SystemTheory
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Russ - I favor solar power on precept and principle. The precept is to "Love God and love your neighbor in the land." And "beat your swords into plowshares."
Through the mercy of our God,
The Daystar of heaven shines upons us,
Enlightening those who dwell in darkness,
And in the shadow of death,
Guiding our feet along the path of peace.
(Adapted from one of the Gospels)
God (Nature) put the harmful nuclear energy in the Sun where it belongs. We were given an ozone layer and magnetosphere to protect from radiation harms. The politicos who said we were not depleting the ozone layer, or polluting Earth with leaded gasoline, were eventually proven wrong. So will many others who seek to protect profits while generating waste and pollution be proven wrong by the passage of sufficient time. The profit motive distorts one's reasoning about reality, which is why the message of the Prophets endures in scripture. I am not advocating religion, simply stating my interpretation of society/scripture parallels in the past and present social conditions.
Nature runs the biosphere on "hot" photons converted to high energy electrons via photosynthesis:
http://www.digital-recordings.com/publ/publife.html
Solar buildings are already contributing to industry/households becoming net energy positive:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/31_Tannery_Project
The radioactive waste hazard and risk of proliferation is something I would rather not tolerate, although it is hard to run nuclear warships on solar/renewable power, it is going to be possible to run industry and a domestic economy on a fuel portfolio including significant renewables in the not-so-distant future. I can envision a 100% solar economy not far down the road with only an improvement in conversion efficiency, electron storage, and a smart grid.
Once a technology takes root it enjoys two advantages, which could be called social subsidies (1) economies of scale; and (2) sunken investment costs. We are living on the sunken investment costs of Tesla's old "smart grid" and a fuel mix based on refining petroleum (do a study on the history of refining and note gasoline was once a waste product, hence the push to develop the internal combustion engine and lower the fuel costs of refining). We use all the by-products of refining oil the way Lakota used every part of the Buffalo, therefore it is hard to change the fuel mix without disrupting our way of life.
Society must undergo disruption to get from where we are to where we hope to be in terms of the energy fuel mix, and personally I prefer the so-called "soft path" as the best long term solution. I don't want a commitment to the "hard path" to preclude that by gaining its foothold via economies of scale and sunk investment costs.
Through the mercy of our God,
The Daystar of heaven shines upons us,
Enlightening those who dwell in darkness,
And in the shadow of death,
Guiding our feet along the path of peace.
(Adapted from one of the Gospels)
God (Nature) put the harmful nuclear energy in the Sun where it belongs. We were given an ozone layer and magnetosphere to protect from radiation harms. The politicos who said we were not depleting the ozone layer, or polluting Earth with leaded gasoline, were eventually proven wrong. So will many others who seek to protect profits while generating waste and pollution be proven wrong by the passage of sufficient time. The profit motive distorts one's reasoning about reality, which is why the message of the Prophets endures in scripture. I am not advocating religion, simply stating my interpretation of society/scripture parallels in the past and present social conditions.
Nature runs the biosphere on "hot" photons converted to high energy electrons via photosynthesis:
http://www.digital-recordings.com/publ/publife.html
Solar buildings are already contributing to industry/households becoming net energy positive:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/31_Tannery_Project
The radioactive waste hazard and risk of proliferation is something I would rather not tolerate, although it is hard to run nuclear warships on solar/renewable power, it is going to be possible to run industry and a domestic economy on a fuel portfolio including significant renewables in the not-so-distant future. I can envision a 100% solar economy not far down the road with only an improvement in conversion efficiency, electron storage, and a smart grid.
Once a technology takes root it enjoys two advantages, which could be called social subsidies (1) economies of scale; and (2) sunken investment costs. We are living on the sunken investment costs of Tesla's old "smart grid" and a fuel mix based on refining petroleum (do a study on the history of refining and note gasoline was once a waste product, hence the push to develop the internal combustion engine and lower the fuel costs of refining). We use all the by-products of refining oil the way Lakota used every part of the Buffalo, therefore it is hard to change the fuel mix without disrupting our way of life.
Society must undergo disruption to get from where we are to where we hope to be in terms of the energy fuel mix, and personally I prefer the so-called "soft path" as the best long term solution. I don't want a commitment to the "hard path" to preclude that by gaining its foothold via economies of scale and sunk investment costs.