Ep 44 – Do Not Disturb (ft. Bernie Krause)

Episode 44 - "Do Not Disturb" The world is waking up to the negative health consequences of noise pollution. The WHO recognizes noise as a health crisis, and the number of places around the world not devastated by human noise is rapidly depleting. But the problems posed by our traffic noise, our airplane noise, and other anthropogenic intrusions go much deeper than the long list of human health effects like stroke, heart disease, diabetes, mental health problems, and increased general mortality. The natural world organizes itself in large part through sound. Our noise disrupts these delicate systems, breaks down ecosystems, and drives species into confusion, disarray, and death. Bernie Krause joins us to help illuminate the complexity of natural soundscapes, and the threats to their stability. Can we relearn how to listen before it's too late? Chapters 06:22 Bernie Krause 08:56 Components of a Soundscape 11:29 Niche Hypothesis 13:02 What are ways animals vocalize to survive? 14:52 The sound of habitat destruction 24:41 Beauty of marine environments 29:21 Cultural pathology and inattention 30:52 Difference between organized and chaotic sound 48:50 Loudness wars against our health 52:58 Human health consequences of sound 58:55 Animal health consequences of sound 1:08:08 Going forward A full transcript is available as well as detailed links and sources (plus credits and more) on our website ashesashes.org. Find more information along with relevant news and links on your favorite social network @ashesashescast. CC BY-SA 4.0

Om Podcasten

Ashes Ashes is a podcast about the end of the world. Each week we explore a new systemic or apocalyptic issue that society is facing now or will have to deal with in the coming decades. Through this we hope to draw the listener to the conclusion that our overarching economic and political systems are inherently flawed. Once that fact is accepted, it's that much easier to do something about it. Find episodes, full transcripts, links, and more at https://ashesashes.org.