An interrogation of how we calculate value, examining what we dismiss as useless in nature while overlooking hidden dependencies.
Hodja frequently highlights the foolishness of conventional value systems—dismissing things as worthless while depending entirely on them, or treasuring things that bring suffering. Environmental grief often reflects crisis in our systems of valuation: we price carbon in the atmosphere but not carbon sequestered in forests; we count GDP but not natural capital; we value only what we can extract. This framework, inspired by Hodja's exposure of false reasoning, invites us to examine what we've deemed 'useless' in nature—wetlands, fungi, insects, predators—while discovering we depend entirely on their functioning. It also questions what we've valued highly—convenience, consumption, growth—while ignoring their hidden costs. By playfully examining our absurd valuations, we can begin assigning worth more honestly. A 'useless' swamp that filters water and houses birds becomes invaluable. A 'valuable' convenience that requires extracting rare minerals becomes questionable. This revaluation is essential to transforming environmental grief into ecological wisdom.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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