Feature Articles Sorted by Issue

Many feature articles from our past issues of Whole Earth are now available online! To read an article, simply click the title.

Spring 2003


Remembering Ivan Illich

Reflections on a seminal cultural critic/intellectual gadfly, by Carl Mitcham, Peter Warshall, Jerry Brown, Vijaya Nagarajan, Lee Swenson, David Cayley, and Lee Hoinacki

by Michael K. Stone

Remembering Ivan Illich

Carl Mitcham's memories of Ivan Illich.

by Carl Mitcham

Remembering Ivan Illich

Peter Warshall's memories of Ivan Illich.

by Peter Warshall

Remembering Ivan Illich

Jerry Brown's memories of Ivan Illich.

by Jerry Brown

Remembering Ivan Illich

Vijaya Nagarajan's memories of Ivan Illich.

by Vijaya Nagarajan

Remembering Ivan Illich

Lee Swenson's memories of Ivan Illich.

by Lee Swenson

Remembering Ivan Illich

David Cayley's memories of Ivan Illich.

by David Cayley

Remembering Ivan Illich

Lee Hoinacki's memories of Ivan Illich.

by Lee Hoinacki

What Happens When Technology Zooms Off the Chart?

Singularity and its meanings

by Alex Steffen

 

Spring 2001

Donella Meadows tribute by Peter Warshall

Remembering Donella Meadows

by Peter Warshall

Nice Boulders, but Where's the Fish?

Why twenty years of salmon restoration efforts haven't brought us back to the era of plenty, at least not yet.

by Seth Zuckerman

Pete Seeger interviewed by David Kupfer

An interview with Pete Seeger.

by David Kupfer

Reintroducing the Lost

Once extinct, always extinct? Maybe not.

by Peter Warshall

Resurrection Ecology

Bring back the Xerces Blue!

by Robert Michael Pyle

Solving for Pattern: The Straw Project

Fourth-graders' love of a shrimp has built a human web for changing education, ranching, government, philanthropy, and parenting.

by Michael K. Stone

The New New Economy

A new economy is emerging that is based on providing clean energy, clean transportation, clean water, and other goods and services that embody the principles of industrial ecology, resource productivity, and natural capitalism.

by Joel Makower

Wilderness and the Hyperreal

Are all our future landscapes headed for the hyperreal? Does faking nature matter?

by Peter Warshall

 

Winter 2001

Comparison is Key

New learning is a victory for the human spirit. So is empathy.

by Mary Catherine Bateson

Dancing with Systems

This excerpt from the last book written by Donella Meadows discusses what to do when systems resist change.

by Donella H. Meadows

Jump-Starting Renewables

What it takes to enter the Hydrogen Era.

by Tyrone Cashman

The Highest Litter Brigade

The clean-up of Mt. Everest.

by David Bolling

The Table of Contents

In his vehicle--part VW Bug, part table--Reuben Margolin navigates a cross-country traveling commons.

by Reuben Margolin

The Unholy Triumvirate

Starting on the day we dreamed up money, flows of energy and water became inseparable from flows of cash.

by Peter Warshall

 

Summer 2001

A Bug Story

It began, as so many things begin these days, with an email message.

by Alan Atkisson

A Future-Proofed Power Meter

One unfortunate vision of our technological future is the "innovation imperative," which strongly implies that our things and appliances must always get "smarter."

by Natalie Jeremijenko

Communication Prosthetics: Threat, or Menace?

"Neal," he finally said, "have you ever heard of this thing called . . . a PowerPoint Presentation?"

by Neal Stephenson

Foot-and-Mouth or Foot In Mouth?

Breakdown of the British Social Infrastructure

by Caroline Oakley

Hybrid Vigor

The Hybrid Vigor Institute

by Denise Caruso

Metrophagy

The art and science of digesting large cities.

by William Gibson

Technology: The Bitch Goddess

Technological success is the bitch-goddess of the twenty-first century

by Joel Garreau

The Paradox of Loss

If you have nothing, you'll have nothing to lose.

by Jasmina Tesanovic

Viridians Invade Whole Earth, Seize Means of Information

The Viridian Design Movement

by Bruce Sterling

 

Spring 2000

A Whole Earth Forum of Compassionate Linguists

Concerned linguists take counsel: is ours a future of language fossils, or the preservation of many tongues?

by Elena Benedicto

Bring Back the Elephants

Early hunters killed off the mammoths. Should we bring back proboscideans and restore America to its Pleistocene richness?

by Paul S. Martin

Disappearing Languages

Of the 6,000 languages still on Earth, 90 percent could be gone by 2100.

by Rosemarie Ostler

English: The Killer Language? Or a Passing Phase?

There are reasons to believe that the English language will eventually wane in influence.

by Joshua A. Fishman

Grassroots Radio

Noncommercial and nonprofessional, local and global, shortwave, Internet, and low-power FM radio.

by Dorothy Kidd

Informed by Indifference

'In those moments above the cloudless sea, my body vibrating with the plane, I began to feel how remote Antarctica is....'

by Barry Lopez

Just Speak Your Language

'It is the spiritual relevance deeply embedded in our own languages that makes them relevant to us as American Indians today....'

by Richard Littlebear

Left-Handed Bears and Androgynous Cassowaries

Homosexual/transgendered animals and indigenous knowledge.

by Bruce Bagemihl

Micro-Powered Radio

FM radio's Davids win a round against Goliath.

by Dorothy Kidd

Migrant Mushroomers

Tales of adventure, nature love, and money on the globalocal mushroom trail.

by David Arora

Relinquishing the Mic

The only globalocal broadcast for women's rights has served the voiceless.

by Jeanne Carstensen

Salila-ti Mi-mu d-enn-i-gu: I Wish You Would Come Home

Without spiritual language, how are we to hear the Great Power's requests?

by Darryl Babe Wilson

The Cryosphere

The Antarctic atmosphere consists of ice clouds and ice vapor; the hydrosphere is ice rivers and ice seas; the lithosphere, ice plateaus and ice mountains....

by Stephen J. Pyne

The Global Mushroom Trade

With the globalization of trade, mushrooms are being picked in more places than ever before.

by David Arora

The Living Water Garden

An American artist shepherds the first inner-city Chinese ecological park.

by Betsy Damon

The World Trade Organization

Fix it or nix it?

by Peter Warshall

WTO Think-In

A very skeptical India.

by Anuradha Mittal

WTO Think-In

A kind WTO.

by Donella H. Meadows

WTO Think-In

Hold the champagne: globalization's not dead yet.

by Jerry Mander

WTO Think-In

Will all boats, or just yachts, rise with globalization's tide?

by Steve Barnett

WTO Think-In

WTO's been asked to do too much.

by Richard O'Brien

WTO Think-In

WTO, bend or break.

by Lori Wallach

WTO Think-In

Globalizing food standards: the role of the Codex Alimentarius Commission.

by Tim Lang

WTO Think-In

Blue gold and the WTO.

by Maude Barlow

WTO Think-In

First steps toward reclaiming sovereignty and clear conscience.

by William Greider

WTO Think-In

A good, serious confrontation.

by Peter Schwartz

WTO Think-In

Down on the farm with the WTO.

by Mark Ritchie

WTO Think-In

WTO, forests, and a postmodern move.

by Randy Hayes

WTO Think-In

What is the point of trade?

by Anita Roddick

WTO Think-In

Beware! MAI clones in the WTO.

