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A

"WE THE PEOPLE"
interview with

Paolo Soleri
and
Jerry Brown

The following transcript is of a two day interview of Paolo Soleri broadcast on Jerry Brown's nationally syndicated talkshow, "We the People." The program aired on 12/9/95 and 12/11/95. An open and closed parenthesis,(), indicates a loss of information in the process of transcribing the interview.

DAY 1 : Part | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 |
DAY 2 : Part | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 |

DAY 2 : PART 3

JB: Paolo, you've got the planet, should be on our side because it's giving us some very unsubtle warnings that it is being abused. I want to push this idea of laboratories...

PS: Yes.

JB: ...the city, the city based on compassion, the family of man. You've got another criteria, if the whole family can't enjoy it, then it's wrong. It's almost like the Chinchin imperative, you have to universalize it and...

PS: Right.

JB: ...does it work if it is for everyone? And obviously the shopping center can't work for ten billion people, or even eight billion. So then that means that's wrong, and we have to acknowledge it's wrong and we have to create something different and get about doing that, and so in order for to break the log jam, we're going to have to have some kind of step here. And I want to hear concretely if you can help us describe what that step would be or that laboratory.

PS: Okay, I mean, you're asking me to be knowledgeable, but wise in everything, and I'm not. So, what I'm trying to do with Arcosanti is to set up some perimeters, some ways of organizing spaces so that perhaps by mere guidance towards reorganization of our communities, and since the means of classic () , it's a very modest kind of enterprise. But we do have the beginning of a community, a community by necessity is frugal, but it tries to make () into some kind of a () , because frugality is not the dimming of joy or the reduction of fulfillment. Frugality is, as I say, the ability to find within yourself more, and more, and more by way of coping and acting upon reality, upon the physical surroundings, and the social surroundings, and the cultural surroundings.

JB: Now, if you could start listing some of the traits, some of conditions or the check list of an urban laboratory. You started with frugality, and frugality not as some kind of hair shirt, but just the opposite, a rich interior life...

PS: That's right.

JB: ...that would liberate the mind and make use of its creativity as oppose to crushing it with all the contraptions and gadgets. So frugality would be your first factor.

PS: And actually, frugality goes well with paladin complexity and gathering, so what we are doing at Arcosanti, for instance, number one, we had a gathering not on good farmland, we're gathering on one of the shelves, one of the mesas. So you might call that marginal land in terms of agriculture, so we don't want to go down at the lower level where you can cultivate. We want to keep that for cultivation, and we are up on the mesa.

JB: Number one, so you aren't going to cultivate your own food then.

PS: No, we're not very good at it, but the land is there and we are doing some cultivation, yes. We've been doing that for many years.

JB: Okay. So you're not going to use good land for your habitat, you're going to use second rate land. Was there a second thing?

PS: Number two, we are very small now, so it is very easy for us to say that we like to belong to the habitat, let's say to the town, but we also like to belong to the open landscape, and that's what's happening. We are on the edge between what you might call the manmade environment, the habitat, and nature. And that's really a physical fact, we are really stepping out of our places and we are in the middle of the high desert. That's another point that's very critical if we want to partake both in what you might call the culture of development, civilized development of society and the beauty of nature and the resources that nature can give us in () culture, farming, on and on. That's a second point.

JB: Okay, you're in between.

PS: Yeah, we're really on the edge of both of them, so we can partake in both...

JB: Would you say then that you couldn't have an urban laboratory of the new frugal city inside an old city where there isn't much nature around, at least nature is covered up?

PS: Given the condition by which nature has been transformed for a hundred square miles for a city like Phoenix, then you might want to may be also this gigantic system culture into smaller structure but more three-dimensional so that each one of the spots can regenerate at least some greenery around itself. So what you might call urban villages.

JB: You'd carve those out of this immense urban sprawl.

PS: That's right. Naturally you can take the blighted areas first, and then again in terms of laboratory to generate a different kind...

JB: Okay, so now that's an interesting point. The places that have been abandoned, the South Bronx, parts of South Central Los Angeles, parts of Oakland, what you could do is take these abandoned places and regenerate them both with your dense, complex, frugal habitat, and with the nature being right outside the door.

PS: Yeah, reintroducing some kind of farming or gardening, or parks, and so on. But naturally you need the physical unit and you need the human, so not only you have to work on the architectural state of the system, but also on the special () you are going to have the system filled with.

JB: Is there anybody working on this in terms of trying to transform a existing urban space in accordance with ideas we are now talking about?

PS: I think in Europe there is quite a bit of that, and also in the States, in San Francisco, Berkeley, I think there was an attempt there, and they did some work about that, but again our priorities are so mixed up. If we invest the money that we invest in oneself paying, say 3 billion dollars in some laboratory work in urban questions, we would gain lots of knowledge and we would begin to transform our habitat. We are not willing to do that.

