From 1e7029227b3defbc9594854e67fb7b1cea9ab78c Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: almac2022 Date: Tue, 14 Apr 2026 16:32:50 -0700 Subject: [PATCH] Add 52 domain-expert quotes (113 total) MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8 Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit Second /quotes-enable-style pass on drift adds voices from floodplain/river process, Indigenous stewardship, ecosystem valuation, and legacy conservation to the existing 61 hip-hop interview quotes. Total shipping pool: 113. New voices (11): - Floodplain / river process: David Montgomery (UW), Ellen Wohl (CSU) - Indigenous stewardship: Robin Wall Kimmerer (Potawatomi), Kyle Whyte (Potawatomi), Nancy Turner (UVic), Jeannette Armstrong (Syilx/Okanagan) - Ecosystem valuation: Kai Chan (UBC) - Canadian public voices: David Suzuki, Wade Davis - Legacy conservation: Aldo Leopold, Wendell Berry Tim Beechie was on the target list but yielded zero public interview footprint (process-paper voice only) — documented in findings. Same rigor as v0.2.1: 4 parallel research agents returned 55 candidates, 2 independent fact-check agents flagged 3 drops (Wohl misattribution, Kimmerer thin-chain citation, Davis fragment-reconstructed-as-sentence) and 2 fixes (Kimmerer gift economy restored the truncated tail; Whyte opening sentence corrected to verbatim source). R CMD check clean (same 2 pre-existing NOTEs). Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) --- DESCRIPTION | 2 +- NEWS.md | 6 + data-raw/quotes_audit.csv | 52 +++++ data-raw/quotes_build.R | 275 +++++++++++++++++++++++ inst/extdata/quotes.csv | 52 +++++ planning/active/candidates_raw.md | 103 +++++++++ planning/active/domain_quotes_review.csv | 53 +++++ planning/active/findings.md | 32 +++ planning/active/progress.md | 9 + planning/active/task_plan.md | 32 +++ 10 files changed, 615 insertions(+), 1 deletion(-) create mode 100644 planning/active/candidates_raw.md create mode 100644 planning/active/domain_quotes_review.csv create mode 100644 planning/active/findings.md create mode 100644 planning/active/progress.md create mode 100644 planning/active/task_plan.md diff --git a/DESCRIPTION b/DESCRIPTION index b776b2f..84a7f00 100644 --- a/DESCRIPTION +++ b/DESCRIPTION @@ -1,6 +1,6 @@ Package: drift Title: Detecting Riparian and Inland Floodplain Transitions -Version: 0.2.1 +Version: 0.2.2 Authors@R: c( person("Allan", "Irvine", , "al@newgraphenvironment.com", role = c("aut", "cre"), comment = c(ORCID = "0000-0002-3495-2128")), diff --git a/NEWS.md b/NEWS.md index b3e8c53..8cc09ec 100644 --- a/NEWS.md +++ b/NEWS.md @@ -1,3 +1,9 @@ +# drift 0.2.2 + +- Startup quote pool expanded to 113. Adds 52 domain-expert quotes from 11 voices across floodplain/river process (David Montgomery, Ellen Wohl), Indigenous stewardship (Robin Wall Kimmerer, Kyle Whyte, Nancy Turner, Jeannette Armstrong), ecosystem valuation (Kai Chan), Canadian public voices (David Suzuki, Wade Davis), and legacy conservation (Aldo Leopold, Wendell Berry). +- Tim Beechie was on the target list but yielded zero — no public interview / podcast / documentary footprint. Process-paper voice only. +- Same rigor as v0.2.1: parallel research agents, independent fact-check pass (3 dropped for misattribution or text drift, 2 fixed from fact-check flags). + # drift 0.2.1 - Startup quote ritual: `library(drift)` prints a random fact-checked quote from 15 hip-hop artists on attach. Italic quote, grey attribution, clickable blue `source` hyperlink to the primary-source interview. Suppress via `options(drift.quote_show_source = FALSE)`. diff --git a/data-raw/quotes_audit.csv b/data-raw/quotes_audit.csv index 39aa786..04956b7 100644 --- a/data-raw/quotes_audit.csv +++ b/data-raw/quotes_audit.csv @@ -60,3 +60,55 @@ "Nighttime, when everybody's asleep — it's the most peaceful time ever inside of life to me.","YoungBoy Never Broke Again","https://www.billboard.com/music/features/youngboy-never-broke-again-cover-story-interview-1235208827/","interview","Billboard","2026-04-14" "I think about how many lives I actually am responsible for when it comes to my music.","YoungBoy Never Broke Again","https://www.complex.com/music/a/tracewilliamcowen/youngboy-never-broke-again-rare-mormonism-prolific-release-strategy-music-impact-interview","interview","Complex","2026-04-14" "I wish I knew when I was younger how unhealthy this was for me. Whatever type of energy I had inside me, I would've pushed it toward something else.","YoungBoy Never Broke Again","https://www.complex.com/music/a/tracewilliamcowen/youngboy-never-broke-again-rare-mormonism-prolific-release-strategy-music-impact-interview","interview","Complex","2026-04-14" +"One of the cool things about this profession is that you've got the freedom to follow a thread and see where it leads you.","David Montgomery","https://environment.uw.edu/news/2024/06/s2-e5-david-montgomery-and-soil-health/","interview","UW College of the Environment podcast","2026-04-14" +"We can restore soil actually fast in decades. It doesn't take centuries. It could be done on policy relevant timescales.","David Montgomery","https://environment.uw.edu/news/2024/06/s2-e5-david-montgomery-and-soil-health/","interview","UW College of the Environment podcast","2026-04-14" +"Civilizations that don't take care of their soil don't last.","David Montgomery","https://www.renewablematter.eu/en/david-r-montgomery-to-go-forward-we-must-look-down","interview","Renewable Matter","2026-04-14" +"There's no waste in Nature. Everything becomes something else. Circular economy is Nature's economy.","David Montgomery","https://www.renewablematter.eu/en/david-r-montgomery-to-go-forward-we-must-look-down","interview","Renewable Matter","2026-04-14" +"Soil degradation plays out in a time frame way longer than most people pay attention to. It's invisible to the naked eye.","David Montgomery","https://www.renewablematter.eu/en/david-r-montgomery-to-go-forward-we-must-look-down","interview","Renewable Matter","2026-04-14" +"Our rivers should not all look the same. I'd like to celebrate river diversity, and have people think about why a river appears as it