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James Arbib and I explore how humanity stands at the threshold of a fundamental paradigm shift from an extractive to a stellar world, and how technological change could transform our civilization for the better.
• Our current societal structures (governments, markets, property ownership) have persisted for 5,000 years because they confer advantages in an extractive production paradigm
• The extractive paradigm, requiring inputs from people and planet, inherently creates environmental degradation, inequality, and conflict
• "Stellar technologies" like solar panels and AI reach an ignition point where they require no further inputs but continue producing value
• Human nature isn't fixed but exists on a spectrum influenced by our production systems—extraction may tilt us toward greed while stellar systems could foster collaboration
• Change happens from the edges, not centers of power—cities and regions adopting stellar technologies will outcompete old systems through competitive advantage
• The transition will be like metamorphosis—painful but necessary—as we move from "caterpillar" to "butterfly"
If you like listening to my podcast, please like and subscribe, and check out my new YouTube channel called "Crossword Author Interviews Real, original."
By Michele McAloon4.6
2727 ratings
Send a text
James Arbib and I explore how humanity stands at the threshold of a fundamental paradigm shift from an extractive to a stellar world, and how technological change could transform our civilization for the better.
• Our current societal structures (governments, markets, property ownership) have persisted for 5,000 years because they confer advantages in an extractive production paradigm
• The extractive paradigm, requiring inputs from people and planet, inherently creates environmental degradation, inequality, and conflict
• "Stellar technologies" like solar panels and AI reach an ignition point where they require no further inputs but continue producing value
• Human nature isn't fixed but exists on a spectrum influenced by our production systems—extraction may tilt us toward greed while stellar systems could foster collaboration
• Change happens from the edges, not centers of power—cities and regions adopting stellar technologies will outcompete old systems through competitive advantage
• The transition will be like metamorphosis—painful but necessary—as we move from "caterpillar" to "butterfly"
If you like listening to my podcast, please like and subscribe, and check out my new YouTube channel called "Crossword Author Interviews Real, original."

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