brainstorm
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mheslep said:Ah, there's case. I asked you above to explore such a case, as this is an Engineering forum. In China, before a significant motor vehicle presence, along with the millions of bicycles China also had
- An average life expectancy of http://www.google.com/publicdata?ds...ntry:CHN&dl=en&hl=en&q=life+expectancy+china" circa 1960.
- A GDP (PPP) per capita of http://www.indexmundi.com/china/gdp_per_capita_(ppp).html" , with hundreds of millions in grinding poverty
Are you trying to suggest some kind of causal link between widespread bicycling/walking and low life expectancy and low GDP? What about EU and US cities where large numbers of people get around by foot or bicycle? Is it lowering their life expectancy or income? You claim to be doing engineering but this is just very poor quantitative sociological claims you're making without even being brave enough to go beyond implicit suggestions. If you're going to make a claim like saying that biking/walking reduce life expectancy and cause poverty, please be so rigorous as to explain the details of the causation as you envision it.
Luxury is a relative experience. To someone who has lived in a mansion, a 2500sf house may seem degrading. To someone who's used to living in 1500sf, 2500sf can seem like a mansion.I don't see a modern life expectancy and income sufficient to live in a single family dwelling as "luxuries." Inexpensive mobility for a family, that enables http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Division_of_labour" r is visibly a contributor to the economic productivity that makes these possible.
Why aren't there forum rules against using such an aggressive tone as this?I'm attacking the material in your posts in this line, but apparently insufficiently, so here's some more.
Where do you get that engineering discussion have to involve numbers? Besides, in one of my earlier posts I mentioned 40watts as a typical amount of energy generated by a human body and I divided that by 15 mph to get @3 watt-hours.This is the G. Engineering forum, you are aware of the guidelines. Yet instead of offering something akin to a quantitative analysis,
You don't recognize these things are referring to discourse that you yourself have witnessed? And how is anything I've said, "navel gazing" except insofar as it doesn't fit your personal beliefs about what methods for reducing energy consumption are good?you would make this into the navel gazing forum by offering strawmen and loading your posts with smug pronouncements, e.g. "this thread is somewhat superfluous", "It's such a joke to listen to people talk", "And guess what", "people just think", topped off by "People would just reform" when they do as you pronounce, without bothering with a single reference. Please take it all elsewhere.
Congratulations. Is biking a prerequisite for discussing biking and walking as forms of transit now?BTW, I bike 24 miles a day, family commitments permitting.
Many people would agree with you. I wish there was a way to assess how much of the resistance would be institutional, cultural, and psychological, and how much involves actual material hurdles.Dr Lots-o'watts said:I still think it's a huge undertaking.
If nuclear is unbridled, would there really be any need for any other source of energy? The problem is that there usually tends to be popular resistance to nuclear anything. So, imo, the way to get renewable sources going is to come up with very cheap, easy methods. People may not want to shovel snow off their roofs, but if it turns out to make a difference in their heating bill, many might in the long run. In very cold climates, I think insulation and zone-heating are key to efficiency. I've also recently heard that artificial logs can be made by compressing leaves and brush and burned in wood stoves and boilers. I don't know how valuable a source of fuel this would be.Solar panels may be able to heat homes in some countries, but up here in Canada, it can not be taken seriously. Not only it can't possibly provide enough heat (from a regular sized-roof), but no one is going to want to shovel snow off a roof-top after the typical storm we get a few times a year. I'm counting on hydro and nuclear for this.
I've been hearing about this a lot lately. It seems you can heat water either with an a/c heat pump or a refrigerator/cooler.Yes. Although perhaps the hot air produced by air conditioning could be used to heat water, instead of being wasted.
You suppose? I'm sorry to have expressed cynicism in this forum because I seem to upset some people with it. I just get tired of hearing all this madness in the media about economic, energy, and ecological crises but then see people live as if these crises weren't happening. I mean, there's either crisis or there isn't. Well, maybe what it is is that some people are enduring crisis while others are insulated from it. Also, I think there are so many people insulated from it that those people can just pretend no one else really matters.I suppose we need to attack the problem on all fronts.
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