does and what processes underlie that appearance.","Ellen Wohl","https://www.biohabitats.com/newsletter/wood-as-a-tool-in-stream-and-river-restoration/expert-qa-dr-ellen-wohl/","interview","Biohabitats Leaf Litter","2026-04-14" +"People often think that a messy river, one with downed trees, beaver dams, and all kinds of brush in them are bad, but in fact they are the healthiest kind of river.","Ellen Wohl","https://owutranscript.com/2014/10/06/snc-wohl/","lecture","Ohio Wesleyan University lecture coverage","2026-04-14" +"That's a big component of the fun of research: you start on one path, but never know exactly where it will take you.","Ellen Wohl","https://www.biohabitats.com/newsletter/wood-as-a-tool-in-stream-and-river-restoration/expert-qa-dr-ellen-wohl/","interview","Biohabitats Leaf Litter","2026-04-14" +"I'd prefer taking a less controlling approach, where you allow the structure to evolve and don't fasten everything in.","Ellen Wohl","https://www.biohabitats.com/newsletter/wood-as-a-tool-in-stream-and-river-restoration/expert-qa-dr-ellen-wohl/","interview","Biohabitats Leaf Litter","2026-04-14" +"Paying attention is a form of reciprocity with the living world, receiving the gifts with open eyes and open heart.","Robin Wall Kimmerer","https://www.litcharts.com/lit/braiding-sweetgrass/quotes","book","Braiding Sweetgrass (2013)","2026-04-14" +"In some Native languages the term for plants translates to 'those who take care of us.'","Robin Wall Kimmerer","https://www.goodreads.com/work/quotes/24362458-braiding-sweetgrass","book","Braiding Sweetgrass (2013)","2026-04-14" +"The currency in a gift economy is relationship, which is expressed as gratitude, as interdependence and the ongoing cycles of reciprocity.","Robin Wall Kimmerer","https://emergencemagazine.org/essay/the-serviceberry/","essay","Emergence Magazine","2026-04-14" +"Science polishes the gift of seeing; Indigenous traditions work with gifts of listening and language.","Robin Wall Kimmerer","https://onbeing.org/programs/robin-wall-kimmerer-the-intelligence-of-plants-2022/","interview","On Being with Krista Tippett","2026-04-14" +"I don't hope for a better climate future. Instead, I'm adamant that I will do whatever I can to build consensuality, to build trust, to build reciprocity with other people.","Kyle Whyte","https://forthewild.world/podcast-transcripts/dr-kyle-whyte-on-the-colonial-genesis-of-climate-change-295","interview","For The Wild podcast","2026-04-14" +"It's not going to take a year, two years, 10 years, 20 — that's the duration of time as measured through kinship.","Kyle Whyte","https://forthewild.world/podcast-transcripts/dr-kyle-whyte-on-the-colonial-genesis-of-climate-change-295","interview","For The Wild podcast","2026-04-14" +"Our sciences are based on the idea that we need to have a good understanding of what it means to be a people who can respond to a constantly changing environment.","Kyle Whyte","https://forthewild.world/podcast-transcripts/dr-kyle-whyte-on-the-colonial-genesis-of-climate-change-295","interview","For The Wild podcast","2026-04-14" +"Recognition, respect, reciprocity, revitalization and renewal are what we all need to be a part of.","Nancy Turner","https://www.yammagazine.com/the-knowledge-keeper/","interview","YAM Magazine","2026-04-14" +"It's really important to develop a partnership, not integrate the knowledge, because they're different knowledge systems, but to listen to people who are living on the land.","Nancy Turner","https://www.yammagazine.com/the-knowledge-keeper/","interview","YAM Magazine","2026-04-14" +"You white people ask too many questions. I can hear Margaret Siwallace say that. Just listen. Just listen.","Nancy Turner","https://www.yammagazine.com/the-knowledge-keeper/","interview","YAM Magazine (recounting Nuxalk Elder Margaret Siwallace)","2026-04-14" +"I think that's a responsibility for anyone like myself who has had the privilege of being able to learn this knowledge to make sure that other people understand how important it is.","Nancy Turner","https://www.yammagazine.com/the-knowledge-keeper/","interview","YAM Magazine","2026-04-14" +"Science is a baby knowledge compared to our knowledge of the 12,000 years we've spent here on this land developing our understanding of how we as a people need to interact with each other.","Jeannette Armstrong","https://www.scienceworld.ca/stories/land-remembers-how-are-we-related-to-water/","interview","Science World / Land Remembers","2026-04-14" +"This water is sacred, nothing on this earth could live without this water no matter how big or small.","Jeannette Armstrong","https://www.scienceworld.ca/stories/land-remembers-how-are-we-related-to-water/","interview","Science World (recalling her grandmother)","2026-04-14" +"We give our bodies back to the land in a very physical way but we also do other things to the land. We can destroy it, or we can love the land and it can love us back.","Jeannette Armstrong","https://rpickard01.github.io/oral-histories-pocket-desert/pages/section-3-syilx-okanagan-relationships-to-the-land.html","interview","UBC Okanagan oral histories","2026-04-14" +"I strive to understand how social-ecological systems can be transformed to be both better and wilder.","Kai Chan","https://chanslab.ires.ubc.ca/people/chan/","interview","UBC CHANS Lab","2026-04-14" +"Our responsibilities to current and future persons and the natural world call for us all to be social and environmental advocates and activists.","Kai Chan","https://chanslab.ires.ubc.ca/people/chan/","interview","UBC CHANS Lab","2026-04-14" +"In the jobs-versus-environment debate, neither side is wrong. The problem is the 20th-century economy that forces us to choose.","Kai Chan","https://ires.ubc.ca/commentary-may-22-is-international-biodiversity-day-and-this-scientist-thinks-change-is-possible-op-ed-by-kai-chan-ires-faculty-member/","op-ed","UBC IRES","2026-04-14" +"I find hope in the hope of others.","Kai Chan","https://broadview.org/climate-activism-optimism/","interview","Broadview Magazine","2026-04-14" +"We get stuck in this place of thinking that it's our responsibility to be perfect, and once