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The Machine That Saw Tomorrow: How Cybernetics Predicted Global CollapseEpisode Description
Journey back to the late 1960s when a revolutionary idea emerged: that our entire planet could be understood, modeled, and managed as a single interconnected system. This episode explores how cybernetic thinking transformed our understanding of humanity's relationship with Earth and fundamentally altered environmental politics.
We begin with poet Richard Brautigan's utopian vision of a "cybernetic ecology" where nature and technology exist in perfect harmony—a dream that captured the imagination of a generation. But the heart of our story lies with MIT professor Jay Forrester, who created the first comprehensive computer model of the entire world for the prestigious Club of Rome.
Forrester's groundbreaking simulation delivered a shocking verdict: continued population growth, resource consumption, and pollution would lead to global collapse by the mid-21st century. His work formed the basis for the influential "Limits to Growth" report that sent shockwaves through international politics, culminating in the historic 1972 UN Conference on the Human Environment in Stockholm.
Most provocatively, we examine how Forrester's conclusions challenged the fundamental assumption of endless economic growth. His radical proposal that governments should shift from promoting expansion to maintaining a "steady-state equilibrium" represented a fundamental reimagining of humanity's relationship with the planet—one that continues to resonate in today's climate crisis debates.
Join us for this fascinating exploration of how computers first predicted our environmental future and forever changed how we see our place in the global system.
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The Machine That Saw Tomorrow: How Cybernetics Predicted Global CollapseEpisode Description
Journey back to the late 1960s when a revolutionary idea emerged: that our entire planet could be understood, modeled, and managed as a single interconnected system. This episode explores how cybernetic thinking transformed our understanding of humanity's relationship with Earth and fundamentally altered environmental politics.
We begin with poet Richard Brautigan's utopian vision of a "cybernetic ecology" where nature and technology exist in perfect harmony—a dream that captured the imagination of a generation. But the heart of our story lies with MIT professor Jay Forrester, who created the first comprehensive computer model of the entire world for the prestigious Club of Rome.
Forrester's groundbreaking simulation delivered a shocking verdict: continued population growth, resource consumption, and pollution would lead to global collapse by the mid-21st century. His work formed the basis for the influential "Limits to Growth" report that sent shockwaves through international politics, culminating in the historic 1972 UN Conference on the Human Environment in Stockholm.
Most provocatively, we examine how Forrester's conclusions challenged the fundamental assumption of endless economic growth. His radical proposal that governments should shift from promoting expansion to maintaining a "steady-state equilibrium" represented a fundamental reimagining of humanity's relationship with the planet—one that continues to resonate in today's climate crisis debates.
Join us for this fascinating exploration of how computers first predicted our environmental future and forever changed how we see our place in the global system.
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