by Tony Clarke

WTO: Journal of the Uninvited

A streetwise report of happenings in Seattle on November 30,1999, when turtles, priests, farmers, scholars, diplomats, workers, scientists, fishermen, businesspeople, lawyers, and just plain citizens confronted the WTO.

by Paul Hawken

Yowlumni: The Path to Revitalization

Everytime we use our language I feel that all of creation understands us and is rejuvenated....

by Matt Vera

 

Fall 2000

A Letter About "Aloha," the Internal Paradise

Defining the word Aloha.

by Lanakila Brandt

A Goddess in the Making

A very hard-to-find town in India builds a shrine to a goddess for AIDS.

by Anna Portnoy

All Species Inventory

A call for the discovery of all life-forms on Earth.

by Kevin Kelly

Discovery

...or, find the 'suckers.'

by Peter Warshall

 

Summer 2000

Beyond Left and Right

My modus operandi was fairly simple: I'd explore one group's convictions, granting them the benefit of the doubt, and see how it felt to see the world through . . .

by Jay Kinney

Carlos Santana

An interview with Steve Heilig.

by Steve Heilig

Escaping the Matrix

What if consensus reality is a fabricated illusion? Are you ready for the red pill?

by Richard K. Moore

Storm Warning: Are Left and Right Obsolete?

Hay foot, straw foot

by Stephanie Mills

Storm Warning: Are Left and Right Obsolete?

How about that green option?

by Charlene Spretnak

Storm Warning: Are Left and Right Obsolete?

'Socialism is dead'...really?

by Mark Dowie

Storm Warning: Are Left and Right Obsolete?

Left and right: an outworn framework.

by Joseph Stromberg

Storm Warning: Are Left and Right Obsolete?

Progressives against progress!

by Charles Siegel

Storm Warning: Are Left and Right Obsolete?

Symposium introduction

by Jay Kinney

To Save the Whooping Crane, You Need Two Wings

Down in the trenches of local politics, labels lose their meaning and odd bedfellows arise.

by Peter Warshall

 

Winter 2000

Changing the World

Five Ways You can Change the World

by Danny Hillis

Really Useful Websites

Websites that Kevin Kelly Finds to be Useful

by Kevin Kelly

Thinking With Her Hands

Maya Lin speaks of landscapes, history, and the practice of making mindful art.

by Michael Krasner

Tools Are the Revolution

The problems created by technology create opportunities for new tool making.

by Kevin Kelly

True Films

Non-fictional films recommended by Kevin Kelly

by Kevin Kelly

 

Spring 1999

Changing The Winds

A leader at the South African post-apartheid and Columbia, South America scenario workshops describes his journey from corporate 'reactive' to empowering facilitator.

by Adam Kahane

Chicken Little, Cassandra, and the Real Wolf

So many ways to think about the future.

by Donella H. Meadows

Declaration on Soil

The ecological discourse on planet Earth, global hunger and threats to life urges us to look down at the soil, humbly.

by Sigmar Groeneveld

Doing Scenarios

Scenarios are imaginative pictures of futures, but the picture is just a means to an end.

by Art Kleiner

Eating Earth

Geophagy is universal.

by Peter Warshall

Futurama Retro

An interview with John Clute, author of The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction.

by Peter Warshall

Greedy Frogs, Balanced Humans, and Improvisational Music

The planetary scenarios of the World Business Council for Sustainable Development

by Global Scenarios Project Shell International

Soybean of Happiness

A 3,000 year history of our most modern oilseed.

by Peter Warshall

 

Fall 1999

Cancer As Metaphor

Metaphors of personality can victimize.

by Rick Fields

Earth's Natural Internet

Healing the planet with mushrooms.

by Paul Stamets

Enough with the Nature Already, Do You Know a Good Dentist?

Let's pay 'nature writers' not to write any more books for at least ten years.

by Stephen J. Lyons

It's Time for Me to Die

A killer writes from death row. He wants to die, but psychiatrists say no.

by Michael B. Ross

Rock Not Always a Hard Place

Manufacturing minerals is a life process that has shaped the continents and our history.

by Lynn Margulis

Salman Rushdie on Bombay, Rock N' Roll, and The Satanic Verses

An Interview with Salman Rushdie from Bombay, India.

by Vijaya Nagarajan

The Body Politic

The metaphor of our nation as family.

by George Lakoff

Virtual Community

Changing communications extend our minds, disrupt old forms of community, and create new ways to relate.

by Howard Rheingold

Virtual Reality

Sometimes, when you make up a metaphor, it goes out and has adventures. It mixes with the wrong crowd. It forgets where it came from and changes so you hardly recognize it. A metaphor can . . . .

by Jaron Lanier

 

Summer 1999

Book Brawl

Independent bookstores, the Internet, chain stores and discount houses duke it out.

by Patricia Holt

City Lights

An address by San Francisco's first Poet Laureate.

by Lawrence Ferlinghetti

Elegant Densities

Mayor Jerry Brown on a sustainable Oakland

by Jerry Brown

Elegant, Empathetic Affordable Housing

An interview with Michael Pyatok, America's master craftsman of community partnerships and architectural design.

by Michael Pyatok

Global Aspirations, Local Gospels

Most of the human-rights standards which now exist in international law derive from the world's major religions and philosophies.

by Blair Gibb

Poor Monsanto

Corporate demonizing will not transform industrial agriculture, but less hubris and more openness to organic agriculture might help.

by Donella H. Meadows

The Viridian Manifesto of January 3,2000

Art movements have a problem, which is that moron critics name them. That's how you get stuck with a name like 'fauves.' We've already got a name. We're Viridian Greens.

by Bruce Sterling

 

Winter 1999

Attention! All Keepers of the Flame

The imagery stubbornly remains: flame is a hostile force or, at best, an unrelenting nuisance that the world would be wise to discard.

by Stephen J. Pyne

Burning Libraries

Burning libraries is a profound form of murder, or if self-inflicted, suicide.

by Stewart Brand

Burning Mirrors

The ancient Chinese, Greeks, Incas, and Romans discovered that curved mirrors could concentrate the rays of the sun onto anything burnable with enough intensity to cause the object to burst into flames in seconds.

by John Perlin

Cooking with Fire

A short history, with access to the best cookbooks.

by Daphne Derven

Green Chemistry's Maven

An interview with EPA's Tracy Williamson.

by Peter Warshall

Need-Fire

Kindling new fire; the basic rite of community renewal.

by Stephen J. Pyne

Restorative Fire Is Local Fire

Restoring fire's creativity in the San Joaquin grasslands.

by Robert B. Hansen

The Fires of Life

Solar fire, cellular fire.

by Harold J. Morowitz

The Long Burn

Seizing fire was our most daring, our most profound gamble. It made us the biospheric creature we are. It made the biosphere anew.

by Stephen J. Pyne

The Wild Rice Moon

Globalocal markets and preserving the taste of manoomin.

by Winona LaDuke

To Burn or Not To Burn

Should we incinerate our garbage?

by Peter Warshall

Uma and Shiva, or The Origin of a Young God

The Hindu story of fire, desire, and bringing order to the world.

by Sadie Hadley

Vital Fire

Can we restore fire as a friend?

by Peter Warshall

 

Fall 1998


Can a Nation Become a Commons of Nonviolence?