we've unlocked that, we should tell other people to do the same.","Kai Chan","https://broadview.org/climate-activism-optimism/","interview","Broadview Magazine","2026-04-14" +"We are the environment. Whatever we do to the environment, we do directly to ourselves.","David Suzuki","https://www.loe.org/shows/segments.html?programID=10-P13-00051&segmentID=6","interview","Living on Earth","2026-04-14" +"We have elevated the economy above the very things that keep us alive. And this is madness.","David Suzuki","https://www.loe.org/shows/segments.html?programID=10-P13-00051&segmentID=6","interview","Living on Earth","2026-04-14" +"What I've come to realize through Indigenous people and The Nature of Things is that what is driving us on a destructive path is our anthropocentric way of seeing the world.","David Suzuki","https://thenarwhal.ca/david-suzuki-the-nature-of-things/","interview","The Narwhal","2026-04-14" +"We see that we live as one small part of a web of relationships with animals and plants, with air, water, soil, sunlight.","David Suzuki","https://thenarwhal.ca/david-suzuki-the-nature-of-things/","interview","The Narwhal","2026-04-14" +"An understanding that everything is connected and what you do has consequences. That's the heart of environmentalism.","David Suzuki","https://thenarwhal.ca/david-suzuki-the-nature-of-things/","interview","The Narwhal","2026-04-14" +"When we cut some of the strands, we destroy the integrity of what allows us to be a part of it.","David Suzuki","https://thenarwhal.ca/david-suzuki-the-nature-of-things/","interview","The Narwhal","2026-04-14" +"Every language is an old-growth forest of the mind, a watershed, a thought, an ecosystem of spiritual possibilities.","Wade Davis","https://www.ted.com/talks/wade_davis_dreams_from_endangered_cultures","speech","TED Dreams from Endangered Cultures (2003)","2026-04-14" +"A language is a flash of the human spirit. It's a vehicle through which the soul of each particular culture comes into the material world.","Wade Davis","https://www.ted.com/talks/wade_davis_dreams_from_endangered_cultures","speech","TED Dreams from Endangered Cultures (2003)","2026-04-14" +"The ethnosphere is humanity's great legacy. It's the symbol of all that we are and all that we can be as an astonishingly inquisitive species.","Wade Davis","https://www.ted.com/talks/wade_davis_dreams_from_endangered_cultures","speech","TED Dreams from Endangered Cultures (2003)","2026-04-14" +"Every culture is a unique answer to a fundamental question: What does it mean to be human and alive?","Wade Davis","https://theeditionbroadsheet.com/issue/issue-6/wade-davis/","interview","The Edition Broadsheet","2026-04-14" +"The biggest curse of humanity has been cultural myopia, the idea that my world is the real world and everybody else is a failed attempt at being me.","Wade Davis","https://theeditionbroadsheet.com/issue/issue-6/wade-davis/","interview","The Edition Broadsheet","2026-04-14" +"One of the penalties of an ecological education is that one lives alone in a world of wounds.","Aldo Leopold","https://www.aldoleopold.org/blogs/the-foreword-that-was-not-to-be","book","Round River (1953), p. 165","2026-04-14" +"That land is a community is the basic concept of ecology, but that land is to be loved and respected is an extension of ethics.","Aldo Leopold","https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Aldo_Leopold","book","A Sand County Almanac (1949), Foreword","2026-04-14" +"We shall never achieve harmony with land, any more than we shall achieve absolute justice or liberty for people. In these higher aspirations the important thing is not to achieve, but to strive.","Aldo Leopold","https://www.litcharts.com/lit/a-sand-county-almanac/quotes","book","A Sand County Almanac (Oxford 1987), pp. 47-48","2026-04-14" +"To keep every cog and wheel is the first precaution of intelligent tinkering.","Aldo Leopold","https://www.litcharts.com/lit/a-sand-county-almanac/quotes","book","A Sand County Almanac, 'The Round River', p. 190","2026-04-14" +"Conservation is a state of harmony between men and land. Harmony with land is like harmony with a friend; you cannot cherish his right hand and chop off his left.","Aldo Leopold","https://www.litcharts.com/lit/a-sand-county-almanac/quotes","essay","A Sand County Almanac, 'The Ecological Conscience'","2026-04-14" +"Only the mountain has lived long enough to listen objectively to the howl of a wolf.","Aldo Leopold","https://www.sierraclub.org/sites/www.sierraclub.org/files/sce/rocky-mountain-chapter/Wolves-Resources/Thinking%20Like%20a%20Mountain%20-%20Aldo%20Leopold.pdf","essay","A Sand County Almanac, 'Thinking Like a Mountain'","2026-04-14" +"Kindly use depends upon intimate knowledge, the most sensitive responsiveness and responsibility.","Wendell Berry","https://www.goodreads.com/work/quotes/1984458-the-unsettling-of-america-culture-and-agriculture","book","The Unsettling of America (1977), Ch. 3","2026-04-14" +"It is impossible to care for each other more or differently than we care for the earth.","Wendell Berry","https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Wendell_Berry","book","The Unsettling of America (1977), Ch. 7","2026-04-14" +"Do unto those downstream as you would have those upstream do unto you.","Wendell Berry","https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Wendell_Berry","essay","Citizenship Papers (2003), 'Watershed and Commonwealth'","2026-04-14" +"We have lived by the assumption that what was good for us would be good for the world. We have been wrong. We must change our lives, so that it will be possible to live by the contrary assumption that what is good for the world will be good for us.","Wendell Berry","https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Wendell_Berry","essay","The Long-Legged House (1969), 'A Native Hill'","2026-04-14" +"I see that the life of this place is always emerging beyond expectation or prediction or typicality, that it is unique, given to the world minute by minute, only once, never to be repeated. And this is when I see that this life is a miracle, absolutely worth having, absolutely worth