Sustainable evolution

Sustainable evolution is a "life-centric" perspective on very long term sustainability of life on earth. Sustainable evolution is a goal. The term has its roots in evolutionary biology.

About
The term "sustainable evolution" is used in various contexts to indicate a system's ability to continually adapt to change (and thereby survive).

Here we are concerned with sustainability of life on earth.

Biodiversity is at the root of evolutionary potential and life's ability to adapt to change (e.g. climate change).

In the short term, what needs to be done to maximise that potential?


 * Examine contemporary notions of sustainability and sustainable development.
 * Rethink?

In the long term, assuming the potential is not lost, what might happen?


 * Speculate

Aim
The aim of this page (or collection of resources) is to explore the concept and develop knowledge resources leading to a common understanding of what "sustainable evolution" means in the context of (mostly) human impacts (e.g. climate change, habitat destruction, biodiversity loss, pollution, ...), technological capability, and the global knowledge society.

These pages are intended to evolve into a useful collection of knowledge resources for an interesting thought experiment leading to new ways of thinking about sustainability and the destiny of life on earth.

Short Term (pragmatic)
As custodians of the Earth, we need to sort out sustainability really soon. It is time for a new model which still recognises the interconnectedness of social, economic and environmental concerns, but which inspires policy making in cognisance of the biophysical environment as the source of all life and resources on which it depends. An aim could be to change the rhetoric from statements like "kick-starting the economy" for "economic growth" which tends to perpetuate aspirations of affluence and ownership ..., towards rational approaches which maximise sustainability and quality of life.

Long Term: past and future (speculative)
What if humans had not evolved? Would the planet's evolutionary potential be higher? Was the evolution of a species like us inevitable? What could "like us" mean in the previous sentence? (as destructive as, self-aware, top of the food chain, ...).

In future: "sustainable co-evolution" - imagine other species co-evolving with us. Some after millions of years matching and exceeding our intelligence (frogs? octopodes? lizards? other primates? bees? ...).

Learning objectives
Make these up as you go along. They may relate to:


 * Understanding
 * sustainability
 * ecology
 * the social sphere
 * economics
 * interactions among social, economic and environmental concerns.
 * genetics and evolution.
 * Being able to critically evaluate the concept of sustainable evolution.
 * Developing new ways of thinking about sustainability.
 * Speculative writing.

Approach
The "process" box on the right appears on some pages to suggest a process for developing the Sustainable evolution pages:


 * First, learn About the (informal) project and concept.
 * Then, optionally join the Community.
 * Muse - jot down any thoughts which come to mind for deeper exploration later and help structure these into something useful.
 * Gather links etc. under Resources to articles on relevant topics and
 * structure these for learning trails
 * Develop and refine the '''Trails.
 * Using the resources gathered, develop learning trails.
 * Invite/write essays which may be linked to the Trails.
 * Publish papers etc..

Throughout the process:
 * Build communities of interest/ practice/ etc.
 * Stimulate discussion (use the 'discussion' tabs on WikiEducator pages)
 * Enhance the resources (all pages associated with sustainable evolution).