The Dalai Lama proposes that Tibet be transformed into a zone of Ahisma, a Hindu term used to mean a state of peace and nonviolence.

by Dalai Lama

Defending the Global Commons

Having fun supporting the United Nations

by Hazel Henderson

EuroEnglish

The European Union comissioners have announced that agreement has been reached to adopt English as the preferred language for European communications.

by Author Anonymous

Good-Guy Real Estate

Jean Hocker, Land Trust Alliance president, counsels Whole Earth on land trusts as conservation-based commons.

by Jean Hocker

Neptune's Manifesto

How a few good pirates can save the oceans

by Captain Paul Watson

The -stans of Central Asia

The Turanian Bioregion

by Eric Sievers

Trust and Security

Can the commons exist without common decency and common sense?

by Mary Catherine Bateson

Virtual Commons

The Internet is the only commons that now enjoys support from the whole political spectrum, including the farthest right.

by Jaron Lanier

 

Spring 1998

Banking on Natural Capital

Mapping paths to conservation-based banking

by John Haines

Buying Back Eden

Wildlands philanthropy.

by Peter Warshall

Dark Comix

The single largest impediment to the acceptance of comics as an artform has been the word itself.

by Bob Callahan

Democratic Foundations

The future's best way to transfer wealth?

by Mark Dowie

Local Currency: In Each Other We Trust

Creating community economics with local currency.

by Paul Glover

Organic Incorporated

Monocrops, labeling, biotechnology, and watershed activists challenge the pioneer farmer.

by Dan Imhoff

Privilege of Printing Money

Global currency.

by Richard O'Brien

 

Summer 1998

Art as Landscape/Landscape as Art

Art as Landscape/Landscape as Art

by Peter Warshall

Can We Drink the Water We Live With?

New Yorkers struggle to let nature do the job.

by Paul S. Mankiewicz

Facades

When an organization commissions an architectural masterpiece for itself, it is almost always done at precisely the moment when that organization is on its last legs.

by Witold Rybczynski

Gulf of Mexico Bioregion

Though often compared to the Mediterranean, the Gulf of Mexico is a unique semi-enclosed sea.

by Peter Warshall

Lock-In

An interview with Amory Lovins

by Peter Warshall

Sapsuckers at Work

By hewing nest holes in aspens and tapping sap from willows, a keystone bird restructures a mountain landscape, composes its species list, and connects its community members.

by Paul Ehrlich

The Long Wave

Or why Asian economies are collapsing and the Democrats are cutting welfare.

by Donella H. Meadows

The Renewal, Growth, Birth, and Death of Ecological Communities

A promising new model questions old ideologies, brittle beliefs, and ecological ideals. Is it a guide to more mindful actions?

by C.S. Holling

 

Winter 1998

Anniversaries to come: Prolog

In this same year, Stewart Brand and a small group of cohorts published the first Whole Earth Catalog. In retrospect, Whole Earth was not the only . . . .

by Peter Warshall

Code of the Warrior

The code of the Warrior has the basic qualities of courage, loyalty and willingness to sacrifice for the larger group, to be connected to something larger than simply the individual.

by Rick Fields

Destruction

Do you remember the way a bear goes through a cabin when nobody is home?

by Joanne Kyger

Energy Lessons Learned and To be Learned

Verities that will astonish some and delight the rest.

by Amory B. Lovins

GAIA

Another four-letter word.

by Lynn Margulis

God is a verb

Here is God's purpose - for God, to me, it seems, is a verb not a noun . . .

by R. Buckminster Fuller

Internet: The Illusions of Empowerment

Computers, the global information networks, and the information society empower them, not us.

by Jerry Mander

Is Nature Real?

Nature as seen from Kitkitdizze is no social construction.

by Gary Snyder

KGB-ing America

Defending the independence of the judiciary.

by Tony Serra

Living Technologies for a Living Planet

The problem is simply how a species pleased to call itself Homo sapiens fits on a planet with a biosphere.

by John Todd

Natural Systems Agriculture

We now have a chance to seriously work toward solving the problem of agriculture.

by Wes Jackson

Outside the Yuppie Zoo

Modern people do not know what wilderness is.

by Vine Deloria, Jr.

Plant Teachers and The Path of Eve

Plants were the first of Earth's creatures to establish extraterrestial contact.

by Dale Pendall

SF Zendog@politics.heart

Asking 'What would make a differance?' is like taking an ethical snapshot of my life

by Peter Coyote

Softening the Intractable: Tibet, China, and Ethical Pressure

The prospects for Tibet entirely depend on how things go in China.

by Orville Schell

The Computational Metaphor

The least-noticed trends are usually the most subversive ones.

by Kevin Kelly

The Garden Project

An introduction from the 1998 Bioneers Conference.

by Catherine Sneed

The Long Now

We're building a 10,000-year clock and a 10,000-year library.

by Stewart Brand

The Ultimate Swiss Omni Knife

'We were put on this earth to make things.' --W.H. Auden

by J. Baldwin

Thoughts of Buckminster Fuller

Standing by the lake on a jump-or-think basis, the very first spontaneous question coming to mind was, "If you put aside everything you've ever been asked to believe and have recourse only to your own experiences do you have any conviction arising from . . .

by R. Buckminster Fuller

To Make Sure That Things Go On

The Red Queen told Alice that, in Wonderland, you had to run just in order to stay in the same place.

by William H. Calvin

Visions for Rural Kentucky

In Kentucky we know that the important question is, 'Who has the vision?

by Wendell Berry

Vital Cities: an interview with Jane Jacobs

An an interview with Jane Jacobs, whose The Death and Life of Great American Cities changed urban planning and policy by simply asking: what makes a vital city?

by Stewart Brand

We are as Gods

As unexpected and ungrammatical as a clap of thunder on a sunny day was the opening line of that first Whole Earth Catalog in 1968: "We are as gods and might as well get good at it."

by Stewart Brand

Whithering Politics?

I'd like to propose something radical: maybe, just maybe, most conservatives and liberals, leftists and rightists are...

by Jay Kinney

 

Winter 1997

Dalai Lama on: Earth - A Conservation District in the Universe

Meeting of His Holiness the 14th Dalai Lama and David Brower, Founder and Chairman of Earth Island Institute

by David Brower

Healing Medicine

Any level of biological organization that we examine, from DNA up to the most complex body systems, shows the capacity for self-diagnosis, for removal of damaged structure, and for regeneration of new structure.

by Andrew Weil, MD

Places to Intervene in a System

Leverage Points are places withing a complex system where a small shift in one thing can produce large changes in everything.

by Donella H. Meadows

The Microtonal Wave

Microtonal music results from a philosophical aesthetic of musical intervals.

by Johnny Rheinhard

The Multiverse

Not one but an inflating/deflating rhythmic diversity of many universes.

by Martin Rees

 

Summer 1997

A Bestiary of Useful Fibers

A Bestiary of Useful Fibers

by Peter Warshall

A Treefree Botanical of Plant Fibers

Bamboo is a grass. It is the second most widely used non-wood fiber on the planet (six percent of global plant fiber production), whose bio-attributes just about equal those of pine.

by Carolyn Moran

Crossed Signals

Synthetic chemicals and the coming health revolution.

by Michael Lerner

From Tuva to Tupelo

An American bluesman takes throatsinging home to Central Asia.

by Allison Levin

Hospitals That Poison

Hospitals That Poison

by Lexi Rome

Inventory of Synthetic Fibers

Inventory of Synthetic Fibers

by Peter Warshall

Merino Sheep

Domesticated for 12,000 years, sheep wools, depending on the breed, either become apparels or carpets.