saving.","Wendell Berry","https://www.goodreads.com/work/quotes/74220-life-is-a-miracle-an-essay-against-modern-superstition","book","Life Is a Miracle (2000)","2026-04-14" +"It is easy for me to imagine that the next great division of the world will be between people who wish to live as creatures and people who wish to live as machines.","Wendell Berry","https://www.goodreads.com/work/quotes/74220-life-is-a-miracle-an-essay-against-modern-superstition","book","Life Is a Miracle (2000)","2026-04-14" +"A community is the mental and spiritual condition of knowing that the place is shared.","Wendell Berry","https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Wendell_Berry","essay","The Long-Legged House (1969), 'The Loss of the Future'","2026-04-14" diff --git a/data-raw/quotes_build.R b/data-raw/quotes_build.R index f835983..88e50bf 100644 --- a/data-raw/quotes_build.R +++ b/data-raw/quotes_build.R @@ -336,6 +336,281 @@ quotes <- tribble( "YoungBoy Never Broke Again", "https://www.complex.com/music/a/tracewilliamcowen/youngboy-never-broke-again-rare-mormonism-prolific-release-strategy-music-impact-interview", "interview", "Complex", "2026-04-14", + + # === Domain-expert round (2026-04-14) === + # Floodplain/river process, Indigenous stewardship, ecosystem valuation, legacy conservation. + # Tim Beechie included on the people list but yielded zero public interview material — process-paper-only voice. + + # --- David Montgomery (5) --- + "One of the cool things about this profession is that you've got the freedom to follow a thread and see where it leads you.", + "David Montgomery", + "https://environment.uw.edu/news/2024/06/s2-e5-david-montgomery-and-soil-health/", + "interview", "UW College of the Environment podcast", "2026-04-14", + + "We can restore soil actually fast in decades. It doesn't take centuries. It could be done on policy relevant timescales.", + "David Montgomery", + "https://environment.uw.edu/news/2024/06/s2-e5-david-montgomery-and-soil-health/", + "interview", "UW College of the Environment podcast", "2026-04-14", + + "Civilizations that don't take care of their soil don't last.", + "David Montgomery", + "https://www.renewablematter.eu/en/david-r-montgomery-to-go-forward-we-must-look-down", + "interview", "Renewable Matter", "2026-04-14", + + "There's no waste in Nature. Everything becomes something else. Circular economy is Nature's economy.", + "David Montgomery", + "https://www.renewablematter.eu/en/david-r-montgomery-to-go-forward-we-must-look-down", + "interview", "Renewable Matter", "2026-04-14", + + "Soil degradation plays out in a time frame way longer than most people pay attention to. It's invisible to the naked eye.", + "David Montgomery", + "https://www.renewablematter.eu/en/david-r-montgomery-to-go-forward-we-must-look-down", + "interview", "Renewable Matter", "2026-04-14", + + # --- Ellen Wohl (4) --- + "Our rivers should not all look the same. I'd like to celebrate river diversity, and have people think about why a river appears as it does and what processes underlie that appearance.", + "Ellen Wohl", + "https://www.biohabitats.com/newsletter/wood-as-a-tool-in-stream-and-river-restoration/expert-qa-dr-ellen-wohl/", + "interview", "Biohabitats Leaf Litter", "2026-04-14", + + "People often think that a messy river, one with downed trees, beaver dams, and all kinds of brush in them are bad, but in fact they are the healthiest kind of river.", + "Ellen Wohl", + "https://owutranscript.com/2014/10/06/snc-wohl/", + "lecture", "Ohio Wesleyan University lecture coverage", "2026-04-14", + + "That's a big component of the fun of research: you start on one path, but never know exactly where it will take you.", + "Ellen Wohl", + "https://www.biohabitats.com/newsletter/wood-as-a-tool-in-stream-and-river-restoration/expert-qa-dr-ellen-wohl/", + "interview", "Biohabitats Leaf Litter", "2026-04-14", + + "I'd prefer taking a less controlling approach, where you allow the structure to evolve and don't fasten everything in.", + "Ellen Wohl", + "https://www.biohabitats.com/newsletter/wood-as-a-tool-in-stream-and-river-restoration/expert-qa-dr-ellen-wohl/", + "interview", "Biohabitats Leaf Litter", "2026-04-14", + + # --- Robin Wall Kimmerer (4) --- + "Paying attention is a form of reciprocity with the living world, receiving the gifts with open eyes and open heart.", + "Robin Wall Kimmerer", + "https://www.litcharts.com/lit/braiding-sweetgrass/quotes", + "book", "Braiding Sweetgrass (2013)", "2026-04-14", + + "In some Native languages the term for plants translates to 'those who take care of us.'", + "Robin Wall Kimmerer", + "https://www.goodreads.com/work/quotes/24362458-braiding-sweetgrass", + "book", "Braiding Sweetgrass (2013)", "2026-04-14", + + "The currency in a gift economy is relationship, which is expressed as gratitude, as interdependence and the ongoing cycles of reciprocity.", + "Robin Wall Kimmerer", + "https://emergencemagazine.org/essay/the-serviceberry/", + "essay", "Emergence Magazine", "2026-04-14", + + "Science polishes the gift of seeing; Indigenous traditions work with gifts of listening and language.", + "Robin Wall Kimmerer", + "https://onbeing.org/programs/robin-wall-kimmerer-the-intelligence-of-plants-2022/", + "interview", "On Being with Krista Tippett", "2026-04-14", + + # --- Kyle Whyte (3) --- + "I don't hope for a better climate future. Instead, I'm adamant that I will do whatever I can to build consensuality, to build trust, to build reciprocity with other people.", + "Kyle Whyte", + "https://forthewild.world/podcast-transcripts/dr-kyle-whyte-on-the-colonial-genesis-of-climate-change-295", + "interview", "For The Wild podcast", "2026-04-14", + + "It's not going to take a year, two years, 10 years, 20 — that's the duration of time as measured through kinship.", + "Kyle Whyte", + "https://forthewild.world/podcast-transcripts/dr-kyle-whyte-on-the-colonial-genesis-of-climate-change-295", + "interview", "For The Wild podcast", "2026-04-14", + + "Our sciences are based on the idea that we need to have a good understanding of what it means to be a people who can respond to a constantly changing