In 1620, in his 
          Novum 
          Organum,  Sir Francis Bacon classified the 
          intellectual fallacies of the human kind as idols of the 
          Tribe,  the Cave,  the Marketplace and  
          the Theater. An idol is a mental image which 
          receives veneration but is devoid of substance. Bacon did not regard 
          idols as symbols, but rather as human fixations.  His model of 
          human perceptions is as true today as it was in the 17th century. Some 
          things never change but - because of the mindless and loud media drumbeat - consequences of the common human 
          fallacies are far more damaging today.  
Idols of 
          the Tribe are 
          deceptive beliefs inherent in the minds of all humans. They are 
          abstractions of error arising from common human tendencies  of 
          exaggeration, distortion, and disproportion. Thus people gazing at the production of crude oil over the last century perceive endless growth, and are not content merely to 
          contemplate or record that which is seen. They extend their opinions, 
          investing oil fields with innumerable imaginary qualities.
          In a short time these imaginings 
          gain dignity and are mingled with the facts until the truth and 
          fiction become inseparable. This statement would describe much of the current public debate about energy.
Idols of 
          the Cave are those 
          which arise within the mind of an individual. Man's mind is 
          symbolically a cavern. The thoughts of the individual roam about in 
          this dark cave and are  modified by temperament, education, 
          habit, environment and accident. Thus an 
          individual who dedicates his mind to some particular branch of 
          learning becomes possessed by his own peculiar interest, and 
          interprets all other learning according to the colors of his own 
          devotion. The chemist sees chemistry in all things and the 
          businessman sees profits where there aren't any. 
Idols of 
          the Marketplace are 
          errors arising from the false significance bestowed upon words. People mold their thoughts into words in order to communicate with others. 
          The words carelessly used without attention to their true 
          meaning condition our understanding and breed fallacies.
          Thus, refinery gains and corn ethanol become crude oil. Words often betray their own purpose, obscuring 
          the very thoughts they are designed to express.
Idols of 
          the Theater are those 
          which follow from the paradigm of the moment and false learning. These 
          idols are built up in theology, philosophy, social sciences, and 
          natural science. They are defended by learned groups and accepted 
          without question by the masses. When false philosophies have been 
          cultivated and gained wide dominance in the world of the intellect 
          they are no longer questioned. False 
          superstructures are raised on false foundations, and in the end 
          systems barren of merit parade their grandeur on the stage of the 
          world. This statement might describe most of the current popular beliefs about energy production and sources, or climate change, or healthcare, or education, or agriculture, or so many other important but misunderstood issues that will punish us, clueless Earthlings, with vengeance.
P.S. The Dallas Times Herald clipping below was sent to me by Roger Baker, my ASPO friend. He found this clipping in an old book on micropaleontology loaned to him by a son of Bob Schroeder, a Shell Oil geologist aware of peak oil. This 1980 warning was issued by none other than Sheik Ahmed Zaki Yamani, the Saudi Oil Minister, also famous for saying 20 years later: "The Stone Age did not come to an end because we had a lack of stones, and the oil age will not come to an end because we have a lack of oil."
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| Click on the image to see it in full size.  Source: Roger Baker's ASPO email, 11/10/2012. | 

Thanks for the Yamani quote, we for sure are so late now ...
ReplyDeleteSeveral interviews of him in below doc (unfortunately dubbed, also a German version exists) :
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fQJ-0jAr3LQ
Also very interesting interviews of James Akins (but also dubbed)
By the way if you have time, could you please shed some light on current US production ?
I understand from the eia site that it is now a bit over 6 mbd ? :
http://www.eia.gov/dnav/pet/pet_crd_crpdn_adc_mbbl_m.htm
But CIA world fact book and BP as well put it at 7.8 :
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_oil_production
And today in Le Monde Fatih Birol puts it at 10.9 !! :
http://www.lemonde.fr/planete/article/2012/11/12/les-etats-unis-bientot-premier-producteur-mondial-de-petrole-selon-l-agence-internationale-de-l-energie_1789198_3244.html
So how much is it ? Is it 6 or 7.8 for crude and condensate ?
If it is 6, what does BP 7.8 corresponds to ? (+NGL ?)
And the 10.9 ? (+ biofuels ?)
Otherwise about inner or theater idols, like languages and words, maybe they can also be considered as real, or at least no reason to fight them ..
Best,
Yves
Yves, To get answers to some of your questions, please look at the previous post, "Peak, What Peak?" There, I parse through the recent statements about petroleum production in the U.S.A., made by EIA.
ReplyDeleteTad, thanks a lot, think I got the respective numbers and what is in them now.
ReplyDelete