» » All Watched Over by Machines of Loving Grace The Use and Abuse of Vegetational Concepts (2011– )

All Watched Over by Machines of Loving Grace The Use and Abuse of Vegetational Concepts (2011– ) Online

All Watched Over by Machines of Loving Grace The Use and Abuse of Vegetational Concepts (2011– ) Online
Original Title :
The Use and Abuse of Vegetational Concepts
Genre :
TV Episode / Documentary
Year :
2011–
Directror :
Adam Curtis
Cast :
Adam Curtis,Peder Anker,Tord Björk
Writer :
Adam Curtis
Type :
TV Episode
Time :
1h
Rating :
7.6/10
All Watched Over by Machines of Loving Grace The Use and Abuse of Vegetational Concepts (2011– ) Online

The use of vegetational concepts role in the rise of the machines, our belief in the balance of nature, and how the idea of the ecosystem was invented.
Episode credited cast:
Adam Curtis Adam Curtis - Himself - Narrator
Rest of cast listed alphabetically:
Peder Anker Peder Anker - Himself - Historian of Ecology
Tord Björk Tord Björk - Himself - Environmental Activist
Sam Bledsoe Sam Bledsoe - Himself - Grasslands Project (as Dr Sam Bledsoe)
Daniel Botkin Daniel Botkin - Himself - Ecologist (as Dr Daniel Botkin)
Stewart Brand Stewart Brand - Himself
Richard Brautigan Richard Brautigan - Himself (archive sound)
Jay Forrester Jay Forrester - Himself - Systems Theorist
R. Buckminster Fuller R. Buckminster Fuller - Himself (archive footage)
Randall Gibson Randall Gibson - Himself - Former Member of Synergia Commune
Al Gore Al Gore - Himself - Former Vice-President of the United States
Molly Hollenbach Molly Hollenbach - Herself - Former Member of The Family Commune
Alexander King Alexander King - Himself - Co-founder of the Club of Rome (archive footage)
Steward Pickett Steward Pickett - Himself - Ecologist (as Dr Steward Pickett)
Jan Smuts Jan Smuts - Himself (archive footage)


User reviews

Jack

Jack

Here Adam Curtis weaves together a historical and cognitive tapestry of intrigue and humanity. Typical of his documentaries, he takes a influential school of thought and uses archival news and television clips combined with contemporary interviews to unpack and explain the theory (here its ecological stability and computer systems), he then shows the profound impact of the idea throughout history in many aspects of political and cultural changes inspired by the idea. Personally, his take on the misuse of the idea of the balance of nature to be spot on. The misconception being that if humans can mimic the natural order by removing all authoritarian power all people interacting as inter-regulating nodes exchanging ideas and services then this can create a better society. Unfortunately this idea takes into no account of human selfishness and fails to appreciate that the ecosystem this is modeled upon is actually chaotic and involves unfairness and destruction. My only qualm is that he failed to mention that there are aspects of the "balance of nature" model which have stood the test of time, namely that predators do regulate the abundance of prey, yet still this is not a system suitable to model a fair society on.