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[S3 Discussion] Seeing Like a State, chapter 1 #10
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timber, and thus forests, were crucial to European states for all sorts of construction or energy (firewood); this one function of trees (and other plant life) came to blur out all others (including roles in ecosystems but also things like fruit, ritual/worship, etc):
even the language used reflects this, categorizing the natural world according to economic value:
Scientific forestry was originally developed as part of a broader effort of "cameral science", "an effort to reduce the fiscal management of a kingdom to scientific principles that would allow systematic planning." It involved systematically tallying trees and mathematically estimating their yields, generating an abstracted forest in the form of a spreadsheet. The forest was then grown and managed in such a way to facilitate this measuring and calculation process - they were planted in neat rows and underbrush was regularly cleared, making the forests easy to systematically count, chop down, etc. All together this is the process of making the forest "legible", i.e. applying a structure/regimentation to make it more amenable to these kinds of abstract representations, analyses, and experimentation, as well as stabilizing it to make it's output more reliable/predictable (well, not entirely). People living nearby still tried to use these regimented forests as they used the forests prior (grazing animals, poaching firewood, etc) and natural forces such as blights, storms, insect populations, etc continued to affect them. So these forests were never entirely regimented. Forests are typically composed of multiple species "but the commercial profits from the first rotation [of Norway spruce] were so stunning that there was little effort to return to mixed forests." So future plantings were monocrops, ruining these forests for the nearby people that still used them for grazing and so on. At first it was a huge success, very high yields and so on, but "As we shall see with urban planning, revolutionary theory, collectivization, and rural resettlement, a whole world lying 'outside the brackets' returned to haunt this technical vision." Over time the negative effects showed - "the whole nutrient cycle got out of order and eventually was nearly stopped....This represents a production loss of 20 to 30 percent."
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James C. Scott, analysis of the authoritarian approach to complex problems
https://libcom.org/files/Seeing%20Like%20a%20State%20-%20James%20C.%20Scott.pdf
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