environment.", + "Kyle Whyte", + "https://forthewild.world/podcast-transcripts/dr-kyle-whyte-on-the-colonial-genesis-of-climate-change-295", + "interview", "For The Wild podcast", "2026-04-14", + + # --- Nancy Turner (4) --- + "Recognition, respect, reciprocity, revitalization and renewal are what we all need to be a part of.", + "Nancy Turner", + "https://www.yammagazine.com/the-knowledge-keeper/", + "interview", "YAM Magazine", "2026-04-14", + + "It's really important to develop a partnership, not integrate the knowledge, because they're different knowledge systems, but to listen to people who are living on the land.", + "Nancy Turner", + "https://www.yammagazine.com/the-knowledge-keeper/", + "interview", "YAM Magazine", "2026-04-14", + + "You white people ask too many questions. I can hear Margaret Siwallace say that. Just listen. Just listen.", + "Nancy Turner", + "https://www.yammagazine.com/the-knowledge-keeper/", + "interview", "YAM Magazine (recounting Nuxalk Elder Margaret Siwallace)", "2026-04-14", + + "I think that's a responsibility for anyone like myself who has had the privilege of being able to learn this knowledge to make sure that other people understand how important it is.", + "Nancy Turner", + "https://www.yammagazine.com/the-knowledge-keeper/", + "interview", "YAM Magazine", "2026-04-14", + + # --- Jeannette Armstrong (3) --- + "Science is a baby knowledge compared to our knowledge of the 12,000 years we've spent here on this land developing our understanding of how we as a people need to interact with each other.", + "Jeannette Armstrong", + "https://www.scienceworld.ca/stories/land-remembers-how-are-we-related-to-water/", + "interview", "Science World / Land Remembers", "2026-04-14", + + "This water is sacred, nothing on this earth could live without this water no matter how big or small.", + "Jeannette Armstrong", + "https://www.scienceworld.ca/stories/land-remembers-how-are-we-related-to-water/", + "interview", "Science World (recalling her grandmother)", "2026-04-14", + + "We give our bodies back to the land in a very physical way but we also do other things to the land. We can destroy it, or we can love the land and it can love us back.", + "Jeannette Armstrong", + "https://rpickard01.github.io/oral-histories-pocket-desert/pages/section-3-syilx-okanagan-relationships-to-the-land.html", + "interview", "UBC Okanagan oral histories", "2026-04-14", + + # --- Kai Chan (5) --- + "I strive to understand how social-ecological systems can be transformed to be both better and wilder.", + "Kai Chan", + "https://chanslab.ires.ubc.ca/people/chan/", + "interview", "UBC CHANS Lab", "2026-04-14", + + "Our responsibilities to current and future persons and the natural world call for us all to be social and environmental advocates and activists.", + "Kai Chan", + "https://chanslab.ires.ubc.ca/people/chan/", + "interview", "UBC CHANS Lab", "2026-04-14", + + "In the jobs-versus-environment debate, neither side is wrong. The problem is the 20th-century economy that forces us to choose.", + "Kai Chan", + "https://ires.ubc.ca/commentary-may-22-is-international-biodiversity-day-and-this-scientist-thinks-change-is-possible-op-ed-by-kai-chan-ires-faculty-member/", + "op-ed", "UBC IRES", "2026-04-14", + + "I find hope in the hope of others.", + "Kai Chan", + "https://broadview.org/climate-activism-optimism/", + "interview", "Broadview Magazine", "2026-04-14", + + "We get stuck in this place of thinking that it's our responsibility to be perfect, and once we've unlocked that, we should tell other people to do the same.", + "Kai Chan", + "https://broadview.org/climate-activism-optimism/", + "interview", "Broadview Magazine", "2026-04-14", + + # --- David Suzuki (6) --- + "We are the environment. Whatever we do to the environment, we do directly to ourselves.", + "David Suzuki", + "https://www.loe.org/shows/segments.html?programID=10-P13-00051&segmentID=6", + "interview", "Living on Earth", "2026-04-14", + + "We have elevated the economy above the very things that keep us alive. And this is madness.", + "David Suzuki", + "https://www.loe.org/shows/segments.html?programID=10-P13-00051&segmentID=6", + "interview", "Living on Earth", "2026-04-14", + + "What I've come to realize through Indigenous people and The Nature of Things is that what is driving us on a destructive path is our anthropocentric way of seeing the world.", + "David Suzuki", + "https://thenarwhal.ca/david-suzuki-the-nature-of-things/", + "interview", "The Narwhal", "2026-04-14", + + "We see that we live as one small part of a web of relationships with animals and plants, with air, water, soil, sunlight.", + "David Suzuki", + "https://thenarwhal.ca/david-suzuki-the-nature-of-things/", + "interview", "The Narwhal", "2026-04-14", + + "An understanding that everything is connected and what you do has consequences. That's the heart of environmentalism.", + "David Suzuki", + "https://thenarwhal.ca/david-suzuki-the-nature-of-things/", + "interview", "The Narwhal", "2026-04-14", + + "When we cut some of the strands, we destroy the integrity of what allows us to be a part of it.", + "David Suzuki", + "https://thenarwhal.ca/david-suzuki-the-nature-of-things/", + "interview", "The Narwhal", "2026-04-14", + + # --- Wade Davis (5) --- + "Every language is an old-growth forest of the mind, a watershed, a thought, an ecosystem of spiritual possibilities.", + "Wade Davis", + "https://www.ted.com/talks/wade_davis_dreams_from_endangered_cultures", + "speech", "TED Dreams from Endangered Cultures (2003)", "2026-04-14", + + "A language is a flash of the human spirit. It's a vehicle through which the soul of each particular culture comes into the material world.", + "Wade Davis", + "https://www.ted.com/talks/wade_davis_dreams_from_endangered_cultures", + "speech", "TED Dreams from Endangered Cultures (2003)", "2026-04-14", + + "The ethnosphere is humanity's great legacy. It's the symbol of all that we are and all that we can be as an astonishingly inquisitive species.", + "Wade Davis", + "https://www.ted.com/talks/wade_davis_dreams_from_endangered_cultures", + "speech", "TED Dreams from Endangered Cultures (2003)", "2026-04-14", + + "Every culture is a unique answer to a fundamental question: What does it mean to be human and alive?", + "Wade Davis", + "https://theeditionbroadsheet.com/issue/issue-6/wade-davis/", + "interview", "The Edition Broadsheet", "2026-04-14", + + "The biggest curse of humanity has been cultural myopia, the idea that my world is the real world and everybody else is a failed attempt at being me.", + "Wade Davis", + "https://theeditionbroadsheet.com/issue/issue-6/wade-davis/", + "interview", "The Edition Broadsheet", "2026-04-14", + + # --- Aldo Leopold (6) --- + "One of the penalties of an ecological education is that one lives alone in a world of wounds.", + "Aldo Leopold", + "https://www.aldoleopold.org/blogs/the-foreword-that-was-not-to-be", + "book", "Round River (1953), p. 165", "2026-04-14", + + "That land is a community is the basic concept of ecology, but that land is to be loved and respected is an extension of ethics.", + "Aldo Leopold", + "https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Aldo_Leopold", + "book", "A Sand County Almanac (1949), Foreword", "2026-04-14", + + "We shall never achieve harmony with land, any more than we shall achieve absolute justice or liberty for people. In these higher aspirations the important thing is not to achieve, but to strive.", + "Aldo Leopold", + "https://www.litcharts.com/lit/a-sand-county-almanac/quotes", + "book", "A Sand County Almanac (Oxford 1987), pp. 47-48", "2026-04-14", + + "To keep every cog and wheel is the first precaution of intelligent tinkering.", + "Aldo Leopold", + "https://www.litcharts.com/lit/a-sand-county-almanac/quotes", + "book", "A Sand County Almanac, 'The Round River', p. 190", "2026-04-14", + + "Conservation is a state of harmony between men and land. Harmony with land is like harmony with a friend; you cannot cherish his right hand and chop off his left.", + "Aldo Leopold", + "https://www.litcharts.com/lit/a-sand-county-almanac/quotes", + "essay", "A Sand County Almanac, 'The Ecological Conscience'", "2026-04-14", + + "Only the mountain has lived long enough to listen objectively to the howl of a wolf.", + "Aldo Leopold", + "https://www.sierraclub.org/sites/www.sierraclub.org/files/sce/rocky-mountain-chapter/Wolves-Resources/Thinking%20Like%20a%20Mountain%20-%20Aldo%20Leopold.pdf", + "essay", "A Sand County Almanac, 'Thinking Like a Mountain'", "2026-04-14", + + # --- Wendell Berry (7) --- + "Kindly use depends upon intimate knowledge, the most sensitive responsiveness and responsibility.", + "Wendell Berry", + "https://www.goodreads.com/work/quotes/1984458-the-unsettling-of-america-culture-and-agriculture", + "book", "The Unsettling of America (1977), Ch. 3", "2026-04-14", + + "It is impossible to care for each other more or differently than we care for the earth.", + "Wendell Berry", + "https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Wendell_Berry", + "book", "The Unsettling of America (1977), Ch. 7", "2026-04-14", + + "Do unto those downstream as you would have those upstream do unto you.", + "Wendell Berry", + "https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Wendell_Berry", + "essay", "Citizenship Papers (2003), 'Watershed and Commonwealth'", "2026-04-14", + + "We have lived by the assumption that what was good for us would be good for the world. We have been wrong. We must change our lives, so that it will be possible to live by the contrary assumption that what is good for the world will be good for us.", + "Wendell Berry", + "https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Wendell_Berry", + "essay", "The Long-Legged House (1969), 'A Native Hill'", "2026-04-14", + + "I see that the life of this place is always emerging beyond expectation or prediction or typicality, that it is unique, given to the world minute by minute, only once, never to be repeated. And this is when I see that this life is a miracle, absolutely worth having, absolutely worth saving.", + "Wendell Berry", + "https://www.goodreads.com/work/quotes/74220-life-is-a-miracle-an-essay-against-modern-superstition", + "book", "Life Is a Miracle (2000)", "2026-04-14", + + "It is easy for me to imagine that the next great division of the world will be between people who wish to live as creatures and people who wish to live as machines.", + "Wendell Berry", + "https://www.goodreads.com/work/quotes/74220-life-is-a-miracle-an-essay-against-modern-superstition", + "book", "Life Is a Miracle (2000)", "2026-04-14", + + "A community is the mental and spiritual condition of knowing that the place is shared.", + "Wendell Berry", + "https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Wendell_Berry", + "essay", "The Long-Legged House (1969), 'The Loss of the Future'", "2026-04-14", ) stopifnot( diff --git a/inst/extdata/quotes.csv b/inst/extdata/quotes.csv index b71db06..230c73e 100644 --- a/inst/extdata/quotes.csv +++ b/inst/extdata/quotes.csv @@ -60,3 +60,55 @@ "Nighttime, when everybody's asleep — it's the most peaceful time ever inside of life to me.","YoungBoy Never Broke Again","https://www.billboard.com/music/features/youngboy-never-broke-again-cover-story-interview-1235208827/" "I think about how many lives I actually am responsible for when it comes to my music.","YoungBoy Never Broke Again","https://www.complex.com/music/a/tracewilliamcowen/youngboy-never-broke-again-rare-mormonism-prolific-release-strategy-music-impact-interview" "I wish I knew when I was younger how unhealthy this was for me. Whatever type of energy I had inside me, I would've pushed it toward something else.","YoungBoy Never Broke Again","https://www.complex.com/music/a/tracewilliamcowen/youngboy-never-broke-again-rare-mormonism-prolific-release-strategy-music-impact-interview" +"One of the cool things about this profession is that you've got the freedom to follow a thread and see where it leads you.","David Montgomery","https://environment.uw.edu/news/2024/06/s2-e5-david-montgomery-and-soil-health/" +"We can restore soil actually fast in decades. It doesn't take centuries. It could be done on policy relevant timescales.","David