COMPREHENSION
We want to design places where people
feel comfortable and have free and open choices of activity and
association. Therefore, attention to human needs and the ability
of people to comprehend the world around them is important to
design. Comprehension starts with considerations of scale and
complexity of elements, technology and organizations. People relate
comfortably to "human scale" items and organizations
where they have a sense of understanding and can exert control
over their lives and decisions. As size and complexity increase,
people may become less able to comprehend their personal relationship
to things and events.
In Introduction to Permaculture,
Mollison and Slay call for use of small scale intensive systems.
"Small-scale, intensive systems mean that
- much of the land can be used efficiently and thoroughly,
and
- the site is under control." (pg. 19)
It is important not to try to spread out too quickly and achieve
too much. It is better to start at the doorstep and work out
from there. The focus of permaculture is on designing to the
best advantage of scale using a mixture of human labor, a gradual
establishment of perennial plants, mulching for soil moisture
and weed control, use of biological resources, alternative technologies
for energy and a moderate use of machinery. Plant stacking, taking
advantage of plant species that grow at varying heights above
the ground, and time stacking, the overlapping and mixing of
crops and animals by seasons and years to get continuous production,
are two ways of gaining more intensive use of land at the small
scale.
John Lyle, in Regenerative
Design for Sustainable Development, discusses some of the
problems of matching technology to need (pg. 40-41).
"The economics of industrial technology, involving low-cost
fuels and assumptions of unlimited material supplies and unlimited
waste sinks, allowed overdesign of support systems, often to
an absurd degree."
Water saving irrigation techniques, for example, "are
often not used because they are relatively expensive and the price
of water is kept low by heavy subsidies by the federal government."
Other examples related to use of nuclear power, mechanical systems
in buildings, and automobile vs. mass transportation can be given.
Appropriate technology to meet needs may not necessarily be the
most advanced. Some guidelines for selection of appropriate technology
include:
- Use the best, lowest level, technology to meet the need.
This will help avoid using technology for technology's sake.
- Use the best, non-polluting technology to meet the need.
This will help maintain the quality of the environment by providing
a choice among near-equal technologies.
- Use higher levels of technology for tasks that are dangerous
or overly stressful to the human system, keeping in mind that
the technology itself may be dangerous, wasteful of energy or
polluting.
- Use technology that minimizes human energy expenditure while
maximizing the creative and rewarding nature of personal work.
It is not intended that machines replace people but that they
create an atmosphere for personal challenge and growth by reducing
dangerous and ill-rewarding tasks.
- Use technology that can be built and repaired locally. This
is the bottom line on 'appropriate' and many of us would be in
trouble (or have our lives simplified) if we had to fully apply
it.
The issue of comprehensible social organization is addressed by
Gene Marshall's Empowering
Independent Regions (Permaculture Activist #33, pg. 8-12).
His model views society as being composed of economic, political
and cultural processes and suggests that these components can
be brought under control through local empowerment by such actions
as:
- defining the "local neighborhood, community, and region
in relationship to... biome, continent, and planet,"
- creating "a local empowerment vanguard" in the
region,
- creating "a research and training cooperative"
in the region,
- claiming "culture-building power as a vanguard group
and as neighborhoods and communities,"
- recognizing and supporting "local, sustainable businesses,"
- creating "worker-owned-and-operated cooperatives of
sustainable quality,"
- creating "local buying cooperatives and trading associations,"
- creating "regional fiscal institutions that support
sustainable, local economic empowerment,"
- claiming "empowerment for county governments,"
- creating "a county governments' association" in
a region,
- beginning "steps toward full democracy: neighborhood
assemblies, community councils, and regional councils,"
and
- creating a "regional constitution" and demanding
"appropriate recognition by the wider social arenas."
The result of such actions would be to return understanding and
control of human affairs to those most affected by decisions
and lessen the power held by multinational corporations, state
and national governments.