by Peter Warshall

The Ethics of Eating

The Ethics of Eating

by Alice Waters

Whole Earth Revived

Whole Earth points to bridges and barriers, driving forces and out-of-the-blue wildcards that will shape our lives, communities, bioregions, and planet . . . honors a quarter-century legacy and lineage . . . evaluates tools, ideas, practices; offers labor-saving access and nitty-gritty experiences that sow the seeds for a long-term, viable planet . . . stretches to encompass the whole Earth (and other universes) . . . nurtures adventurous intellect, lots of laughs, and independent thought; exp;ores connectivity and emerging patterns.

by Peter Warshall

 

Spring 1996

Priests of Another Knowledge

But I do go back always to the base questions: What is music? Where does it come from? Where does it go? Can we see the whole perimeter of its range, its spectrum?

by Roger Hyde

Priests of Another Knowledge - An Afterword of Sorts

A follow- up to Priests of Another Knowledge

by Roger Hyde

The Reintroduction of Kate Wolf

If, on the other hand, the Kate Wolf who sings is getting these kinds of letters, I intend to learn how to play the guitar. Yours Truly, Kate Wolf

by J.D. Smith

 

Winter 1995

A Hard Look at Softwoods

THE WHOLE EARTH is in transition from old-growth forests to either managed forests or tree plantations.

by Peter Warshall

Access to Tools

Composer Roger E. Hyde has been an occasional Whole Earth contributor for twenty-two years. His consistent foci have been the philosophy of art and communications theory. He is looking for a publisher for his novel The Weighing of Secret Burdens, and his theoretical tome A General Poetics is nearing completion, but he says not to hold your breath in anticipation of either. However, you may expect to find a fairly amazing Hyde essay, on music as an evolutionary system of knowledge, in these pages in the near future. —James Donnelly

by Roger Hyde

Ten Commandments for Planners

This talk might as easily have been titled "Ten Commandments for Environmentalists," because it grew out of the author's conversion from a knee-jerk environmentalist into a reluctant admirer of the pragmatism of America's new "edge cities" out on the heltways. He chronicled that phenomenon in his 1991 Edge City: Life on the New Frontier fWER 73:52), a book that taught me more about contemporary America than any I've read in years. (That's because I hadn't read Joel's earlier book. The Nine Nations of North America.) A Washington Post journalist for twenty years now, Joel lives with his family on a Virginia homestead straight out of the early Whole Earth Catalogs. — Stewart Brand

by Joel Garreau

 

Spring 1994

How To Use This Book

We're here to point, not to sell. We only review stuff we think is great. Why waste your time with anything else?

by The Whole Earth Catalog

It's Show Time

We tell ourselves stories in order to live. Joan Didion said that.

by Jon Carroll

The Nine Laws of God

Evolution — as used in everyday speech — is about how an entity is changed over time. Deeper evolution — as it might be formally defined — is about how the rules for changing entities over time changes over time. To get the most out of nothing, you need to have self-changing rules.

by Kevin Kelly

 

Spring 1992

A Witch's Manifesto

I HAVE WONDERED for two decades when the happy day will arrive: before every large gathering of women, a woman steps out and leads a prayer to the Goddess.

by Z. Budapest

Blimps for Ecological Observation

Images of the whole Earth like those that gave rise to this magazine are wonderful, but they're distressingly deceptive, too: looking at the sparkling blue sphere floating in the void, you're struck by its ethereal beauty and have no notion of the true state of its surface; you see neither the glories nor the depredations of the works of man and nature, neither the human litter scattered across ocean and desert nor the trees uprooted and killed by sudden high winds or burned by lightning. The scale is wrong for human eyes.

by Robert Cumberford

The Vindication of Karl Marx

"I TOLD YOU it wouldn't work in Russia. You can't skip the capitalistic phase, Vladimir. In Russia you never got out of the feudal period; you went from nobles and serfs to party members and proletariat."

by Elin Whitney-Smith

 

Winter 1991

Beauty & The Junkyard

MEXICO CITY PRESENTS THE WORLD with a new, modern plague.

by Ivan Illich

 

Spring 1991

Do-It-Yourself Eclipse Prediction

IF YOU ARE IN a tight spot, you may find yourself wishing for a solar eclipse to turn day into night, as in A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court. If you knew the eclipse was going to happen (but others didn't), you could pretend to "command the heavens." While Mark Twain's solar eclipse was an invention, his inspiration was probably a real-life incident involving Christopher Columbus in 1504, where the explorer "stole the moon" to get himself out of a sticky situation in Jamaica.

by William H. Calvin

Poets on the Bum

THE ENGLISH DEPARTMENT at the University of Washington was, in 1956, housed in Parrington Hall, a Victorian monster of damp stone and warped wainscoting.

by Will Baker

 

Summer 1990

Cold Turkey on the Farm

CALIFORNIA'S FARMERS HAVE STARTED checking their fields into the agricultural equivalent of the Betty Ford Clinic. Any honest accounting of our nation's chemical dependency should include most of American agriculture, but this fifty-year era is beginning to wind down.

by Richard Nilsen

None of the Above

I WOULD FEEL better about voting if it felt true — if it felt like I was able to state what I think about our shared life by voting. Sometimes what I think is that none of the candidates offered on the ballot is worthy of office.

by Anne Herbert

 

Summer 1990

Juggling as Performing Mathematics

Instruction in juggling provides an interesting model for instruction in mathematics because there is a considerable similiarity between the processes involved in juggling and the abstract thought processes. In juggling, as in pure mathematics, no new facts are ever given to the student by the teacher.

by B. John Sommers

New Age Doctrine is out to lunch on three issues.

It is easy to criticize excessive consumption, competitive marketplace values, and dollar-dominated political institutions and multinational corporations. We would like to suggest that a similar but more courageous critical eye be applied to peer views on three core issues affecting our planet — villages, recycling and democracy.

by Michael Phillips

 

Winter 1990

Defending the Earth and Burying the Hatchet

I have been a social activist for over 55 years. I was on the ecological frontlines as far back as 1952.

by Murry Bookchin

The Gift Economy

ONE AREA IN WHICH American companies are always at a disadvantage when operating in Japan is that of personnel.

by John Elemans

 

Fall 1989

A New Look at Botanical Medicine

BOTANY and medicine have been the closest of friends and the most distant of strangers.

by Andrew Weil, MD

The Political Economy of Deforestation

AS A MANIACAL TREE LOVER, my first act when I moved to California was to sleep in a virgin forest of each major Sierran and coastal species.

by Peter Warshall

 

Spring 1989

Censoring the Paranormal

Writer Charles Fort called them "the damned." De-bunkers call them superstitious nonsense that threatens to undermine the fabric of science. Christian fundamentalists call them satanic manifestations that undermine faith in God. Other people simply call them anomalies.

by Jerome Clark

Forward: The Fringes of Reason

Oh God, how did I get into this room with all these weird people!

by Stewart Brand

Reincarnation: Pro and Con

Ted Schultz discusses three books on the subject of reincarnation.

by Ted Schultz

The Humanoids

DO "HUMAMOIDS" PILOT UFOS? Have human beings seen them?

by Jerome Clark

 

