2020/08/26

希修 | '영성'? '깨달음'? '道'?

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希修  < '영성'? '깨달음'? '道'? >
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'영성', '깨달음', '道' 같은 단어들은 그야말로 텅 빈 기표가 된 것 같다. 말하는 이마다 뜻하는 바가 각기 다르고, 때로는 그저 신비주의만 풍길 뿐 자신이 의미하는 바가 무엇인지 본인조차 설명을 못 하기 때문. 그런 것들이 상식이나 논리의 차원을 초월하기에 언어만으로 설명하기는 '부족'하다 해도 설명이 아예 '불가능'하다면, '벌거벗은 임금님의 멋진 옷' 같은 詐欺나 환상/망상과 어떻게 구분하겠는지. 그래서 나는, 어디까지나 나의 현재 이해 수준에서의 초기불교 관점을 소개하려고 한다.
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타인의 심리가 어떤 상태인지, 기가 몸안 어디서 어떻게 막혀 있는지, 어느 하늘나라에 어떤 용이 있는지 등을 보는 것을 '得道'라 표현하는 이들이 있다. 하지만 그들도, 한 번 재배하고 나면 땅의 힘을 소진시켜 몇 년간 땅을 쉬게 해야 한다는 인삼을 아침 저녁으로 챙겨 먹어 가며 건강/젊음에 집착하는, 마치 보톡스 중독자의 젊음 집착과도 전혀 다르지 않은 자기 자신의 그 이기적 욕심은 보지 못 한다. 신통력은 '선정' (정신의 집중으로 인한 고요함)에 수반될 수도 안 될 수도 있는 side effect일 뿐이고 '지혜'와는 무관하다고 초기불교는 분명하게 못을 박고 있건만, 예외적인 감각이나 질병 치유 능력을 이들은 '영성'/'지혜'라고 부른다.
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또 어떤 이들은 자기 내부의 '참 나'를 찾는 것이 '깨달음'이라고 얘기하는데, 결국 인도 베다전통에서 말하는 브라만-아트만이 그 뿌리. 대승불교에서는 이것을 '불성'이라고 단어만 바꿨고. 각 개인이 神의 '일부' (일부라고는 하지만 프랙탈 개념)인데 자신이 神이라는 것을 망각하고 있기에 그 망각만 일깨우면 된다는 얘기. 그렇기에 Advaita 혹은 Nondualism이라고도 불리는 전통에서의 '수행'이라는 것은 '이승에 국한된 자아인 ego'가 하는 모든 생각을 비우고 'I am'을 되뇌임으로써 잠자고 있는 神性을 깨우는 것. 그리고 이런 철학을 이어 받은 뉴에이지는 미국에서 자기계발과 결합하여 "너는 신이기 때문에 너 자신의 감정을 신뢰해야 하고, 너는 신이기 때문에 니가 스스로를 믿기만 하면 며칠 안에 백만장자도 될 수 있다!"는 '복음'을 낳기도 했다.
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반면 초기불교에서의 '깨달음'이란, '팔정도' (초기불교에서 '道'는 팔정도를 가리킬 뿐 '대자연의 신비/섭리'가 아님)의 전과정을 차근차근 밟아가면서 부처님의 가르침이 사실임을 깨닫는 것을 말한다. 즉, '부처님은 이렇다고 했는데 진짜 그런지 안 그런지 어디 한 번 보자'의 단계를 지나 '아~ 이래서 부처님이 그런 얘기를 하셨구나! 그게 바로 이 얘기였구나! 이제 보니 진짜네!'하고 direct knowledge를 얻는 것을 말한다. 45년간 부처님이 남긴 가르침을 '사성제'라는 단어로 대표하기도 하고, 그러나 가장 핵심 교리는 '12연기'이기에, "사성제를 깨닫는다", "12연기를 깨닫는다"고 해도 틀린 얘기는 아닌데, 암튼 중요한 것은 현상 속에서 부처님의 가르침 전체를 '재발견' 혹은 '확인'하는 것 - 단순히 '논리적 이해'에서 그치지 않고. 다시 말해, 신비적인 게 전혀 아니라는 얘기다. (당신의 가르침은 "쥔 주먹"이 아니라 "편 손바닥" 같은 것이어서, 비밀스러운 것도 신비적인 것도 없다고 부처님은 말씀하셨다.) Direct knowledge까지 얻고 난 후! 모든 관념과 노력마저도 놓는 것은 '강의 건너편인 해탈에 다다랐으니 이제 뗏목에서 내림'인 것이고. (무조건 생각/이성을 놓으라고 말하는 다른 전통들과 달리, 아직 강의 이쪽편에 있으면서 무작정 생각부터 놓으면 축생으로 윤회할 뿐이라고 아비담마는 가르친다.) 요약하여, 선정의 도움을 받아 '지혜를 계발'( =탐진치 감소)해 나가다 보면 direct knowledge를 거쳐 해탈하는 것이고, 신통력은 지혜나 해탈과는 별개라는 것이 초기불교의 입장이다.
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You, 崔明淑 and 3 others
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Hanjin Kang