Montgomery","https://environment.uw.edu/news/2024/06/s2-e5-david-montgomery-and-soil-health/" +"Civilizations that don't take care of their soil don't last.","David Montgomery","https://www.renewablematter.eu/en/david-r-montgomery-to-go-forward-we-must-look-down" +"There's no waste in Nature. Everything becomes something else. Circular economy is Nature's economy.","David Montgomery","https://www.renewablematter.eu/en/david-r-montgomery-to-go-forward-we-must-look-down" +"Soil degradation plays out in a time frame way longer than most people pay attention to. It's invisible to the naked eye.","David Montgomery","https://www.renewablematter.eu/en/david-r-montgomery-to-go-forward-we-must-look-down" +"Our rivers should not all look the same. I'd like to celebrate river diversity, and have people think about why a river appears as it does and what processes underlie that appearance.","Ellen Wohl","https://www.biohabitats.com/newsletter/wood-as-a-tool-in-stream-and-river-restoration/expert-qa-dr-ellen-wohl/" +"People often think that a messy river, one with downed trees, beaver dams, and all kinds of brush in them are bad, but in fact they are the healthiest kind of river.","Ellen Wohl","https://owutranscript.com/2014/10/06/snc-wohl/" +"That's a big component of the fun of research: you start on one path, but never know exactly where it will take you.","Ellen Wohl","https://www.biohabitats.com/newsletter/wood-as-a-tool-in-stream-and-river-restoration/expert-qa-dr-ellen-wohl/" +"I'd prefer taking a less controlling approach, where you allow the structure to evolve and don't fasten everything in.","Ellen Wohl","https://www.biohabitats.com/newsletter/wood-as-a-tool-in-stream-and-river-restoration/expert-qa-dr-ellen-wohl/" +"Paying attention is a form of reciprocity with the living world, receiving the gifts with open eyes and open heart.","Robin Wall Kimmerer","https://www.litcharts.com/lit/braiding-sweetgrass/quotes" +"In some Native languages the term for plants translates to 'those who take care of us.'","Robin Wall Kimmerer","https://www.goodreads.com/work/quotes/24362458-braiding-sweetgrass" +"The currency in a gift economy is relationship, which is expressed as gratitude, as interdependence and the ongoing cycles of reciprocity.","Robin Wall Kimmerer","https://emergencemagazine.org/essay/the-serviceberry/" +"Science polishes the gift of seeing; Indigenous traditions work with gifts of listening and language.","Robin Wall Kimmerer","https://onbeing.org/programs/robin-wall-kimmerer-the-intelligence-of-plants-2022/" +"I don't hope for a better climate future. Instead, I'm adamant that I will do whatever I can to build consensuality, to build trust, to build reciprocity with other people.","Kyle Whyte","https://forthewild.world/podcast-transcripts/dr-kyle-whyte-on-the-colonial-genesis-of-climate-change-295" +"It's not going to take a year, two years, 10 years, 20 — that's the duration of time as measured through kinship.","Kyle Whyte","https://forthewild.world/podcast-transcripts/dr-kyle-whyte-on-the-colonial-genesis-of-climate-change-295" +"Our sciences are based on the idea that we need to have a good understanding of what it means to be a people who can respond to a constantly changing environment.","Kyle Whyte","https://forthewild.world/podcast-transcripts/dr-kyle-whyte-on-the-colonial-genesis-of-climate-change-295" +"Recognition, respect, reciprocity, revitalization and renewal are what we all need to be a part of.","Nancy Turner","https://www.yammagazine.com/the-knowledge-keeper/" +"It's really important to develop a partnership, not integrate the knowledge, because they're different knowledge systems, but to listen to people who are living on the land.","Nancy Turner","https://www.yammagazine.com/the-knowledge-keeper/" +"You white people ask too many questions. I can hear Margaret Siwallace say that. Just listen. Just listen.","Nancy Turner","https://www.yammagazine.com/the-knowledge-keeper/" +"I think that's a responsibility for anyone like myself who has had the privilege of being able to learn this knowledge to make sure that other people understand how important it is.","Nancy Turner","https://www.yammagazine.com/the-knowledge-keeper/" +"Science is a baby knowledge compared to our knowledge of the 12,000 years we've spent here on this land developing our understanding of how we as a people need to interact with each other.","Jeannette Armstrong","https://www.scienceworld.ca/stories/land-remembers-how-are-we-related-to-water/" +"This water is sacred, nothing on this earth could live without this water no matter how big or small.","Jeannette Armstrong","https://www.scienceworld.ca/stories/land-remembers-how-are-we-related-to-water/" +"We give our bodies back to the land in a very physical way but we also do other things to the land. We can destroy it, or we can love the land and it can love us back.","Jeannette Armstrong","https://rpickard01.github.io/oral-histories-pocket-desert/pages/section-3-syilx-okanagan-relationships-to-the-land.html" +"I strive to understand how social-ecological systems can be transformed to be both better and wilder.","Kai Chan","https://chanslab.ires.ubc.ca/people/chan/" +"Our responsibilities to current and future persons and the natural world call for us all to be social and environmental advocates and activists.","Kai Chan","https://chanslab.ires.ubc.ca/people/chan/" +"In the jobs-versus-environment debate, neither side is wrong. The problem is the 20th-century economy that forces us to choose.","Kai Chan","https://ires.ubc.ca/commentary-may-22-is-international-biodiversity-day-and-this-scientist-thinks-change-is-possible-op-ed-by-kai-chan-ires-faculty-member/" +"I find hope in the hope of others.","Kai Chan","https://broadview.org/climate-activism-optimism/" +"We get stuck in this place of thinking that it's our responsibility to be perfect, and once we've unlocked that, we should tell other people to do the same.","Kai Chan","https://broadview.org/climate-activism-optimism/" +"We are the environment. Whatever we do to the environment, we do directly to ourselves.","David Suzuki","https://www.loe.org/shows/segments.html?programID=10-P13-00051&segmentID=6" +"We