Winter 1988

20th Anniversaru Rendezvous - Wavy Gravy

Wavy Gravy is just about the only name Wavy Gravy has by now. A charter member of the prospering Hog Farm (you might know them as the commune providing first aid at a lot of famous concerts), Wavy Gravy is the patron saint and holy jester of all former hippies, tripsters, and backsliding yuppies.

by Wavy Gravy

20th Anniversary Gossip

The format of this forum was stolen from the 1978 Whole Earth 10th anniversary Jamboree. Stewart Brand engineered that two-day gathering so that 60 people spoke for a maximum of five minutes each.

by Kevin Kelly

20th Anniversary Rendezvous - Ivan Illich

Ivan Illich lives in Mexico, and is a radical scholar/historian in the business of overturning perceptions on such topics as education, gender, medicine, energy, economics, and information. In his book, Toward a History of Needs, he developed the "economics of scarcity." His recent investigations concern the history of the body

by Ivan Illich

20th Anniversary Rendezvous - Anne Herbert

Anne Herbert was the first editor Steward Brand hired to assist in producing this magazine. Her prose has animated many issues of CoEvolution and WER. She now freelances in Mill Valley, California.

by Anne Herbert

20th Anniversary Rendezvous - Anne Waldman

Anne Waldman is a performance poet and a Fast Speaking Woman (that's the name of her first collection of poems): As director of Writing & Poetry at the Jack Kerouac School of Disembodied Poetics held at the Naropa Institute, Colorado, Anne is an inspiration and teacher to many young poets.

by Anne Waldman

20th Anniversary Rendezvous - Bob Fuller

Bob Fuller roams the Earth as an international troubleshooter. He seeks hot-spots of conflict and areas of fierce misunderstanding at national, racial, or ethnic levels. There he begins his work as a citizen diplomat to reconcile the many sides (there's almost always more than two). Bob also serves as a Point board member.

by Bob Fuller

20th Anniversary Rendezvous - Dave Foreman

Dave Foreman practices monkeywrenching (sabotaging offending equipment) as founder of Earth First!, an organization whose motto in short is "No compromise." In my informal survey, Earth First! and Dave Foreman were the most often cited examples, both pro and con, of where activism may be headed,

by Dave Foreman

20th Anniversary Rendezvous - Gurney Norman

Gurney Norman created Divine Right's Trip, that strange story threading its unlikely way through the pages of the Last Whole Earth Catalog. Gurney lives in Appalachia where, he says, ten million people and a thousand artists and writers are happily fulfilled by work without reference to the national culture.

by Gurney Norman

20th Anniversary Rendezvous - Huey Johnson

Huey Johnson is a pioneer land guardian. His crusades have been instrumental in preserving key wilderness on the west coast, and his methods of doing it influential on similar projects. He serves on Point Foundation's board of directors.

by Huey Johnson

20th Anniversary Rendezvous - Jerry Brown

Jerry Brown was governor of California from 1974 to 1982, and ran for president in 1980. He has appeared in this magazine primarily as an interviewer of others, such as Herman Kahn. I interviewed him in Los Angeles by phone.

by Jerry Brown

20th Anniversary Rendezvous - Lorenzo Milam

Lorenzo Milam is publisher of the "noisiest book review in the world," the idiosyncratic Fessenden Review

by Lorenzo Milam

20th Anniversary Rendezvous - Marilyn Ferguson

Marilyn Ferguson set the tone for the late New Age with the 1981 publication of her book The Aquarian Conspiracy: Personal and Social Transformation in the 1980s. Her remarks here will appear in her new book, The New Common Sense.

by Marilyn Ferguson

20th Anniversary Rendezvous - Murry Bookchin

Murray Bookchin is one of the granddaddies of American anarchism. He is currently in the center of a raging ideological debate among socialists and environmentalists.

by Murry Bookchin

20th Anniversary Rendezvous - Norman Cousins

Norman Cousins is a lecturer on a wide variety of circuits. He has a reputation among the medical community for having cured his cancer with a program of laughing. He was the long time (1940 to 1971) editor of the Saturday Review, a charmingly highbrow magazine at that time.

by Norman Cousins

20th Anniversary Rendezvous - Peter Warshall

Peter Warshall is a biologist, eco-man, watershed guru, poet, professional naturalist, and Land Use editor of Whole Earth publications. His thinking is entirely nonlinear, so I've excerpted our phone conversation whenever it intersected ground zero.

by Peter Warshall

20th Anniversary Rendezvous - Ralph Nader

Ralph Nader invented the modern consumer-rights movement. His work in Washington, DC, now extends beyond safer automobiles to such issues as voter registration

by Ralph Nader

20th Anniversary Rendezvous - Ram Dass

Ram Dass made waves two decades ago because of his spiritual conversions brought about by LSD and a guru in India, epiphanies conveyed in the book that became a motto: Be Here Now. His self-described role is "social philosopher." In his heart he is a committed servant in SEVA, an organization dedicated to eradicating preventable blindness in the third world.

by Ram Dass

20th Anniversary Rendezvous - Robert Rodale

Robert Rodale manages the Rodale network of publications (Organic Gardening, Prevention, New Farm, many books) and research centers in -eastern Pennsylvania. For a generation, these publications have been preaching that no, or at hast fewer, chemicals for soil, plants, or humans is the best for all. There would be no better example of how formerly fringe ideas of the '60s have moved to the mainstream.

by Robert Rodale

20th Anniversary Rendezvous - Rusty Schweichart

Rusty Schweickart is the astronaut (Apollo 9, 1969) who first floated in space without umbilical connections. Like other astronauts, his space perspective pushed him directly into ocean, atmospheric, and international perspectives.

by Russell Schweickart

20th Anniversary Rendezvous - Sparrow

All day I'm walking around stunned. "I'm a voice of The New Age!" I'm thinking.

by - Sparrow

20th Anniversary Rendezvous - Stephanie Mills

Stephanie Mills is a bioregionalist working in Michigan, She was formerly assistant editor of CQ, and co-editor of the special bioregional issue (Winter 1981).

by Stephanie Mills

20th Anniversary Rendezvous - Stewart Brand

Stewart Brand compiled the first Whole Earth Catalog twenty years ago. His current experiment is the Global Business Network, a mechanism for generating scenarios of the future.

by Stewart Brand

20th Anniversary Rendezvous - Tim Leary

Tim Leary defined a youth rebellion in the late '60s with the words, "turn on, tune in, drop out." His adventures with hallucinogenics earned him notoriety, jail, and an appreciation for artificial intelligence:

by Tim Leary

20th Anniversary Rendezvous - Tom Mandel

Making hard predictions about the future is a guaranteed way to make mistakes. But I believe the above developments are among the important factors shaping our lives and lifestyles over the next 20 years.

by Tom Mandel

 

Spring 1988

Advertising Doesn't Work

Advertising is offensive, expensive, and takes advantage of the vulnerable members of our society.

by Salli Raspberry

The WELL

I WORK AT THE WELL, Whole Earth's online computer conferencing network. The WELL itself sits in an air-conditioned closet at the Whole Earth office.

by John Coate

 

Fall 1988

Farm Stories

The holy-man scene was a big part of the action in the late sixties, and in San Francisco the guy who worked the local beat was Steve Gaskin.

by John Coate

 

Spring 1986

A BRIEF HISTORY OF THE WHOLE EARTH CATALOG

20 Years on one page 1968-1988

by The Whole Earth Catalog

What are People For?

