Capitalism, by Yale professor R. John Williams. We decided to call John up to see if he would discuss his work, and where he lands with trying to navigate technology, spirituality and religion. One of my (Ashley’s) favorite conversations yet!! Discussing: https://rjohnwilliams.wordpress.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/05/williams-techne-zen-and-capitalism.pdf&sa=D&source=calendar&ust=1731775211585824&usg=AOvVaw1ZTYOktfC-mKHhdUCdnVma Bios and links R John Williams is Associate Professor of English and Film Studies at Yale (https://filmstudies.yale.edu/people/r-john-williams) Travis Logan reviews books on Substack: https://postliberalbookreviews.substack.com/

26 Marras 20241h 23min

DO 242 - Jane Jacobs and the City as Liturgy w/ Dr. Timothy Patitsas, Michael Sellas and Ashley

DO 242 - Jane Jacobs and the City as Liturgy w/ Dr. Timothy Patitsas, Michael Sellas and Ashley

Ashley met Michael Sellas as a couple recent Doomer Optimism events and they immediately hit it off. After discussing urban planning’s connection to DO, Michael suggested some writing by his friends Dr. Timothy Patitsas, who not only thinks a lot about cities, but worked with Jane Jacobs!Michael Sellas, M.Div, is the founder of Michael Sellas Photography, and the Audio Producer for the No-Till Growers Podcast Network. Photography: michaelsellasphotography.comMusic: SpotifyTimothy Patitsas is the author of The Ethics of Beauty and the assistant professor of Ethics at the Holy Cross Greek Orthodox School of Theology in Brookline, Boston.For his book: https://www.stnicholaspress.net/store/the-ethics-of-beautyFor his film work: https://www.beautyfirstfilms.com

19 Marras 20241h 36min

DO 241 - Motherhood Sabbatical w/ Ashley and Sean Blanda

DO 241 - Motherhood Sabbatical w/ Ashley and Sean Blanda

This is an interview Sean Blanda of Sabbatical did with Ashley on her approach to moving to Uruguay for a time when her kids were young. A write-up of the interview is here:https://sabbatical.email/interviews/ashley-colby-how-i-took-a-working-parent-sabbatical

14 Marras 202441min

DO 240 - Ecological Farming in Guatemala w/ Dwight, Tessa Carman and Ashley

DO 240 - Ecological Farming in Guatemala w/ Dwight, Tessa Carman and Ashley

Ashley speaks with Tessa Carman and her uncle Dwight about his journey to Guatemala from a small farming family in the Midwest. We discuss the push and pull of moving abroad, learning ecological farming, where to find home, and more.

12 Marras 20241h 4min

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