This is installment number six of the Tractatus Ayyew: A Theory of Green & Grey. Photo: R. Maier.

The Earth’s Pattern of Process

Rather than be mired in self-judgment at our play with carbon, we can be dazzled by the Earth’s.

Russell Maier
6 min readMar 25, 2022

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by Russell Maier & Banayan Angway

OVER THE LAST FOUR BILLION YEARS, the singular combination of our planet’s orbit, spin, chemistry and magnetosphere have played out. As this unique configuration of matter and energy has unfolded, a once barren rock has transformed into the thriving biosphere that is our common home today. Of all that we know of other planets in our solar system and galaxy, it is an extraordinary and epic story. However, what makes the story even more remarkable is that the tellers of the tale are thoroughly part of it.

Indeed, as we saw in our last chapter, our telling of the Earth’s tale is only possible through a vast and unique confluence of matter and energy: the whirl of stellar dust into the formation of the sun; the coalescence of the planets and the Earth around it; the spiral of carbon into ever more concentrated and complex Earthen configurations, the dispersion of the sun’s energy into ever more diverse organisms and ecosystems; and the slow and steady cultivation of life’s consciousness of its own interconnection.

Only through this epochal unfolding, can we look out with vast vantage upon the Earth’s story and truly grasp our own. Only from this vantage can we truly understand the fossil fuels that power our modern economy. And only with this understanding can we see through our despair at the seemingly intractable ecological depletions of modern civilization.

Indeed, the plasticized ancient carbon that passes through our hands each day — and the primordial process of greening the biosphere which it embodies — has a message for us moderns that we are now ready to hear.

Rather than be mired in self-judgment at our modern play with carbon, we can be dazzled by the Earth’s. The way our planet — as a uniquely configured system — has managed its matter and energy has led to the steady greening of its surface; the cultivation of ever greater diversity, vibrancy and abundance of life1. And finally, through the resulting emergence of consciousness, we Earthlings have been propelled to the telling and pondering of the story itself.

So, where do we go from here?

First, let us hold fast to our vantage and the vast view it affords! From here we can observe another pivotal planetary phenomenon. Aside from meteor strikes and massive volcanoes, it is a phenomenon unseen on the planet for hundreds of millions of years.

Because of the doings of much of modern humanity, never before has the Earth’s atmospheric carbon count jumped upwards so quickly2. Never before have there been processes that so rapidly added more loose carbon into the biosphere than they were able to subtract into concentration.

The ensuing ecological disturbances directly challenge our last century of carbon play.

It’s all a little familiar.

If you’ve ever seen children at play with blocks for the first time, you will recall that the results are remarkably the same. After the thrill of assembling a grand creation, when the pieces tumble down, when the results aren’t as intended, the upset youngster invariably blames themselves and the blocks.

Of course, neither are to blame! Only through that first fall can the child grasp the essential pattern of the play.

There is no other way.

Likewise, our disruption of ecological cycles is not a consequence of our ‘nature’ any more than it is the nature of carbon.3 Rather, the pattern by which our processes have managed their energy and their matter have been in dissonance with that of Earth’s.

As we saw in plastic’s stellar story, for most of modern humanity, our processes have increasingly intended patterns of energy and matter that have dispersed carbon, concentrated energy, reduced biodiversity and stifled ecological awareness. In sharp contrast, the Earth’s processes have inexorably tended towards the concentration and subtraction of carbon, the dispersal of energy, the increase of diversity and the cultivation of consciousness. Whereas our modern pattern of process has degraded ecosystems, the Earth’s has enriched them — making them ever more vibrant and abundant.4

Like a despairing and determined child on a second-go at block-building, we’re trying harder than ever before. With a shame at our failings, we have our heads down, striving valiantly to make our processes less polluting, less damaging, less grey. However, with the underlying pattern of our processes unchanged, even if they are less harmful — harmful they remain. With our industrial processes and economic enterprises on the whole ever more widespread, our polluting and greying ever increases.5

Banayan and I believe it is time to raise our heads from the toil — and in particular the judgment. Again, rather than despair, we can be awed.

Our once-in-a-million-years phenomenon of additive carbon usage is in fact a tremendous opportunity.

For the first time, with our usage of carbon as a foil, the difference between our modern human-ways and the ways of Earth’s can be observed in unprecedented clarity. In the stark contrast of patterns, we can begin to clearly discern the pattern of play that has underlaid the Earth’s transformation of a barren planet into a thriving biosphere: the principles in which the Earth’s biomes, ecosystems and organisms of each contributed towards the enrichment of all.

But perhaps most significant of all, through a clarity that only comes from scrapping the depths of grief and depletion, our modern gaze can now recognize those societies, before unseen, that have long found resonance with the Earth’s patterns.

Nations that long ago mastered their ecological integration.

Nations that, rather than build building castles for some, cultivated common homes for all.

A decade ago, Banayan Angway and Russell Maier; an Igorot wisdom keeper and a western philosopher, joined forces to protect the Chico River in the remote Northern Philippines from an inundation of plastic pollution. Ever since, they have continued to explore the pressing modern relevance of indigenous ecological wisdom. Guided by the Igorot Ayyew eco-ethos, they are publishing a systematic theory of green and grey in the form of a philosophical treatise. The Full Story of the Tractatus Ayyew

NEXT: Chapter 5 | Another Knowing

PREVIOUS: Chapter 3 | Plastic’s Stellar Story

WHAT IS THE TRACTATUS AYYEW? The Story

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Footnotes

1Going forward we will frequently refer to the Earth as a proper noun implying agency (i.e. “the Earth managed its energy”). While it is more than possible to conceive the Earth as a sentient entity, a divine being, or the active creation of a divine being(s), such claims are far beyond the scope of this essay. Instead, we imply agency simply in as much as any self-contained system has its own unique patterns and “way of doing things” — as we speak of a clock “keeping time” or a leaf “transforming sunlight”.

2“The present atmospheric content [of CO2] exceeds anything Earth has experienced in the last million years and possibly the last 20 million years” David Beerling, (2007), The Emerald Planet, Oxford University Press.

3In the Matrix agent Smith describes humanity as a unique planetary virus. David Attenborough and others have described humanity as a unique “plague” upon the planet. Within this view of humanity, resides the assumption that ecological denigration is ‘human nature’. We observe this to be an extreme form of anthropocentrism (i.e. humans are unique among all other earthen organisms species in that they destroy rather than enrich the biosphere). We believe that from an indigenous, historical and scientific perspective this assumption is flawed and its repudiation is the main thrust of the Tractatus.

4Here and throughout the Tractatus, we refer to the cumulative four billion years of the Earth’s history. Over the full period of the Earth’s history, there have been tremendous swings in the abundance and diversity of life on the planet– times of extinction where for millions of years life was severely stifled. However, on the whole the net-biodiversity of the biosphere has steadily increased. We will fully examine this phenomenon and the pioneering biodiversity survey of paleontologist Joseph Sepkoski in Chapter nine.

5Hope is often placed on increases in efficiency to decrease the cumulative negative impact of a technology (i.e. “more efficient coal powered steam engines will decrease London’s pollution”). However, the Jevon’s Paradox shows that over history, advances in technological efficiency have resulted in increased ecological impact. As efficiency increases, so too does the adoption and spread of the technology, inevitably leading to a net-increase in pollution despite the greater efficiency (or, as we argue: because of it).

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Russell Maier

Earthen.io → Green ethics, ecological metaphysics, regenerative philosophy. Earth builder & Forest Gardener.