As COUNTRY PERSON, I often feel that I am on the bottom end of the waste problem. I live on the Kentucky River about ten miles from its entrance into the Ohio.

by Wendell Berry

What is an Ecolog?

There were hard choices to be made; it's literally the nature of things that nearly everything is in some way involved with the environment.

by J. Baldwin

 

Winter 1986

Introduction to the 2.0 Version

In all our years doing Whole Earth Catalogs (18 years and counting) we've never dealt with a subject so ephemeral and expensive, so in need of subsequent editions and all the apparatus of routine updating.

by Stewart Brand

 

Fall 1985

We're in a 1920's Economy, an Interview with Paul Hawken

In 1980 and 1981, you seemed to be more pessimistic than optimistic about the economy. On the one hand you predicted that we were going through a healthy economic change, on the other you warned of some type of deflationary crisis or credit collapse. In 1980 and 1981, you seemed to be more pessimistic than optimistic about the economy. On the one hand you predicted that we were going through a healthy economic change, on the other you warned of some type of deflationary crisis or credit collapse. Since then, the economy has

by Stewart Brand

You are the Customer You are the Company

Two years ago, uncommon courtesy offered a two-day course called "Business as Service." Its premise was simple: All business is service regardless of whether it manufactures, produces, or distributes.

by Paul Hawken

 

Spring 1984

Bringing the IBM PC Up to Snuff

The IBM PC is sold "bare bones" to make the initial purchase price seem low. Some personal computers are complete packages including a display, disk storage units and built-in connectors for a printer and communications that make the system ready to go to work as soon as you get it.

by Fedreic E. Davis

Playing Hardball

Have you ever seen an article entitled "Why I hate the Cleveland Indians"? Of course not. Who would care? Someone did take the time, however, to write an entire book about why he hates the New York Yankees — not George Steinbrenner, or even a particular Yankee team, but the very idea of the Yankees. The Yankees, like IBM, are important enough to hate.

by Charles Spezzano

This magazine is a book-in-progress.

The purpose of this magazine, as with our previous Whole Earth Catalogs, is to aid the empowerment of individuals. And to aid the balance of that empowering.

by Stewart Brand

Why the IBM PC is a Lousy Standard for the Induistry

The IBM PC isn't a standard for the industry at all — it's a standard for IBM, and a shifty target at that. IBM never set out to create a standard. They birthed a well-conceived market-grabber that bridged the gap between the adaptable but non-business Apple II and the workaday, dull world of CP/M computers. Well then, fine. . . . What's the big deal about standards anyway?

by Art Kleiner

 

Summer 1984

Breaking the Chains that Bind

I am not artistically inclined. My elementary school art teacher often suggested that I use the little cut-outs of birds and flowers she had available for tracing rather than try any creative drawing. Even now I only doodle in straight lines, but MacPaint stirs some latent artistic urge in me.

by Charles Spezzano

Not a Toy but the Real Thing

Apple Computer's new Macintosh is a professional computer you can own, an affordable (but not inexpensive) version of the kind of machine computer scientists and engineers have been using for several years. What do the pros have that the rest of us don't know about?

by Clifford Barney

 

Fall 1984

Organizing Programs as Mind Extension Tools

There may be no more valuable tool in your life than a good database system keeping an ever expanding, never-forgetting, totally cross-indexed catalog of your mind.

by Wayne Pendley

 

Fall 1984

Endangered Night Skies

Initially I became interested in the appearance of the Earth from "outside" through my work related to the search for extraterrestrial intelligence. I worked out what the radio Earth looks like from interstellar distances . . .

by Woodruff T. Sullivan, III

 

Spring 1984

Hardware: Hard Choices

This is June 1984 speaking. By the time you read this, there will have been changes in personal computing equipment. We've focused on general advice and direction, which shouldn't be seriously affected by the announcement of a new computer or even another "generation" of computer systems.

by Richard Dalton

Introduction to Whole Earth Software Catalog

Introduction in which the book asserts its Agenda, Method, & Credibility

by Stewart Brand

Telecommunicating

But don't be daunted; it's becoming easier. Programs are finally emerging that treat telecommunicating as a human activity instead of a technical obstacle course. Modems are getting cheaper and more reliable.

by Art Kleiner

Writing

Said to account for more than 60% of personal computer use, word processing programs are doing to writing what pocket calculators did to figuring. Cue the testimonials:

by Stewart Brand

 

Fall 1982

Allegory

Reader asks impossible question: "Who's the "Next" Gregory Bateson, por favor? Jim Cleaver, Bolder, Colorado.

by Gregory Bateston

Gregory Bateson: Old Men Ought to be Explorers

Anthropologist, psychologist, biologist, epistemologist, writer of Steps to an Ecology of Mind and Mind and Nature: A Necessary Unity, Gregory Bateson was (is) godfather to most of what I've been up to with CoEvolution Quarterly. -SB

by Stephen Nachmanovitch

 

Spring 1980

Introduction to The Essential Whole Earth Catalog

"Live and learn" is a redundancy. Live is learn.

by Stewart Brand

One Highly Evolved Toolbox

That's the whole idea: making it easy to work makes it easy to try new concepts, to prove them in an irrefutable way. You can actually change things out there! Maybe not in a big way, but at a scale you can comprehend. Instead of technology taking over, you are in control — at least locally, and perhaps universally if the idea works well for lots of people. That's subversive tech. It can be fun. It's always satisfying. Work up your toolbox and give it a try.

by J. Baldwin

Preface to The Essential Whole Earth Catalog

Reviewers of our Catalogs have often missed the point by calling us a "wishbook." Not at all. You can grab ahold of nearly anything in here and make it a part of your life.

by J. Baldwin

Some rules and hints for teachers and students.

RULE TEN: "We're breaking all the rules. Even our own rules. And how do we do that? By leaving plenty of room for X quantities." (John Cage)

by Corita Kent

Someday Everyone will communicate this way!

Whole Earth editors became so enamored of computer networks that we started our own — the WELL (Whole Earth 'Lectronic Link). Like all such networks, you pay by the minute — in our case, $3/hour plus $8/month.

by Art Kleiner

 

Spring 1978

Clothesline Paradox.

If you go in the other direction and remove the electric clothes dryer and install a clothesline the consumption of electricity drops slightly, but there is no credit given anywhere on the charts and graphs to solar energy which is now drying the clothes.

by Steve Baer

Local Dependency

"Self-sufficiency" is an idea which has done more harm than good. On close conceptual examination it is flawed at the root. More importantly, it works badly in practice.

by Stewart Brand

The Double Bubble Wheel Engine

The invention is a device for converting thermal energy into mechanical energy.

by Steve Baer

 

Spring 1978

Number is Different from Quantity.

You can have exactly 3 tomatoes. You can never have exactly 3 gallons of water.

by Gregory Bateston

What happens with presuppositions such as "Number is Different From Qunanity"?