명쾌합니다! 아직도 불교 공부하려면 한자를 잘하고 불교한자를 제대로 익혀야한다고 믿는 분들이 태반이니... 한국어로 초기불교 소개하시는 분들도 결국 한자어에 의존 안 할수는 없는 노릇이거든요

2020/08/25

BBC - Future - How vertical farming reinvents agriculture

 BBC - Future - How vertical farming reinvents agriculture




How vertical farming reinvents agriculture

Instead of growing crops in sunny fields or greenhouses, some companies stack them and grow them in old, dark warehouses with UV lights — saving water and harvesting produce faster.







By Chris Baraniuk 

6 April 2017





 




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In an old carpet factory on the outskirts of the Belgian city of Kortrijk, an agricultural upheaval is being plotted: growing crops indoors, not out on a farm, stacked layer after layer under candy-coloured lights in an area the size of a studio flat.


It’s called vertical farming, and several companies have sprung up over the last 10 years or so, filling old warehouses and disused factories with structures that grow vegetables and herbs in cramped, artificially lit quarters out of the warm glow of the sun.


A firm called Urban Crops is one of them. In its case, a large frame is designed to hold conveyor belt-shunted trays of young plants under gently glowing blue and red LEDs in this former carpet factory.


But their system, largely automated, is still a work in progress. When I visit, a software update, scheduled at short notice, means that none of the machinery is working. Chief executive Maarten Vandecruys apologises and explains that, usually, the hardware allows the plants to be fed light and nutrients throughout their growing cycle. Then they can be harvested when the time is right.


“You don’t have the risk of contamination,” says Vandecruys as he points out that the area is sealed off. And each species of crop has a growing plan tailored to its needs, determining its nutrient uptake and light, for instance. Plus, in here, plants grow faster than they do on an outdoor farm.






Some companies are turning to vertical farming, which they say uses less water and grows crops faster than outdoor farms or greenhouses (Credit: Urban Crops)



Urban Crops says that vertical farming yields more crops per square metre than traditional farming or greenhouses do. Vertical farming also uses less water, grows plants faster, and can be used year-round – not just in certain seasons. The facilities also can, in theory, be built anywhere.


At Urban Crops, eight layers of plants can be stacked in an area of just 30sq m (322 sq ft). It’s not a commercial-sized operation, but rather a proving ground intended to show that the concept is viable.


“Basically, inside the system, every day is a summer day without a cloud in the sky,” says Vandecruys.






Stacks and stacks of vegetables and herbs are grown under UV lights, with individual stacks fitting in spaces just 30 sq m (Credit: Urban Crops)



But can you really grow anything in a building, with the right technology at your fingertips?


Vandecruys says it’s possible to grow practically anything inside – but that’s not always a good idea. He explains that it’s more cost-effective to stick to quicker-growing crops that yield a high market value. Herbs, baby greens for salad and edible flowers, for instance, fetch a lot more per kilogram than certain root vegetables, which are more likely to be grown outdoors the old-fashioned way for some time yet.


Basically, inside the system, every day is a summer day without a cloud in the sky - Maarten Vandecruys


By growing plants indoors, you get a lot of fine-grained control you get over the resources your crops need. It allows for rapid growing and predictable nutrient content. The LEDs, for example, can be turned up or down at will and, because they do not give out lots of heat like old filament bulbs, they can be kept close to the plants for optimal light absorption.


