I’m conference-weary… and wary. But I’m not about to miss Pando Populus, June 4-7. Maybe I’ll see you there.
First of all there’s the name—Pando Populus! I said, “What?” But when I read about it, I thought, “Very clever! What a wonderful ecological symbol for how our species needs to live!” It was chosen for this conference because it is the oldest (80,000 yrs) and largest (100 acres) living organism on the planet. It appears to be a vast grove of individual aspen trees above ground. But underground it’s a vast, integrated system of life. Get the symbolism? Whereas industrial civilization puts us all into 7 billion separate units, in an ecological way of arranging society we are interconnected with all of Nature like Pando Populus. We’ll rethink how to live from an ecological perspective. And that really excites me!
Next, there’s the press release. It quotes John Cobb, a favorite of mine, saying:
“Over 700 leading experts and original thinkers from more than twenty countries are coming together for the largest transdisciplinary conference on ecological civilization ever held on behalf of the planet,” announced the American philosopher and environmentalist John B Cobb, Jr., co-founder of Pando Populus and the intellectual architect of the inaugural conference.
These “700 leading experts and original thinkers” will be leading 82 tracks clustered into 12 Segments arranged by themes of an interconnecting ecological way of thinking. That overwhelmed me! How the devil do I choose one track when I want to be in 10? I read. I read some more. And then I registered for the track on “Ecological Economics” led by Joshua Farley, University of Vermont where he’s with the Gund Institute for Ecological Economics.
Other reasons why I’m attending?
Visit the website. Give it an hour and you’ll learn a lot about the life-giving promise ecological living holds for us. And, if possible, register.