Both groups are difficult to teach because they attach such great importance to "right" premises and presuppositions that heresy becomes for them a threat - of excommunication.

by Gregory Bateston

 

Winter 1978

Five Minute Speeches - Anne Herbert

Hi. I'd like to share with you the story of Jonah. Jonah is the guy who lives in the Bible, about halfway between Elijah and Luke. A lot of you probably think Jonah is the story of a man and his whale. That's not actually true.

by Anne Herbert

Five Minute Speeches - David Brower

Our best opportunity, and we've almost forgotten it, is to use the most potent energy we have, and that is love, gratitude, thanks. Try it. And I've got to try it, too.

by David Brower

Five Minute Speeches - Huey Johnson

I would like to tell you a story about this place. The name of this valley, the Gerbode Preserve, commemorates a woman who had great courage to support gentle rebellions. Mrs. Gerbode, when she was alive, always said, "Don't come to me for a contribution that is socially acceptable in cocktail circles," and she didn't ever want publicity.

by Huey Johnson

Five Minute Speeches - J. Baldwin

... We're not really credible when we talk about appropriate technology. What a lot of people around here mean by appropriate technology is they drive a diesel Mercedes to work. That won't do.

by J. Baldwin

Five Minute Speeches - Jay Kinney

If you use this method in real life it can help keep you from going too crazy, which is also important to me, otherwise I couldn't get my comics done.

by Jay Kinney

Five Minute Speeches - Meca Wawona

SB: We happen to have a crazy lady here, just in time. She can't stay til tomorrow, so she's going on right now. Known to tree-savers everywhere, her name is Meca Wawona.

by Meca Wawona

Five Minute Speeches - Peter Warshall

The Hooeeoko people who lived in this valley believed in the salmon. The salmon was the creature of the watershed. The salmon went from the headwaters where the adults mated and produced their young down to the Pacific, where they lived and grew to adulthood and then came back.

by Peter Warshall

Five Minute Speeches - Russell Schweikart

The difference between universe and environment is me, the thinker, feeler, doer, lover.

by Russell Schweickart

Five Minute Speeches - Stephanie Mills

I think that environmentalism, as I practice it and as many of us practice it, is a form of nostalgia for a world we never knew.

by Stephanie Mills

Five Minute Speeches - Stewart Brand

Ten years ago we reached for something with the Whole Earth Catalog. A lot of us reached for various things — some to stop the war in Vietnam, some to save various species, some to find a way to stay high. And we have spent ten years refining our activities so that our grasp could catch up with that reach.

by Stewart Brand

Five Minute Speeches - Wavy Gravy

"If you had the whole Earth, what would you do with it?" And I started to think about that — God, well, we need to clean it up.

by Wavy Gravy

The Whole Earth Jamboree Wasn't Worth It Once

It was in fact a neighborhood feeling — a relaxation and ease natural among a community that had temporarily become a neighborhood. A community can believe in itself,

by Anne Herbert

Two afternoons at the Whole Eartth Jamboree Talk Stage

...they can see their time proceeding along to zero, and then you'll hear - RIIINNGGG! - that lets them know and you know that they have 15 seconds to conclude beautifully before their microphone tapers down to nothing.

by Stewart Brand

 

September 1977

Space Colonies - A CoEvolution Book

Most of this book is Used Information. It is reprinted from various issues of The CoEvolution Quarterly, a California-based peculiar magazine. You can look at that news two ways. If you operate by the Bread Model of Information, it's terrible news. You've been gypped — stale information.

by Stewart Brand

The Long View

The shocks of this Age are the shocks of pace. Change accelerates around us so rapidly that we are strangers to our own pasts and even more to our futures.

by Stewart Brand

Who's Earth

Like a long, pauseless prayer, astronaut Russell Schweickart spoke these words in the summer of '74 before a brainy group meeting on "Planetary Culture" at the spiritual community of Lindisfarne, Long Island. Schweickart himself seemed amazed at what he was saying, amazed at the gathering he was attending, amazed — still — at the events which led him to drift bodily free between Earth and Universe. Remember the starchild at the end of "2001"? Like that.

by Russell Schweickart

 

Spring 1975

2025, If...

Predicting the future, if we make it that far.

by R. Buckminster Fuller

Plains of Science, Summits of Passion

I happen to live in a marginal ecosystem, where the Great Plains meet the Rocky Mountains and cactus blooms under the ponderosa pine. I have also lived most of my life on the uneasy margin between science and religion.

by Kenneth E. Boulding

 

Summer 1974

NEW FRISBEE

Perfection is expected and thus not extrinsically rewarded.

by George Leonard

 

Fall 1974

Eliminate the Presidency

A conspiratorial coup d'etat intended to secure for Richard M. Nixon the divine right of Kings has been revealed through the hearings of the Senate Select Committee on Presidential Campaign Activities. This conspiracy undermines our country's republican form of government, jeopardizes our country's potential for good in the world and constitutes a serious threat to peace and progress for all humankind.

by The Black Panther Party

Guest Editors - The Black Panther Party

It is and honor and a relief to turn over the editorship of this entire issue of THE CoEVOLUTION QUARTERLY to the Black Panther Party. A relief because the usual CQ staff is buried under a mountain of books getting out the WHOLE EARTH EPILOG. An honor because the Panthers are the most effective community service-and-organization group I know.

by Stewart Brand

Introduction - All Power to the People

From its founding, the Black Panther Party for Self-Defense (the term "for Self-Defense" was later dropped) has been assailed and villified in the mass media, its leaders hounded and harassed by local and federal law enforcement agencies and its membership and supporters threatened and intimidated at every turn. Through it all, the Black Panther Party has survived.

by The Black Panther Party

Son of Man Temple

We have always hoped that we could establish a place in our community where hundreds of ideas could grow and flourish, where people could feel free to say and do the things that seemed most natural to them. The Son of Man Temple was created for that purpose, to serve in humankind's development.

by The Black Panther Party

Survival Programs of the Black Panther Party

In order to achieve its goals of organizing and serving Black and oppressed communities, the Black Panther Party has developed a wide variety of Survival Programs since the Party's founding in October, 1966.

by The Black Panther Party

 

Spring 1974

Beginning Buddhism

Buddhism as a tool, maybe the sharpest and kindest tool held by us sentient beings, a tool for dismantling, cutting away and through, unmasking, demystifying.

by Rick Fields

Law of the minimun

Which is the special material without which industrial technology and its civilization cannot function? When does it run out?

by Anne Brower

Nuclear Firewood

Important aspects of the energy shortage are being ignored in both science and government. We tend to forget that most of the energy used by man is solar energy that has been fixed recently through . . .

by G.M. Woodwell

 

October 1974

History - Demise Party etc.

So, in June 1971, we had the Demise Party celebrating the self-termination of The Whole Earth Catalog, and all in all it was a rout. 1500 people showed up.

by Stewart Brand

Inroduction to Woodcarving Tools

Imagine that the camping hil«e you've planned Will be taking you through the famous site of the Fallen Tree-Trunk, where amateurs and professional wood-carvers alike have chipped away and added to an evolving sculpture for over 100 years!

by Bruce Erman

Mormon Advise

It's time for a deep bow to the Mormons for their research and practice in food storage and general-emergency readiness. Here is the full text of a recent message to Mormons here in Marin County (sent to us by Kathy Mayer), It has forethought considerations— and generosity— we've seen nowhere else in the doom literature generally available.

by Weston L. Roe

 

January 1971

"I don't want to. I DON'T WANT TO. I don't want to be a MAN; I want to be a Fox."

