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Flourish : Design Paradigms for Our Planetary Emergency.

By: Ichioka, SarahContributor(s): Pawlyn, MichaelMaterial type: TextTextPublisher: Axminster : Triarchy Press, 2022Copyright date: �2021Edition: 1st edDescription: 1 online resource (182 pages)Content type: text Media type: computer Carrier type: online resourceISBN: 9781913743284Genre/Form: Electronic books. Additional physical formats: Print version:: FlourishOnline resources: Click to View
Contents:
Intro -- Contents -- Introduction -- Origins of this book -- Moving beyond conventional sustainability -- Frames, metaphors and stories -- Shifts towards flourishing -- Tipping points -- Possibilism: evidence, uncertainty and agency -- Evidence-based problem solving -- Designing for uncertainty -- Expanding agency -- Possible new stories -- Conclusion -- Co-evolution as nature: stewardship and living systems -- Complexity and the shortcomings of the current paradigm -- A new philosophy of design -- Deeper principles of biomimicry -- Applying co-evolutionary principles -- Materials -- Cities -- Energy systems -- Legislation -- Rethinking existing frames -- Conclusion -- A longer now: deep, cyclical time and holarchic progress -- Competing visions of deep and shallow time -- Colonization and commodification of time -- The story of progress -- Rethinking time -- Being a 'good ancestor' -- Temporality and the design process -- Temporality and landscape -- National and urban policy -- Temporality and buildings -- Conclusion -- Symbiogenesis: mutualism, citizen-activism and public luxury -- The persistence of 'survival of the fittest' -- Evolving together -- Everything is interconnected -- Beyond 'the Anthropocene' -- What about human nature? -- What's wrong with competition? -- New hope for collective action? -- Symbiogenesis in the built environment -- Mobility -- Towards a regenerative design culture -- Towards regenerative governance -- Conclusion -- Planetary health: qualitative development, living metrics and flows -- Distinguishing types of growth and development -- Planetary health and doughnut economics -- Cyclical flows and the circular economy -- Globalized to localized resource use -- Conclusion -- Conclusion -- Acknowledgements -- Endnotes.
Summary: Proposes regenerative principles with potential to transform how we design, make and manage our buildings, infrastructure and communities.
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Intro -- Contents -- Introduction -- Origins of this book -- Moving beyond conventional sustainability -- Frames, metaphors and stories -- Shifts towards flourishing -- Tipping points -- Possibilism: evidence, uncertainty and agency -- Evidence-based problem solving -- Designing for uncertainty -- Expanding agency -- Possible new stories -- Conclusion -- Co-evolution as nature: stewardship and living systems -- Complexity and the shortcomings of the current paradigm -- A new philosophy of design -- Deeper principles of biomimicry -- Applying co-evolutionary principles -- Materials -- Cities -- Energy systems -- Legislation -- Rethinking existing frames -- Conclusion -- A longer now: deep, cyclical time and holarchic progress -- Competing visions of deep and shallow time -- Colonization and commodification of time -- The story of progress -- Rethinking time -- Being a 'good ancestor' -- Temporality and the design process -- Temporality and landscape -- National and urban policy -- Temporality and buildings -- Conclusion -- Symbiogenesis: mutualism, citizen-activism and public luxury -- The persistence of 'survival of the fittest' -- Evolving together -- Everything is interconnected -- Beyond 'the Anthropocene' -- What about human nature? -- What's wrong with competition? -- New hope for collective action? -- Symbiogenesis in the built environment -- Mobility -- Towards a regenerative design culture -- Towards regenerative governance -- Conclusion -- Planetary health: qualitative development, living metrics and flows -- Distinguishing types of growth and development -- Planetary health and doughnut economics -- Cyclical flows and the circular economy -- Globalized to localized resource use -- Conclusion -- Conclusion -- Acknowledgements -- Endnotes.

Proposes regenerative principles with potential to transform how we design, make and manage our buildings, infrastructure and communities.

Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources.

Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2024. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.

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