El problema de los tres cuerpos

Ya conocéis mi inclinación por la literatura de ciencia ficción y reconozco que suelo incluir en mis lecturas muchos premio Nebula y Hugo.
En 2015, por primera vez desde su inicio, el premio Hugo fue otorgado a una obra de un autor no anglosajón; comenzaba la invasión editorial China.
Cixin Liu ha conseguido vender más de tres millón de copias de la primera parte de una trilogía; cifras que en este género, sólo autores como Asimov, Orwell o Scott Card, han conseguido.
El libro tiene una base científica muy sólida, que hace que determinados fragmentos sean de difícil lectura, pero la estructura, la definición de los personajes, la trama y el desenlace, son francamente buenos.
Como los clásicos de la ciencia ficción, plantea problema morales, éticos y sociales, en un paralelismo de la historia de la Tierra, con un futuro imaginario que bien podría ser cierto en cualquier momento.
El inicio transcurre durante la revolución cultural China, liderada por Mao, con la demonización de la ciencia y la persecución a científicos que no apoyan los nuevos dogmas con ojos ciegos; ¿es la ciencia, el camino al progreso y la libertad? Es una de las preguntas que flotan en el libro desde la primera página, mezclado con la sobreexplotación de nuestros recursos, el afán por encontrar vida fuera de la Tierra, el dilema de qué ocurriría si algún día contactásemos con extraterrestres.
Un libro muy bien escrito que obliga al lector a reflexionar sobre temas que, sin formar parte de nuestro día a día, subyacen de alguna forma en el pensamiento universal.
Autor: Cixin Liu
Nº pags.: 408

The future is a pluriverse by David Bollier

Some believe that the commons are incompatible with commodity markets. Others claim that markets and commons may form mutually beneficial relations with each other. What are your own views on this issue?
I think it is entirely possible for markets and commons to “play nicely together,” but only if commoners can have “value sovereignty” over their resources and community governance.  Market players such as businesses and investors cannot be able to freely appropriate the fruits of a commons for themselves without the express authorization of commoners.  Nor should markets be allowed to uses their power to force commoners to assume market, money-based roles such as “consumers” and “employees.”  In short, a commons must have the capacity to self-regulate its relations with the market and to assure that significant aspects of its common wealth and social relationships remain inalienable – not for sale via market exchange.
A commons must be able to develop “semi-permeable boundaries” that enable it to safely interact with markets on its own terms.  So, for example, a coastal fishery functioning as a commons may sell some of its fish to markets, but the goals of earning money and maximizing profit cannot be allowed to become so foundational that it crowds out commons governance and respect for ecological limits.
Of course, market/commons relations are easier when it comes to digital commons and their shared wealth such as code, text, music, images and other intangible (non-physical) resources.  Such digital resources can be reproduced and shared at virtually no cost, so there is not the “subtractability” or depletion problems of finite bodies of shared resources.  In such cases, the problem for commons is less about preventing “free riding” than in intelligently curating digital information and preventing mischievous disruptions.  In digital spaces, the principle of “the more, the merrier” generally prevails.
That said, even digital commoners must be able to prevent powerful market players from simply appropriating their work for commercial purposes, at no cost.  Digital commoners should not simply generate “free resources” for larger market players to exploit for private gain.  That is why some digital communities are exploring the use of the newly created Peer Production License, which authorizes free usage of digital material for noncommercial and commons-based people but requires any commercial users to pay a fee.  Other communities are exploring the potential of “platform co-operatives,” in which an networked platform is owned and managed by the group for the benefit of its members.
The terms by which a commons protects its shared wealth and community ethos will vary immensely from one commons to another, but assuring a stable, benign relationship with markets is a major and sometimes tricky challenge.
During the last years we saw a boom in digital-commons, developed in urban areas by collectives and hack labs. What are the potentialities for non-digital commoning in the city in its present form – heavily urbanized and under constant surveillance? Are its proportions incompatible with the logic of the commons or the social right to the city is still achievable?
There has been an explosion of urban commons in the past several years, or at least a keen awareness of the need and potential of self-organized citizen projects and systems, going well beyond what either markets or city governments can provide.  To be sure, digital commons such as maker spaces and FabLabs are more salient and familiar types of urban commons.  And there is growing interest, as mentioned, in platform co-operatives, mutually owned and managed platforms to counter the extractive, sometimes-predatory behaviors of proprietary platforms such as Uber, Airbnb, Taskrabbit and others.
But there are many types of urban commons that already exist and that could expand, if given sufficient support.  Urban agriculture and community gardens, for example, are important ways to relocalize food production and lower the carbon footprint.  They also provide a way to improve the quality of food and invigorate the local economy.  As fuel and transport costs rise with the approach of Peak Oil, these types of urban commons will become more important.
I might add, it is not just about growing food but about the distribution, storage and retailing of food along the whole value-chain.  There is no reason that regional food systems could not be re-invented to mutualize costs, limit transport costs and ecological harm, and improve wages, working conditions, food quality (e.g., no pesticides; fresher produce), and affordability of food through commons-based food systems.  Jose Luis Vivero Pol has explored the idea of “food commons” to help achieve such results, and cities like Fresno, California, are engaged with re-inventing their local agriculture/food systems as systems.
Other important urban commons are social in character, such as timebanks for bartering one’s time and services when money is scarce; urban gardens and parks managed by residents of the nearby neighborhoods, such as the Nidiaci garden in Florence, Italy; telcommunications infrastructures such as Guifi.net in Barcelona; and alternative currencies such as the BerkShares in western Massachusetts in the US, which help regions retain more of the value they generate, rather than allowing it to be siphoned away via conventional finance and banking systems.
There are also new types of state/commons partnerships such as the Bologna Regulation for the Care and Regeneration of Urban commons. This model of post-bureaucratic governance actively invites citizen groups to take responsibility for urban spaces and gardens, kindergartens and eldercare. The state remains the more powerful partner, but instead of the usual public/private partnerships that can be blatant ripoffs of the public treasury, the Bologna Regulation enlists citizens to take active responsibility for some aspect of the city. It’s not just government on behalf of citizens, but governance with citizens. It’s based on the idea of “horizontal subsidiarity” – that all levels of governments must find ways to share their powers and cooperate with single or associated citizens willing to exercise their constitutional right to carry out activities of general interest.
In France and the US, there are growing “community chartering” movements that give communities the ability to express their own interests and needs, often in the face of hostile pressures by corporations and governments.  There are also efforts to develop data commons that will give ordinary people greater control over their data from mobile devices, computers and other equipment, and prevent tech companies from asserting proprietary control over data that has important public health, transport, planning or other uses.  Another important form of urban commons is urban land trusts, which enable the de-commodification of urban land so that the buildings (and housing) built upon it can be more affordable to ordinary people.  This is a particularly important approach as more “global cities” becomes sites of speculative investment and Airbnb-style rentals; ordinary city dwellers are being priced out of their own cities.  Commons-based approaches offer some help in recovering the city for its residents.
Why bring the commons to the management and governance of a city?  Urban commons can also reduce costs that a city and its citizens must pay. They do this by mutualizing the costs of infrastructure and sharing the benefits — and by inviting self-organized initiatives to contribute to the city’s needs. Urban commons enliven social life simply by bringing people together for a common purpose, whether social or civic, going beyond shopping and consumerism.  And urban commons can empower people and build a sense of fairness.  In a time of political alienation, this is a significant achievement.
Urban commons can unleash creative social energies of ordinary citizens, who have a range of talents and the passion to share them.  They can produce artworks and music, murals and neighborhood self-improvement, data collections and stewardship of public spaces, among other things.  Finally, as international and national governance structures become less effective and less trusted, cities and urban regions are likely to become the most appropriately scaled governance systems, and more receptive to the constructive role that commons can play.
Contemporary struggles for protection of commons seem to be strongly intertwined with ecological matters. We can clearly see this in struggles like the one that is currently taking place in North Dakota. Is there a direct link between the commons and ecology?
Historically, commoning has been the dominant mode of managing land and even today, in places like Africa, Asia and Latin America, it is arguably the default norm, notwithstanding the efforts of governments and investors to commodify land and natural resources.  According to the International Land Alliance, an estimated 2 billion people in the world still depend upon forests, fisheries, farmland, water, wild game and other natural resources for their everyday survival.  This is a huge number of people, yet conventional economists still regard this “subsistence” economy and indigenous societies as uninteresting because there is little market-exchange going on.  Yet these communities are surely more ecologically mindful of their relations to the land than agribusinesses that rely upon monoculture crops and pesticides, or which exploit a plot of land purely for its commercial potential without regard for biodiversity or long-term effects, such as the massive palm oil plantations in tropical regions.
Commoning is a way for we humans to re-integrate our social and commercial practices with the fundamental imperatives of nature.  By honoring specific local landscapes, the situated knowledge of commoners, the principle of inalienability, and the evolving social practices of commoning, the commons can be a powerful force for ecological improvement.
What should be the role of the state in relation to the commons?
This is a very complex subject, but in general, one can say that the state has very different ideas than commoners about how power, governance and accountability should be structured.  The state is also far more eager to strike tight, cozy alliances with investors, businesses and financial institutions because of its own desires to share in the benefits of markets, and particularly, tax revenues.  I call our system the market/state system because the alliance – and collusion – between the two are so extensive, and their goals and worldview so similar despite their different roles, that commoners often don’t have the freedom or choice to enact commons.  Indeed, the state often criminalizes commoning – think seed sharing, file sharing, cultural re-use – because it “competes” with market forms of production and stands as a “bad example” of alternative modes of provisioning.
Having said this, state power could play many useful roles in supporting commoning, if it could be properly deployed.  For example, the state could provide greater legal recognition to commoning, and not insist upon strict forms of private property and monetization.  State law Is generally so hostile or indifferent to commoning that commoners often have to develop their own legal hacks or workarounds to achieve some measure of protection for their shared wealth.  Think about the General Public License for software, the Creative Commons licenses, and land trusts.  Each amounts to an ingenious re-purposing of property law to serve the interests of sharing and intergenerational access.
The state could also be more supportive of bottom-up infrastructures developed by commoners, whether they be wifi systems, energy coops, community solar grids, or platform co-operatives.  If city governments were to develop municipal platforms for ride-hailing or apartment rentals – or many other functions – they could begin to mutualize the benefits or such services and better protect the interests of workers, consumers and the general public.
The state could also help develop better forms of finance and banking to help commoning expand.  The state provides all sorts of subsidies to the banking industry despite its intense commitment to private extraction of value.  Why not use “quantitative easing” or seignorage (the state’s right to create money without it being considered public debt) to finance the building of infrastructure, environmental remediation, and social needs?  Commoners could benefit from new sources of credit for social or ecological purposes – or a transition to a more climate-friendly economy — that would not likely be as remunerative as conventional market activity.
For more on these topics, I recommend two reports by the Commons Strategies Group:  “Democratic Money and Capital for the Commons:  Strategies for Transforming Neoliberal Finance through Commons-based Alternatives,” about new types of commons-based finance and banking (http://commonsstrategies.org/democratic-money-and-capital-for-the-commons-2/); and “State Power and Commoning:  Transcending a Problematic Relationship,” a report about how we might reconceptualize state power so that it could foster commoning as a post-capitalist, post-growth means of provisioning and governance.  (http://commonsstrategies.org/state-power-commoning-transcending-problematic-relationship)
How essential is, in your opinion, direct user participation for practices of commoning? Can the management of the commons be delegated to structures like the state or are the commons essentially connected to genuine grassroots democracy?
Direct participation in commoning is preferred and often essential.  However, each of us has only so many hours in the day, and we can remember the complaint that “the trouble with socialism is that it takes too many evenings.”  Still, there are many systems, particularly in digital commons, for assuring bottom-up opportunities for participation along with accountable governance and transparency.   And there are ways in which commons values can be embedded in the design of infrastructures and institutions, much as Internet protocols favor a distributed egalitarianism.  By building commons principles into the structures of larger institutions, it can help prevent or impede the private capture of them or a betrayal of their collective purposes.
That said, neither legal forms or nor organizational forms are a guarantee that the integrity of a commons and its shared wealth will remain intact.  Consider how some larger co-operatives resemble conventional corporations.  That is why some elemental forms of commoning remain important for assuring the cultural and ethical integrity of a commons.
We are entering in an age of aggressive privatization and degradation of commons: from privatization of water resources, through internet surveillance, to extreme air pollution. What should be the priorities of the movements fighting for protection of the commons? What about their organizational structure?
Besides securing their own commons against the threats of enclosure, commons should begin to federate and cooperate as a way to build a more self-aware Commons Sector as a viable alternative to both the state and market.  We can see rudimentary forms of this in the “assemblies of the commons” that have self-organized in some cities, and in the recently formed European Commons Assembly.  I am agnostic about the best organizational structure for such work because I think it will be emergent; the participants themselves must decide what will be most suitable at that time.  Of course, in this digital age, I have a predisposition to think that the forms will consist of many disparate types of players loosely joined; it won’t be a centralized, hierarchical organization.  The future is a “pluriverse,” and the new organizational forms will need to recognize this reality in operational ways.
What is your vision of a commons-based society? How would it look like?
I don’t have a grand vision.  I stand by core values and learn from ongoing practical lessons.  We don’t know the developmental evolution that will occur in the future, or for that matter, what our own imaginations and capacities might be able to actualize.  Emergence happens.  Yet I do believe that commoning is far more of a default talent of the human species than homo economicus.  We are hard-wired to cooperate, coordinate and co-evolve together.  Especially as the grand, centralized market/state systems of the 20th century begin to implode through their own dysfunctionality, the commons will more swiftly step into the breach by offering more local, convivial and trusted systems of survival.
The transition of “commonification” will likely be bumpy, if only because the current masters of the universe will not readily cede their power and prerogatives. They will be incapable of recognizing a “competing” worldview and social order.  But the costs of maintaining the antiquated Old Order are becoming increasingly prohibitive.  The capital expense, coercion, organizational complexities, and ecological instability are growing even as popular trust in the market/state and its political legitimacy is declining.
Rather than propose a glowing vision of a commons-based society, I am content to point to hundreds of smaller-scale projects and movements.  As they find each other, replicate their innovations, and federate into a more coordinated, self-aware polity – if we dare call it that! – well, that’s when things will get very interesting.

Olvid-Arte


No hay suficiente arena en el desierto
para enmudecer los ecos de tu voz.
No existe rincón en las estrellas
que no albergue el recuerdo del dolor.

Látigos, que aún hoy, rompen el silencio
del refugio que tuve que inventar.
Palabras afiladas que cercenan,
sin piedad, lo que otro día fue real.

Se tambalean y cruzan las líneas
de lo cierto y lo irreal, de aquel mundo
que de la mano creamos y creímos
para luego descubrir, que era humo.

Humo negro, espeso y tóxico
que hoy, no puedo ni respirar.
Nube de desilusión y engaño
que me arrastra a una espiral,
donde un lienzo de acuarela es mi pasado,
las lágrimas, gotas, que cual pincel
desdibujan trazos de mis recuerdos
perdidos, aquellos que ya enterré,
entre dolor, arena y estrellas.

Porque ellas me explicaron que fallaste.
Que odiarte no era el camino,
el camino era Olvid-Arte


Sylvia García 

El regreso del catón

De nuevo uno de Matilde Asensi. El primero para mí fue ‘Todo bajo el cielo‘ y tengo que decir que, mis comentarios a este segundo libro que leo de ella, son prácticamente los mismos.

Libro con estructura de bestseller, éste continuación de ‘El último catón’, del que Planeta dice que ha vendido más de 1,25 millones de copias.

No importa no haber leído la primera parte. El argumento vuelve a ser tipo ‘gymkana’, los protagonistas, listos y con unas habilidades fuera de todo lo normal, se enfrentan a una serie de pruebas, para conseguir el tesoro que buscan.

El trabajo de documentación, vuelve a ser muy bueno, y dentro de una historia amena, se aprende un poco sobre muchos temas, aunque hay que saber encontrar el límite de lo real y la ficción, ya que muchas de las cosas que cita el libro, son fruto de la imaginación de la autora.

Recomendable, aunque en esta ocasión, el narrador, una de las protagonistas, llega a hacerse un poco ‘cansina’.

Nºpags. 600
Escritor: Matilde Asensi

Dese-Arte

Deseo que esgrime arte,
anhelando algún consuelo.
Como el agua busca el mar,
busco yo besar tu cuerpo.

Es mi memoria la guía,
de mi mano en tu cabello.
Vereda en piel tatuada
que dibuja mis recuerdos.

Aún en tinieblas, intuyo,
el brillo de los luceros.
Son el faro de mi noche,
hasta el altar de tu templo.

Y allí, en lo más sagrado,
siento opresión en el pecho
y el pulso ya desbocado.

Para el mundo soy un ciego,
que tan sólo ve los trazos
que dan color a tu cuerpo.

Eres el arte que emana
de la fuente del deseo;
Siddharta de los efebos,
Artemisa de las hadas.

Todo y Nada. Nada y Parte.
Y en el todo y en la nada,
no hago más que Dese-Arte.

Siddharta :: ‘aquel que alcanzó sus objetivos’ o ‘todo deseo ha sido satisfecho’

Sylvia García

La rueda del tiempo – Robert Jordan

Hace muchos, muchos años, algo así como 25, en una feria del libro, cayó en mis manos, gracias a la recomendación de un buen librero, ‘Desde dos ríos’, primer libro de la saga ‘LA RUEDA DEL TIEMPO’.

Su autor, Robert Jordan (James Oliver Rigney, Jr.) ha sido calificado por los medios, como el Tolkien americano.

Además de varios libros del personaje de Conan, en concreto los que se llevaron al cine, Jordan es el autor de una de las sagas más largas de fantasía épica, escritas; La Rueda del Tiempo.

El primer tomo fue publicado en 1990. En 2007, con la saga inacabada, escribiendo aún el tomo 18, Robert Jordan falleció, completando su obra, el escrito Brandon Sanderson.

Esta saga me ha acompañado durante los últimos 20 años de mi vida. Sus innumerables personajes han llenado noches y días de lectura, han hecho volar mi imaginación, me han introducido en un mundo mágico que nada tiene que envidiar a la Tierra Media.

No es un saga demasiado conocida para la calidad literaria que tiene. Si no la has leído, y la paciencia te acompaña, para devorar los 20 tomos de la colección, empiézala YA, seguro que no te arrepientes.

Autor: Robert Jordan
Tomos: 20

Am-Arte

Iré a buscarte al cuerno de la luna
cuando la noche acepte mi descarte,
cuando apenas medien siete lunas
en el cálido camino hacia abrazarte.

Harto de buscarte en el silencio,
suerte que el destino quiso darte,
al abrir las puertas, sin remedio,
del juego inabarcable de mirarte,

del miedo inacabable de perderte,
del viento, que ondea el estandarte
que parte a la batalla de quererte,

guiado por la fuerza de un pasado
que artesano en la talla de la piedra,
cincela con sosiego, delicado,
la cara de su amada, el alma que desea.

Sylvia García
Día de la poesía 2017

La infantilización de la sociedad

Desde hace años, sociólogos, antropólogos o psicólogos vienen advirtiendo sobre la  infantilización de la sociedad postindustrial. La media de edad aumenta incesantemente, la población envejece, pero los rasgos adolescentes permanecen en una porción significativa de sujetos adultos. La juventud se ha convertido en icono de culto, objeto de incesante alabanza, de veneración. Lo grave no es que la gente intente aparentar juventud física, recurra en exceso a la cirugía estética o a los implantes capilares. Es más preocupante que un creciente porcentaje de adultos se afane en el cultivo consciente de su propia inmadurez. Hoy día no son los jóvenes quienes imitan la conducta de los adultos… sino al revés. La experiencia, el conocimiento que proporciona la edad no es ya virtud sino rémora, un lastre del que desprenderse a toda costa.