His pseudonym is taken from a mistreated river in the locality and it is now blazoned on car bumpers in the slogan "Go Fox Stop Pollution".

by . Unknown

Bigfoot No Longer Fair Game

It may be the first time an animal was protected by man before it was even found. Let's do the same for unicorns, sea serpents, UFO's, and humans.

by . Unknown

 

May 1971

Divine Right's Trip

This original folk-tale will be found proceeding episodically along the right-hand pages (lower-right corner) in this type face, making the CATALOG what if has longed to be, a work of drama.

by Gurney Norman

How to do a Whole Earth Catalgo

From page 435 of The Updated Last Whole Earth Catalog

by Stewart Brand

Jarfalla: City of the Future

STOCKHOLM-The first city of the futre will be built in Sweden. It will be called Jarflla. No gasoline powered vehicle will be allowed.

by The Times/Post News Service

Manifesto: The Mad Farmer Liberation Front

Love the quick profit, the annual raise, vacation with pay. Want more of everything ready made. Be afraid to know your neighbors and to die. Any you will have a window in your head . . .

by Wendell Berry

THE GREAT BUS RACE

Everybody's pretty innoculated already; it's the spaciest part of the afternoon. The race was going to be one bus at a time against the clock, but Ken Kesey and others are maintaining that's a chicken shit race. It's got to be all at once.

by Author Anonymous

 

June 1971

Edgar Cayce

In Biblical times the word resurrection meant reincarnation. . . . . . . I had to tiptoe out.

by Shirley Abicair

King Kong Died For Our Sins

He was just a kid when They got 'im . . .

by Yabe Yablonsky

Planetary People

The initiation and termination of this publishing project, the Whole Earth Catalog, is one of the clearest indications of the unique characteristics and needs of our age. What the Catalog has attempted to do is to get out the essential information that is

by Ed Rosenfield

Sufis

And maybe, like all the Masters said, there is one Place, one Consciousness.

by George de Alth

Wendell Berry

Wendell Berry is the Sargeant York charging unnatural odds across our no-man's-land of ecology. Conveying the same limber innocence of young Gary Cooper, Wendell advances on the current crop of Krauts armed with naught but his pen and his mythic ridge runner righteousness.

by The Whole Earth Catalog

 

June 1971

All Watched over by Machines of Loving Grace

I like to think (and the sooner the better!) of a . . . .

by . Unknown

History-Some of what happened around here for the last three years.

The WHOLE EARTH CATALOG got started in a plane over Nebraska in March 1968. I was returning to California from my father's long dying and funeral that morning in Illinois. The sun had set ahead of the plane while I was reading Spaceship Earth by Barbara Ward.

by Stewart Brand

 

March 1970

In Celebration of Worms

Earthworms ordinarily come to the surface only at night in order to forage for food and to throw off their soil-enriching castings. They forage for organic litter. Earthworms never eat anything that is living.

by The Whole Earth Catalog

Model Rockets

Model rockets, you say, what are they ... idealizations of instruments of war? Not at all. They are idealizations of one of man's primal urges, mastery of the skies.

by The Whole Earth Catalog

Shit

tommy laing said you can shit in your nest just so long, then you're nesting in your shit.

by J.D. Smith

 

July 1970

Always Whole Thing Catalog

Knowing you place helps you get there. There are many ways of doing things . . . . besides our own.

by The Whole Earth Catalog

CATALOG Procedure

Most Whole Earth Catalogs presented "Procedure" for readers. Here is an example from July 1970.

by The Whole Earth Catalog

Open letter to Hon. John Brademas, Chairman, Committee of Education and Labor, U.S. House of Representatives

Thank you for the opportunity to testify before your committee. John Holt has suggested that if we tried to teach infants to talk, they would never learn. I suspect it is the same with ecology. It must be learned. It is being learned. If you try to reach it to people, you will only teach them to hate it.

by Stewart Brand

 

January 1970

Dedication to Lenny Bruce

"Cause everytime we get a suicide, it's the weirdest thing but they always got this grin on their faces. No matter how they go: hanging, gas or whatever, they always got this certain grin"

by All the Yippies

Liferaft Earth

The scene Wednesday at the Truck Strore was harrowing.

by The Whole Earth Catalog

The Great Mail Hassle

The Whole Earth Catalog had an ongoing problem with the US Post Office. Their description of such problems follows:

by The Whole Earth Catalog

 

September 1970

Appalachia and On Heroes

The Whole Earth Catalog often provided context to it's reviews. These comments by Gurney Norman surround reviews of Stinking Creek, Night Comes To The Cumberlands , Seedtime On The Cumberland, and Cabins In The Land. All four reviews are posted on this site.

by Gurney Norman

 

January 1969

Portola Institute, Inc.

Taken from the last page of The Difficult But Possible Supplement to the Whole Earth Catalog

by Stewart Brand

Take what you want. Take what you need There is plenty to go around Everything is free.

Nothing in this manual is copyrighted. Anyone may reprint this information without permission. If you paid money for this manual you got screwed. It's absolutely free because it's yours. Think about it.

by George Meteshy

 

March 1969

More on Getting by Without Money

You don't have to be rich to drop out—but it helps.

by Tom Duckworth

Other People's Mail

Correspondence between Steward Brand and Dr. Carl Djerassi, President Syntex Research Center

by Stewart Brand

Whole Earth Catalog Costs

Publishing is a numbers game. Volume. With more subscribers and buyers we're increasingly able to lower the price on the CATALOG and deepen and widen its research and its usefulness. More ain't necessarily merrier, but it permits you to keep playing.

by Stewart Brand

 

Spring 1969

Volkswagen Technical Manual

There's unusual agreement among all the mechanics we've talked to that this is the best book on VW's, It's good prevention against getting burned when a dismaying noise starts following you down the road and your trip shifts from 400 miles a day to nothing a week.

by Henry Elfrink

 

September 1969

Other People's Mail - No. 1

Community is a matter of making, not finding. Start your own.

by The Whole Earth Catalog

Other People's Mail - No. 2

Communes aren't too interested in being studied, unless you feel like paying them.

by The Whole Earth Catalog

The Unanimous Declaration of Interdependence

On the Planet, Earth, August, 1969 The Declaration of Interdependence, written by Thomas Jefferson and Cliff Humphrey and many delegates is available in poster form (17"x22") for$1 from: Ecology Action P.O. Box 9334 Berkeley, Calif. 94709 The poster has lots of space at the bottom for signatures, paw prints, fly specks, snake slithers, clam spit, pollen.,,

by Thomas Jefferson

 

Fall 1969

Pollution by Fertilizer

injection of excess nitrogen into the biosphere not only is seriously polluting rivers and lakes but also has greatly increased the frequency of a rare form of poisoning among both humans and domestic animals.

by Barry Commoner

Water Supply for Mountain Camp

For another simple example, let us estimate how we would bring water from a running stream into a tank (let's say a 50-gallon gravity tank) to supply water for a vacation cabin in the woods. A natural supply point is 100 ft away upstream, guaranteeing among other things a clean, continuous water supply. Our problem is transport.

by Thomas Woodson

 

July 1969

Ed Rosenfield Suggests

The early Whole Earth Catalog featured a section titled "New Suggestions" here are Ed's.

by Ed Rosenfield

The Far-Out Park Party

.... And the whole thing came out the top of itself. "We're not going to use the Earth as a weapon. We're going to use it as a tool." No stones or bullets were thrown while 30,000 fans of fluidity strolled through Berkeley. War had turned into party. Something squirted loose and commenced to flow.

by The San Francisco Chronicle

Up Against the Wall Mothers

Here's the valedictory address of Stephanie Mills at Mills College on June 1st in full.

by Stephanie Mills

 

Fall 1968