Of course, it’s possible to produce the same amount of veg that you might get from an outdoor farm – but with far less land at your disposal.


So, how does it actually work? There are a few main models for indoor agriculture that vertical farmers tend to choose from: hydroponics – in which plants are grown in a nutrient-rich basin of water – and aeroponics, where crops’ roots are periodically sprayed with a mist containing water and nutrients. The latter uses less water overall, but comes with some greater technical challenges. There's also aquaponics, which is slightly different, in that it involves breeding fish to help cultivate bacteria that's used for plant nutrients.


Urban Crops has opted for hydroponics. Vandecruys points out that they recycle the water several times after it is evaporated from the plant and recaptured from the humid air. It’s also treated with UV light to curb the spread of disease.


Perhaps the key benefit of vertical farming is that it uses far less water. “We made an estimation with oak leaf lettuce and there we are actually at, say 5% [water consumption], compared to traditional growing in fields,” explains Vandecruys.


But Urban Crops doesn’t plan to make its money from the sale of crops. It plans to make money on the sale of its vertical farms.






Vertical farm companies hope to one day sell consumers indoor kits of their own for the ultimate 'farm to table' experience (Credit: Urban Crops)



It has designed contained growing systems as a product in and of themselves – people will be able to buy them in order to grow food in relatively confined spaces – potentially bringing farming to urban areas or complexes like the campus of a university. The apparatus can also be installed alongside existing plant production lines at greenhouse farms.


One of the biggest names in vertical farming, however, has a different business model. AeroFarms in New Jersey, USA, has opened what they say is the world’s largest indoor vertical farm – with a total of 7,000 sq m (70,000 sq ft) floor space – and they’re hoping to produce tasty greens in massive quantities.


Ed Harwood is the inventor and agricultural expert who came up with the technology that has made this possible. He got the idea years ago while working for Cornell University, where aeroponic systems were being used to grow plants in a lab setting. Why, he wondered, was this approach not being used on a bigger scale?


“I kept asking, ‘how come’ – people said, ‘Oh, it would never make money, the sun is free, it’s expensive to add lights and everything else, it won’t happen’,” recalls Harwood.


But he wasn’t satisfied with that. After years of experimentation he came up with a system and nozzle design for spraying the aeroponic mist onto his plants’ roots. At AeroFarms, the roots grow through a fine cloth rather than soil. But the details of how he solved the key problem – keeping the nozzles clean over time – remain a trade secret.


“Every nozzle I purchased off the shelf had significant issues,” says Harwood. “I had to do something about it – it was just a cool moment of, I guess, serendipity.” But he’s not telling anyone how he did it.


Like Urban Crops, AeroFarms is prioritising the cultivation of fast-growing salad veg and greens. Harwood believes there is a demand for such produce grown locally in big facilities like theirs that could one day be a feature of city suburbs. And he also promises the guaranteed crunchiness and freshness that consumers want.






Despite futuristic appearances, some vertical farming facilities are built inside old factories or abandoned warehouses (Credit: Chris Baraniuk)



Harwood is firm in his belief that the business he and his colleagues have put together can be profitable. But there are still those who remain sceptical.


Michael Hamm, a professor of sustainable agriculture at Michigan State University, is one of them. He points out that vertical farms depend on constant supplies of electricity, much of which will come from fossil fuel sources.


“Why waste that energy to produce a whole lettuce, when you can get light from the sun?” he says.


And he points out that it just doesn’t make economic sense to grow some crops this way: “At 10 cents a kilowatt hour, the amount of energy it would take to produce wheat would [translate to] something like $11 for a loaf of bread.”


There’s been a spike in home beer brewing – might we see a spike in farming at home, too?


He does acknowledge a few of the benefits, though. If the indoor systems are well-maintained, then the technology should in theory allow for reproducible results with every harvest – you’ll likely get the same quality of crops every time. Plus, while it costs a lot of money to set up a vertical farm in the first instance, it’s potentially a more attractive option to people getting into the agriculture business for the first time – they won’t need to spend years learning how to contend with the vagaries of the sun and seasons. For that, there’s no substitute yet for experience.


With the development of vertical farming technologies, and the likely fall in cost associated with them in coming years, some are betting that all kinds of people will want to start growing their own greens – even at home. There’s been a spike in home beer brewing – might we see a spike in farming at home, too?


Neofarms is one start-up based in Germany and Italy that is anticipating this. Its founders, Henrik Jobczyk and Maximillian Richter, have developed a prototype vertical farm about the size of a household fridge-freezer.


“We designed it in standard kitchen closet sizes,” explains Jobczyk, who adds that their plan is to make the device available as an integrated or standalone design, depending on the customer’s preferences.


People who choose to grow their salad veg at home will pay about two euros (£1.71/2.13) per week in energy costs with this system for the privilege, the pair calculate. And they would also have to keep the Neofarms device clean and constantly topped up with water. But in exchange they will have the freshest produce possible.


“With the plants growing in the system, you know about the conditions they were raised in – that gives you control and knowledge,” says Jobczyk. “But also it’s the freshness, one of the biggest problems with fresh veg – especially the greens – is the field to fork time, the time between harvest and consumption.”


Future supermarkets, though, might be filled with miniature vertical farms of their own


If you pick the plants yourself and eat them straightaway, you might enjoy a richer wealth of vitamins and other nutrients – which can be lost during packaging and transportation. Many consumers already grow their herbs on a window box, but that is a low-cost and low-maintenance activity. It remains to be seen whether the same people would be interested in making the conceptual leap that comes with bringing a mini vertical farm into their own kitchen.


Jobczyk and Richter will have to wait to find out – they’re planning more testing of their device later this year, with a public launch potentially following sometime after that.


Ed Harwood, for one, thinks vertical farming technologies might help to bring agriculture closer to the consumer. But he also sticks by his belief that farming on giant scales is here to stay.


“Irrespective of the number of recalls, I think we’ve improved food safety over all, we’re feeding more people with fewer resources,” he says.


One of the downsides of this is that children have to be introduced to the idea that their food is grown somewhere – it doesn’t come from the supermarket, but a field or factory. Future supermarkets, though, might be filled with miniature vertical farms of their own.


“For the child who says their food comes from the grocery store,” says Harwood, “they might one day be right."

Oxford Handbook of Emotion, Social Cognition, and Problem Solving in Adulthood - Oxford Handbooks

 








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The Oxford Handbook of Emotion, Social Cognition, and Problem Solving in Adulthood 

Edited by Paul Verhaeghen and Christopher Hertzog
Abstract


Adult aging influences the decoding of social and emotional cues. Older adults perform worse than younger adults in labeling some types of emotional expression from faces, bodies, and voices. Age-related declines also occur in following social cues from eye gaze. Other aspects of social perception show age-related stability, including automatic mimicry responses to emotional stimuli. There are also age-related improvements or positivity biases in some social perception tasks such as decoding information about smiles. Evidence to date indicates that age-related deficits in social perception are ... More

Keywords: agingemotionsocial perceptionemotion perceptionjoint attention

Bibliographic InformationPrint Publication Date: Jun 2014ISBN: 9780199899463Published online: May 2014DOI: 10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199899463.001.0001

EDITORS


Paul Verhaeghen, editor 
Paul Verhaeghen, Ph.D., is a Professor of Psychology at Georgia Institute of Technology. He is interested in working memory, attention, executive control, creativity, aging, and the interfaces between them.

Christopher Hertzog, editor 
Christopher K. Hertzog, Ph.D., is a More


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Subject(s) in Oxford Handbooks Online
Psychology

Contents
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toggleFront Matter
Oxford Library of Psychology 
The Oxford Handbook of Emotion, Social Cognition, and Problem Solving in Adulthood 
Dedication 
Oxford Library of Psychology 
About the Editors 
Contributors 
IntroductionChristopher Hertzog and Paul Verhaeghen
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Part 1 Emotion During Adulthood
Older Adults’ Perception of Social and Emotional CuesLouise H. Phillips, Gillian Slessor, Phoebe E. Bailey, and Julie D. Henry
The Effects of Age on Memory for Socioemotional Material: An Affective Neuroscience PerspectiveElizabeth A. Kensinger, Eric R. Allard,, and Anne C. Krendl
Age Changes in Facial Morphology, Emotional Communication, and Age StereotypingMary Lee Hummert
Do Everyday Affective Experiences Differ Throughout Adulthood?: A Review of Ambulatory-Assessment EvidenceMichaela Riediger and Antje Rauers
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Part 2 Emotion in Context: Antecedents and Consequences
The Dynamics of Cognitive-Emotional Integration: Complexity and Hedonics in Emotional DevelopmentGisela Labouvie-Vief, Anne-Laure Gilet, and Nathalie Mella
Putting Emotional Aging in Context: Contextual Influences on Age-Related Changes in Emotion Regulation and RecognitionJennifer Tehan Stanley and Derek M. Isaacowitz
Positive Emotions and Health in Adulthood and Later LifeCatherine Riffin, Anthony D. Ong,, and Cindy S. Bergeman
Boundary Conditions for Emotional Well-Being in Aging: The Importance of Daily StressMartin J. Sliwinski and Stacey B. Scott
Tasks, Capacities, and Tactics: A Skill-Based Conceptualization of Emotion Regulation Across the LifespanNathan S. Consedine and Iris Mauss
Reconciling Cognitive Decline and Increased Well-Being With Age: The Role of Increased Emotion Regulation EfficiencyErin Senesac Morgan and Susanne Scheibe
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The Oxford Handbook of Identity Development - Paperback - Kate C. McLean, Moin Syed - Oxford University Press

 The Oxford Handbook of Identity Development - Paperback - Kate C. McLean, Moin Syed - Oxford University Press




Cover

The Oxford Handbook of Identity Development

Edited by Kate C. McLean and Edited by Moin Syed

Oxford Library of Psychology

Table of Contents

Chapter 1: The Field of Identity Development Needs an Identity: An Introduction to the Handbook of Identity Development
Kate C. McLean and Moin Syed
Chapter 2: Theoretical Foundations of Identity
Phillip L. Hammack
Part 1: Debates: Identity Development Across the Lifespan
Chapter 3: Gendered Narrative Voices: Sociocultural and Feminist Approaches to Emerging Identity in Childhood and Adolescence
Robyn Fivush and Widaad Zaman
Chapter 4: Identity Development from Adolescence to Emerging Adulthood: What We Know and (Especially) Don't Know
Jeffrey Jensen Arnett
Chapter 5: Identity Development through Adulthood: The Move Toward "Wholeness"
Jane Kroger
Chapter 6: Three Strands of Identity Development Across the Human Life Course: Reading Erik Erikson in Full
Dan P. McAdams and Claudia Zapata-Gietl
Part 2: Debates: Identity Status Perspectives on Processes of Identity Development
Chapter 7: The Identity Statuses: Strengths of a Person-Centered Approach
Elisabetta Crocetti and Wim Meeus
Chapter 8: Commitment and Exploration: The Need for a Developmental Approach
Saskia Kunnen and Marijke Metz
Chapter 9: Identity Status: On Refinding the People
Ruthellen Josselson and Hanoch Flum
Part 3: Debates: Narrative Perspectives on Processes of Identity Development
Chapter 10: Autobiographical Reasoning Is Constitutive for Narrative Identity: The Role of the Life Story for Personal Continuity
Tilman Habermas and Christin Köber
Chapter 11: Autobiographical Reasoning and My Discontent: Alternative Paths from Narrative to Identity
Monisha Pasupathi
Chapter 12: Discerning Oneself: A Plea for the Whole
Mark Freeman
Part 4: Debates: Internal, External, and Interactional Approaches to Identity Development
Chapter 13: Identity as Internal Processes: How the "I" Comes to Define the "Me"
Alan S. Waterman
Chapter 14: Identities as an Interactional Process
Neill Korobov
Chapter 15: Integrating 'Internal', 'Interactional,' and 'External' Perspectives: Identity Process as the Formulation of Accountable Claims Regarding Selves
Elli P. Schachter
Part 5: Debates: Culture and Identity Development
Chapter 16: Culture as Race/Ethnicity
Frank C. Worrell
Chapter 17: "[T]hey say Black men won't make it, but I know I'm gonna make it": Ethnic and Racial Identity Development in the Context of Cultural Stereotypes
Niobe Way and Onnie Rogers
Chapter 18: Reflections on the Cultural Lenses of Identity Development
Margarita Azmitia
Part 6: Applied Issues in Identity Development 
Chapter 19: Identities, Cultures, and Schooling: How Students Navigate Racial-Ethnic, Indigenous, Immigrant, Social Class, and Gender Identities on Their Pathways Through School
Catherine R. Cooper, Elizabeth Gonzalez, and Antoinette R. Wilson
Chapter 20: Transformation, Erosion or Disparity in Work Identity? Challenges during the Contemporary Transition to Adulthood
Jeylan T. Mortimer, Jack Lam, and Shi-Rong Lee
Chapter 21: Identity and Positive Youth Development: Advances in Developmental Intervention Science
Kyle Eichas, Alan Meca, Marilyn J. Montgomery, and William Kurtines
Chapter 22: A Translational Research Approach to Narrative Identity in Psychotherapy
Jefferson A. Singer and Adam M. Kasmark
Chapter 23: Youths' Constructions of Meanings about Experiences with Political Conflict: Implications for Processes of Identity Development
Cecilia Wainryb and Holly Recchia
Part 7: Extensions
Chapter 24: Puberty, Identity, and Context: A Biopsychosocial Perspective on Internalizing Psychopathology in Early Adolescent Girls
Misaki N. Natsuaki, Danielle Samuels, and Leslie D. Leve
Chapter 25: Body Image and Identity: A Call for New Research
Elizabeth A. Daniels and Meghan M. Gillen
Chapter 26: Cultural Neuroscience of Identity Development
Alissa J. Mrazek, Tokiko Harada and Joan Y. Chiao
Chapter 27: Parenting, Adolescent-Parent Relationships, and Social Domain Theory:
Implications for Identity Development
Wendy M. Rote and Judith G. Smetana
Chapter 28: Who Am I If We're Not Us? Divorce and Identity across the Lifespan
Jeffrey T. Cookston and Luke Remy
Chapter 29: Identity Development in the Context of the Risk and Resilience Framework
Frosso Motti-Stefanidi
Chapter 30: The Dynamic Role of Identity Processes in Personality Development:
Theories, Patterns, and New Directions
Jennifer Pals Lilgendahl
Chapter 31: Identity Development in the Digital Age: The Case of Social Networking Sites
Adriana M. Manago
Part 8: Reflections, Conclusions, and the Future
Chapter 32: Identity-Formation Research from a Critical Perspective: Is a Social Science Developing?
James E. Côté
Chapter 33: What Have We Learned Since Schwartz (2001)? A Reappraisal of the Field of Identity Development
Seth J. Schwartz, Koen Luyckx, and Elisabetta Crocetti
Chapter 34: The Future of Identity Development Research: Reflections, Tensions, and Challenges
Moin Syed and Kate C. McLean

Sustainable Urban Agriculture in Cuba (Contemporary Cuba): Sinan Koont: 9780813054032: Amazon.com: Books

 



Sustainable Urban Agriculture in Cuba (Contemporary Cuba): Sinan Koont: 9780813054032: Amazon.com: Books






Sustainable Urban Agriculture in Cuba (Contemporary Cuba) Paperback – January 17, 2017
by Sinan Koont (Author)
3.3 out of 5 stars 2 customer reviews


“Pushed by necessity but enabled by its existing social and educational policies, Cuba in the 1990s launched the most extensive program of urban sustainable agriculture in the world. This study is to date the only book-length investigation in either English or Spanish of this important national experiment in transforming the environmental, economic, and social nature of today’s dominant system of producing food.”—Al Campbell, University of Utah

As large-scale industrial agriculture comes under increasing scrutiny because of its petroleum- and petrochemical-based input costs and environmentally objectionable consequences, increasing attention has been focused on sustainable, local, and agro-ecological techniques in food production. Cuba was forced by historical circumstances to be one of the pioneers in the massive application of these techniques.