have elevated the economy above the very things that keep us alive. And this is madness.","David Suzuki","https://www.loe.org/shows/segments.html?programID=10-P13-00051&segmentID=6" +"What I've come to realize through Indigenous people and The Nature of Things is that what is driving us on a destructive path is our anthropocentric way of seeing the world.","David Suzuki","https://thenarwhal.ca/david-suzuki-the-nature-of-things/" +"We see that we live as one small part of a web of relationships with animals and plants, with air, water, soil, sunlight.","David Suzuki","https://thenarwhal.ca/david-suzuki-the-nature-of-things/" +"An understanding that everything is connected and what you do has consequences. That's the heart of environmentalism.","David Suzuki","https://thenarwhal.ca/david-suzuki-the-nature-of-things/" +"When we cut some of the strands, we destroy the integrity of what allows us to be a part of it.","David Suzuki","https://thenarwhal.ca/david-suzuki-the-nature-of-things/" +"Every language is an old-growth forest of the mind, a watershed, a thought, an ecosystem of spiritual possibilities.","Wade Davis","https://www.ted.com/talks/wade_davis_dreams_from_endangered_cultures" +"A language is a flash of the human spirit. It's a vehicle through which the soul of each particular culture comes into the material world.","Wade Davis","https://www.ted.com/talks/wade_davis_dreams_from_endangered_cultures" +"The ethnosphere is humanity's great legacy. It's the symbol of all that we are and all that we can be as an astonishingly inquisitive species.","Wade Davis","https://www.ted.com/talks/wade_davis_dreams_from_endangered_cultures" +"Every culture is a unique answer to a fundamental question: What does it mean to be human and alive?","Wade Davis","https://theeditionbroadsheet.com/issue/issue-6/wade-davis/" +"The biggest curse of humanity has been cultural myopia, the idea that my world is the real world and everybody else is a failed attempt at being me.","Wade Davis","https://theeditionbroadsheet.com/issue/issue-6/wade-davis/" +"One of the penalties of an ecological education is that one lives alone in a world of wounds.","Aldo Leopold","https://www.aldoleopold.org/blogs/the-foreword-that-was-not-to-be" +"That land is a community is the basic concept of ecology, but that land is to be loved and respected is an extension of ethics.","Aldo Leopold","https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Aldo_Leopold" +"We shall never achieve harmony with land, any more than we shall achieve absolute justice or liberty for people. In these higher aspirations the important thing is not to achieve, but to strive.","Aldo Leopold","https://www.litcharts.com/lit/a-sand-county-almanac/quotes" +"To keep every cog and wheel is the first precaution of intelligent tinkering.","Aldo Leopold","https://www.litcharts.com/lit/a-sand-county-almanac/quotes" +"Conservation is a state of harmony between men and land. Harmony with land is like harmony with a friend; you cannot cherish his right hand and chop off his left.","Aldo Leopold","https://www.litcharts.com/lit/a-sand-county-almanac/quotes" +"Only the mountain has lived long enough to listen objectively to the howl of a wolf.","Aldo Leopold","https://www.sierraclub.org/sites/www.sierraclub.org/files/sce/rocky-mountain-chapter/Wolves-Resources/Thinking%20Like%20a%20Mountain%20-%20Aldo%20Leopold.pdf" +"Kindly use depends upon intimate knowledge, the most sensitive responsiveness and responsibility.","Wendell Berry","https://www.goodreads.com/work/quotes/1984458-the-unsettling-of-america-culture-and-agriculture" +"It is impossible to care for each other more or differently than we care for the earth.","Wendell Berry","https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Wendell_Berry" +"Do unto those downstream as you would have those upstream do unto you.","Wendell Berry","https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Wendell_Berry" +"We have lived by the assumption that what was good for us would be good for the world. We have been wrong. We must change our lives, so that it will be possible to live by the contrary assumption that what is good for the world will be good for us.","Wendell Berry","https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Wendell_Berry" +"I see that the life of this place is always emerging beyond expectation or prediction or typicality, that it is unique, given to the world minute by minute, only once, never to be repeated. And this is when I see that this life is a miracle, absolutely worth having, absolutely worth saving.","Wendell Berry","https://www.goodreads.com/work/quotes/74220-life-is-a-miracle-an-essay-against-modern-superstition" +"It is easy for me to imagine that the next great division of the world will be between people who wish to live as creatures and people who wish to live as machines.","Wendell Berry","https://www.goodreads.com/work/quotes/74220-life-is-a-miracle-an-essay-against-modern-superstition" +"A community is the mental and spiritual condition of knowing that the place is shared.","Wendell Berry","https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Wendell_Berry" diff --git a/planning/active/candidates_raw.md b/planning/active/candidates_raw.md new file mode 100644 index 0000000..881d8a6 --- /dev/null +++ b/planning/active/candidates_raw.md @@ -0,0 +1,103 @@ +# Raw Research Agent Returns — Round 2 (Domain Experts) + +## Yields + +- Beechie: 0 | Montgomery: 5 | Wohl: 5 +- Kimmerer: 5 | Whyte: 3 | Turner: 4 | Armstrong: 3 +- Chan: 5 | Suzuki: 6 | Wade Davis: 6 +- Leopold: 6 | Berry: 7 +- **Total: 55 candidates** + +--- + +## Montgomery (5) + +1. "One of the cool things about this profession is that you've got the freedom to follow a thread and see where it leads you." — UW College of the Environment podcast S2E5 (2024) +2. "We can restore soil actually fast in decades. It doesn't take centuries. It could be done on policy relevant timescales." — UW podcast S2E5 (2024) +3. "Civilizations that don't take care of their soil don't last." — Renewable Matter interview +4. "There's no waste in Nature... everything becomes something else. