The Encyclopedia Foundation concerns itself with having all the
knowledge of mankind, preserved for future need, in case civilization
collapses. There are other reasons why such knowledge in such form
would have benefit, but that is a large one.
It has been noticed
by us that a large subset of people, principally in the Western World,
have a fascination with “end times” or an “apocalypse” or some other
type of societal collapse. It can be as little as a penchant for
apocalyptic movies from “The Day After” to “28 Days Later” or it can
become a hobby like “survivalism” (though “preparedness” is the kind
word).
Most of those involved in “Preparedness” do not look far
ahead, though they think they do. They look ahead to a collapse (or
Zombie Apocalypse!) and they think that’s taking the long view, but they
don’t look past their survival of it.
Consider a Survivalist.
He has every bit of camping gear you can think of. Food stores for a
year. Tools and fishing gear and guns and bow and arrows for when the
bullets run out. He usually has at least a few books, but ones like
“Improvised traps” or “Bow Hunting made EZ” (made up titles) or if he’s a
bit more on the ball, “Five Acres and Independence” and stuff about
animal husbandry, agriculture and canning.
All well and good.
But in reading a blog article at the Long Now Foundation’s website, I
had to smile when I saw that someone had wrote that these people almost
seem to look forward to an apocalypse, like being “Mad Max” would be
fun! I smiled because I know just what they mean!
Truth is, it
would not be fun, it would be horrific. And truth is, pretty much any
person you know who is into “Survivalism” or “Preparedness” is not going
to have an easy time of it. Nor will his children. And definitely not
his grandchildren.
Let us take the best case. The survivalist
does not get killed in the initial catastrophe (nuclear war, massive
plague, rise of the undead) and further, does not have his house over
run and looted by the masses who failed to prepare, but are armed and
desperate.
And let us further assume that he has seeds to plant,
bows to hunt with, and that even more extraordinarily, he can actually
do these things. Plant a crop. Raise cattle or even rabbits. And
further, he can defend it against additional marauders that would still
be out there.
So he is on a self-sufficient farm with his family. Now what?
Yeah,
that’s right. Now what? Is that it? “One day son, you too will get
to work all day in the fields, never knowing when you’ll be shot and
ate, and we’ll find you a woman (who’s not a mutant!) so you can raise
kids with no hopes and no future, too!”
For what they all forget
is while hunting and gathering was probably a real blast when it was all
we knew, and while plowing like a peasant with a yoke on your wife was
probably something they were used to back in the day (well, the men got
used to it!), most all thinking people wish a bit more. And 100% of the
women do, as technology is the only reason they became free. And
everyone would wish it much more if they ever were in a position to not
have it!
No book or book set is going to get civilization back on
track instantly. But it could manage a good start even in the first
person’s lifetime, especially before all the leftover machines rust out.
At the Encyclopedia Foundation, we are intending on preserving just
those books. Books that would allow a future rebuilding, so that the
survivalist’s great grandchildren have a better chance of visiting the
moon, than they do of worshiping it!
No comments:
Post a Comment