After the demise of the Soviet Union in the early 1990s, Cuba was left without access to external support needed to carry on with industrial agriculture. The economic crisis led the country to reconsider their former models of resource management. Cuba retooled its agricultural programs to focus on urban agriculture—sustainable, ecologically sound farming close to densely populated areas. Food now takes far less time to get to the people, who are now better nourished because they have easier access to whole foods. Moreover, urban farming has become a source of national pride—Cuba has one of the best urban agriculture programs in the world, with a thousand-fold increase in urban agricultural output since 1994.

Sinan Koont has spent the last several years researching urban agriculture in Cuba, including field work at many sustainable farms on the island. He tells the story of why and how Cuba was able to turn to urban food production on a large scale with minimal use of chemicals, petroleum, and machinery, and of the successes it achieved—along with the continuing difficulties it still faces in reducing its need for food imports.

Sinan Koont is associate professor of economics at Dickinson College.

A volume in the series Contemporary Cuba, edited by John M. Kirk

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Unfinished Puzzle: Cuban Agriculture: The Challenges, Lessons & Opportunities Paperback
May Ling Chan

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Editorial Reviews

Review



“A much-needed detailed account of the strides made in Cuban urban agriculture.”—Monthly Review



“Meticulously sets out the very special political, economic, institutional and social conditions that enabled Cuba to survive the ‘Special Period’ following the sudden ending of Soviet Union support and the previous period of external food import dependency. The country has created an alternative food and farming paradigm that has many important lessons for the rest of the world. . . . Deserves careful reading and consideration.”—Journal of Experimental Agriculture



“A comprehensive analysis of urban sustainable agriculture viewed through the lens of a successful transition from a society highly dependent on foreign support to one of self-sustained output based on ingenuity, perseverance, and necessity. . . . A thorough background to the way food security has changed in Cuba.”—New West Indian Guide



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“Pushed by necessity but enabled by its existing social and educational policies, Cuba in the 1990s launched the most extensive program of urban sustainable agriculture in the world. This study is to date the only book-length investigation in either English or Spanish of this important national experiment in transforming the environmental, economic, and social nature of today’s dominant system of producing food.”—Al Campbell, University of Utah

As large-scale industrial agriculture comes under increasing scrutiny because of its petroleum- and petrochemical-based input costs and environmentally objectionable consequences, increasing attention has been focused on sustainable, local, and agro-ecological techniques in food production. Cuba was forced by historical circumstances to be one of the pioneers in the massive application of these techniques.

After the demise of the Soviet Union in the early 1990s, Cuba was left without access to external support needed to carry on with industrial agriculture. The economic crisis led the country to reconsider their former models of resource management. Cuba retooled its agricultural programs to focus on urban agriculture—sustainable, ecologically sound farming close to densely populated areas. Food now takes far less time to get to the people, who are now better nourished because they have easier access to whole foods. Moreover, urban farming has become a source of national pride—Cuba has one of the best urban agriculture programs in the world, with a thousand-fold increase in urban agricultural output since 1994.

Sinan Koont has spent the last several years researching urban agriculture in Cuba, including field work at many sustainable farms on the island. He tells the story of why and how Cuba was able to turn to urban food production on a large scale with minimal use of chemicals, petroleum, and machinery, and of the successes it achieved—along with the continuing difficulties it still faces in reducing its need for food imports.

Sinan Koont is associate professor of economics at Dickinson College.

A volume in the series Contemporary Cuba, edited by John M. Kirk


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Product details

Series: Contemporary Cuba

Paperback: 254 pages
Publisher: University Press of Florida; Reprint edition (January 17, 2017)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0813054036
ISBN-13: 978-0813054032
Product Dimensions: 6 x 0.6 x 9 inches
Shipping Weight: 12 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
Average Customer Review: 3.3 out of 5 stars 2 customer reviews
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Customer reviews
3.3 out of 5 stars
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Top customer reviews

converger

2.0 out of 5 starsAn extraordinary missed opportunitySeptember 21, 2015
Format: Hardcover|Verified Purchase

A lovely if densely academic narrative about one of the poster children for sustainable, large scale, grassroots urban food production.