Marcel Danesi, profesor de antropología y autor del libro “Forever Young”, describe este síndrome colectivo: la adolescencia se extiende hoy hasta edades muy avanzadas, generando una sociedad inmadura, unos sujetos que exigen cada vez más de la vida pero entienden cada vez menos el mundo que los rodea. La opinión pública tiende a considerar la inmadurez deseable, incluso normal para un adulto. Como resultado, cunde una sensación de inutilidad, de profunda distorsión: quienes toman las decisiones cruciales suelen ser individuos con valores adolescentes. Va desapareciendo la cultura del pensamiento, de la reflexión, del entendimiento y es sustituida por el impulso, la búsqueda de la satisfacción instantánea.
El discurso político se simplifica, dogmatiza, se agota en sí mismo, se limita a meras consignas, sencillas estampas. Pierde la complejidad que correspondería a un electorado adulto. En concordancia con la visión adolescente del mundo, no se exige en los líderes políticos ideas, capacidad de elaboración, sino belleza, atractivo, tópicos, divertidas frases, una imagen que conecte con un electorado envejecido en edad pero muy rejuvenecido en mentalidad
Los nuevos tiempos son testigos de la preponderancia de los rasgos infantiles sobre los maduros. La impulsividad, los instintos, dominan a la reflexión; el placer a corto plazo a la búsqueda del horizonte. Los derechos, o privilegios, imperan sobre los denostados deberes, esas pesadas obligaciones de un adulto. La inclinación a la protesta, al pataleo, domina a la auto superación. Y la imagen se antepone al mérito y el esfuerzo.
Los medios de comunicación actúan en consecuencia: incluso la prensa más seria promociona el cotilleo más obsceno, el chascarrillo, el escándalo, esas noticias que hacen las delicias del público con mentalidad adolescente. Resulta preocupante la fuerte deriva de la prensa hacia el puro entretenimiento, la mera diversión, en detrimento de la información y análisis rigurosos. La preponderancia de ubres y glúteos sobre la opinión razonada.
El creciente infantilismo fomenta la difusión de miedos, esos temores inventados o exagerados que generan los reflejos distorsionados de la calle en la oscuridad de la habitación. Surge una “sociedad del miedo, tremendamente conservadora, que en el cambio ve peligros, no oportunidades. Una colectividad asustadiza, víctima fácil del terrorismo internacional. Nunca fue el mundo tan seguro como en el presente; pero nunca el ciudadano medio vivió tan aterrado. Ni el intelectual tan temeroso de escribir lo que realmente ocurre. Una sociedad bastante cobarde, insegura, que se asusta de su sombra, de lo que come o respira, que siente pánico ante noticias que, por definición, no son más que excepciones. Prueba de ello es la creciente atracción por el milenarismo: igual que en la Edad Media, los predicadores del Apocalipsis ejercen una singular fascinación, aunque sólo pretendan llenarse los bolsillos.
Muchos olvidan que la madurez consiste básicamente en la adquisición de juicio para distinguir el bien del mal, la formación de los propios principios y, sobre todo, la disposición a aceptar responsabilidades. Y que los dirigentes han contribuido con todas sus fuerzas a diluir o difuminar la responsabilidad individual. A sumir al ciudadano poco avisado en una adolescencia permanente. El Estado paternalista aseguró al súbdito que resolvería hasta la más mínima de sus dificultades a cambio de renunciar al pensamiento crítico, de delegar en los dirigentes todas las decisiones. Fue la promesa de una interminable infancia despreocupada y feliz.
La mentalidad infantil encaja muy bien en la sociedad compuesta por grupos de intereses, que tan magistralmente describió Mancur Olson. Unas facciones que actúan como pandillas de adolescentes en entornos donde escasea la responsabilidad, donde el grito, la pataleta, el alboroto, son vías mucho más eficaces para conseguir ventajas que el mérito y el esfuerzo. Un marco, como el español, donde predomina quien más vocifera, “reivindica”, apabulla. O tiene más amigos, mejores contactos. Raramente quién aporta razones más profundas.