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Directional Advice for the (More Than) Human Predicament

November 25, 2025

Recorded on: Nov 18, 2025

Description

In this week’s episode, Nate invites listeners into an exploration of what it means to navigate a growing predicament shaped by ecological limits, rapid technological changes, and shifting expectations of reality. Our complex world hosts an immense diversity of human (and non-human) circumstances, which demand responses that are adaptive, not static. Rather than offer misleadingly prescriptive answers, Nate lays out a set of “compass points” that serve to both challenge our assumptions, and to attune our values in the direction of ‘better futures than the default.’

Our responses to the ‘more-than-human predicament’ as individuals, communities, and a species are impacted by socially-constructed notions of status, identity, and fear. This episode draws these concepts into a wider-lens conversation regarding how we intervene and respond to the systemic change on the horizon, how we relate to one another and to the ecosystems we’re a part of, and what kinds of futures we make possible by the choices – large and small – we make today.

What does it mean to move directionally rather than to seek tidy solutions? How might shifts in behavior now allow one to become a “rock in the river” as change continues, and accelerates? And where do we look for the “True North” of our values and behaviors in order to orient ourselves towards a more coherent collective response?

Show Notes & Links to Learn More

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The TGS team puts together these brief references and show notes for the learning and convenience of our listeners. However, most of the points made in episodes hold more nuance than one link can address, and we encourage you to dig deeper into any of these topics and come to your own informed conclusions.

07:53 – Single point of failure

08:20 – Able Archer 83 War Scare documentsF#111: The Three Most Important Words We’re Taught Not to Say

08:46 – Nate SoaresRisk of human extinction from AI

09:06 – Cloudflare outage

11:36 – SubsidiarityNested governance

12:06 – Re-regionalizing/BioregionalismRR#14: The Future is Local

13:10 – F#69 Goldilocks Technology – A Preliminary Checklist

19:38 – Audrey Tang on TGS

22:22 – Wet bulb temperatures

24:18 – Easter Island natural resources

24:29 – Old growth forests store huge amounts of carbon

24:52 – Anastassia Makarieva on TGS

26:24 – Dune “Fear is the mind killer”

26:38 – Amygdala function

28:00 – A calm nervous system reengages prefrontal cortex

29:00 – Sympathetic vs parasympathetic nervous systems

30:39 – Economic superorganism

31:07 – Towards Individual Wisdom and Restraint

32:54 – F#74: The Lament of the Bigfoot (agenda of the gene)

Nate Hagens

Nate Hagens

Nate Hagens is the Director of The Institute for the Study of Energy & Our Future (ISEOF) an organization focused on educating and preparing society for the coming cultural transition. Allied with leading ecologists, energy experts, politicians and systems thinkers ISEOF assembles road-maps and off-ramps for how human societies can adapt to lower throughput lifestyles.

Nate holds a Masters Degree in Finance with Honors from the University of Chicago and a Ph.D. in Natural Resources from the University of Vermont. He teaches an Honors course, Reality 101, at the University of Minnesota.