Otherwise, pretty much useless. I was looking for real, quantifiable, longitudinal data about what, exactly, has been accomplished. How has this changed food availability and/or quality in Havana and elsewhere? What would be everyone's food situation be if this remarkable phenomenon had never happened?How much food gets produced? What kind? What percentage of nutritional requirements are being met, for how many people? What is the seasonal flow of food and nutritional support? Is there any infrastructure for transporting food beyond neighborhoods? Is there any infrastructure for preserving food, or is it all fresh food only? How much acreage is being cultivated? What's the size distribution of garden plots? How much fertilizer goes into producing food, and what kind? Are garden soils being built up, or depleted? How is everything distributed? If money changes hands, how much do things cost, and what percentage of available income is going to buy this food? How many people do the gardening, transport, and distribution? What is the total labor input for each step in the value chain? By conventional standards, what does the cost-benefit ratio look like? Assuming that it's not great by conventional standards, what other quantifiable benefits does this phenomenon provide? Will it survive the coming transition to a capitalist economy? What has been learned from this inspiring example of urban food that can be replicated and scaled elsewhere? Nobody has really tried to answer, or even ask any of these questions (at least not outside of Cuba). This book doesn't either.

The utter failure of this dense academic text to offer any useful results, combined with its atrocious writing style (not unusually so for an academic text) and ridiculous cost makes this book a poor choice for any serious researcher. That said, there's not much in English, good or bad, about this extraordinary story. Even an awful book is probably better than nothing.
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Walter D. Teague

5.0 out of 5 starsAnother important book censored by price.April 23, 2013
Format: Hardcover

I would love to read this book, more than the few free pages shown above. But even at the "savings" of $67.46, I will defer until it comes to a library near me. Oops, that isn't going to happen what with austerity and continuing US opposition to anything good said about Cuba.

This outrageous price, $75 retail, is another example of the old British tradition of censorship by price. I read somewhere that for a long time the British kept the masses safe from dangerous liberating knowledge by printing serious works in hardcover which the plebes couldn't afford. In the US today, some of the best research and scholarly works continue to be published in limited circulation (by exorbitant price) academic journals. And not only do they keep their information safe from the eyes of the rabble, but they make sure the world processor files or God forbid PDF versions, safely locked up behind copy-write laws.

Don't believe there is a de facto conspiracy to keep complex facts from the public discourse? Go Google this subject and read the vast number of ill-informed and irrational comments on the subject of Cuba on web pages across the internet.

One person found this helpful

2020/08/24

Beyond the Weberian Trails: An Essay on the Anthropology of Southeast Asian Buddhism - Kitiarsa - 2009 - Religion Compass - Wiley Online Library

Beyond the Weberian Trails: An Essay on the Anthropology of Southeast Asian Buddhism - Kitiarsa - 2009 - Religion Compass - Wiley Online Library

Beyond the Weberian Trails: An Essay on the Anthropology of Southeast Asian Buddhism

Pattana Kitiarsa

First published: 20 March 2009 https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1749-8171.2009.00135.xCitations: 3

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Abstract

Theravada Buddhism is one of the most important fields of inquiry within a larger context of Southeast Asian studies. In this essay, I discuss an overview of anthropolo gical studies of Theravada Buddhism in Southeast Asia since the 1960s. I argue that key intellectual and social forces, which have characterized and sustained the anthropological studies of Buddhism in the region, are the combination of the following factors: (1) an insistent and subtle applications of Weberian thoughts to understand complexity and multivalency of Buddhist practices in the region's diverse contexts; (2) some critical problematic relationships between Buddhism and the post‐Indochinese War (post‐Cold War) nation states and other turbulent politics of the social life of the Buddhists; and (3) some surging global interests in Theravada Buddhism, especially its teachings and meditational practices. Such interests have transformed the Buddhist World of Southeast Asia into a transnational religious phenomenon and instantly placed Southeast Asian Buddhism at the center of the world's theological and intellectual Buddhist landscapes. Toward the end, I suggest some critical issues that could ignite new directions in the field of study and create some vibrant and exciting generations of ethnographies on Southeast Asian Buddhism.