JB: We would first of all have to have a very experimental bent of mind willing to try something.

PS: You would have to. We do that in every field including medicine. We tend to use ourselves as guinea pigs in order to carry medicine forward and beyond the limits of the tests now. So that's human flesh that we are putting in the grinder. We should do the same thing with the urban condition, knowing it's not the final, highly successful laboratory where new relationship, including the physical relationship and human relationship are developed so that we can learn more. Keeping in mind that there is a learning which comes from history. The history of Europe, for instance, is the history of the making of the city, and civilization.

JB: Yeah, your point there about the experimentation on human flesh. It goes on by the millions because a lot of stuff that's going on in terms of medical intervention is definitely experimental even when they say it isn't.

PS: Oh, yeah.

JB: So your talking about a very...in terms of the human physical impact, immediate. It's a far less invasive of the body.

PS: It's much more gentle than medicine, because medicine has to go to extreme in order to come out with good answers, but now the habitat is the most complex because it reaches everywhere, and it's the most complex, the most costly, involving the most of the planet in terms of resources, in terms of space, so it's a very serious undertak- ing, and we need to learn about it, not to just throw out things that are somehow, some kind of re-collage, and say, well, it didn't work very well so we demolish it. Let's be more systematic.

JB: Are you talking about the building of buildings in downtown areas and then tearing them down twenty years later?

PS: Yeah, the same buildings in a Europe city would work perfectly. That shows the buildings per se cannot give the answers. The answers come from the building plus the social

JB: Oh, you're saying...now I think I understand...that a lot of buildings have been torn down to make way for modern buildings that if they were in Europe, they would have been left alone and it would have...the space would have been utilized...

PS: What I am thinking of the dynamiting in the early we dynamite something because it was inhumane. Different kinds of society would find that unacceptable.

JB: They'd find a way to use it.

PS: Yeah.

JB: And also I was thinking that as the United States with all its power is pioneering new weapons system, new medical interventions, to the hundreds of billions. The military is 240 - 50 billions right now. The medical experimentation also goes into the hundreds of billions, and here what your saying, you made a reference to a very modest sum for some urban laboratories.

PS: Yes, and but...

JB: Which we probably of the countries are capably of doing and which will have the exemplary effect, just like we're teaching China, in fact General Motors is building cars there and we're even letting contracts for eight-lane roads and freeways, so willy nilly we are already setting the tone, it's just that we're missing the boat on this omega seed unfolding of a laboratory of frugality and interior-kinds of being.

PS: Naturally in order to get to that point we would like to persuade our politicians and our power people that as things are developing now there is no way we can succeed. Again, I am speaking about the family of man, not the 250 or so Americans, because I think that ethically we will not be able to say, well, we don't care about the rest, 250 million Americans are going to have a good time. Well, that's no longer feasible as we know. Resources are not there, the isolation and the segregation of us one chunk of humanity is not going to work, so we have to be slowly realized the () and this notion of we of the elected people is utterly a fossil. Cannot do that any longer.

JB: Well, if you just looked at it from the religious point of view, the religions are saying that their is a Fatherhood of God, a Brotherhood of Human Beings, and that would under validate the notion that we are all in one family. Then you have science that we are interpenetrated by the same molecules. That would also validate that we are in the family of man, the family of human beings, and then, of course, the etiology of democracy or equality, of races and sexes, that would also validate the notion that we are in a family together, except we've got these parochial hangovers saying there is a boundary between Mexico and the United States, or between China and United States, and so we're not really rubbing our nose or put our mind in the face of this utter discrepancy between the way we are and the way it would be if everybody was the way we are, which couldn't be, because then we would all be dead, or destroyed, the whole thing would be over. So, I think what, more than just the politicians, we are going to have to get this idea in our own minds and really deepen it and share it. And as we understand it, it can become part of the base, of the philosophical base of where our country, and any country is going, if it can be grasped by enough people at a deep enough level.

PS: Yeah, and I mean we have this gift of democracy that we can give to everybody, and we are trying to do that in many ways, but then we fall short when we say, well, we are the chosen people, so no matter what, America first, and soon or later that has to be understood for what it is and we have to get rid of it, or the family of man is just a fantasy. So in a way we are living a utopian time where we think that we can isolate something and say, this is sufficient. There is nothing so self-sufficient about anything. The only self-sufficient thing is the cosmos. Actually if the cosmos is created by God, even the cosmos is not self-sufficient. Let's forget about these chosen people...

JB: Chosen people, living a lie. Let us come back, we've got to take a break. Paolo, we'll be right back. You're listening to "We the People."

Next


DAY 1 : Part | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 |
DAY 2 : Part | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 |

 

 

 
 
 
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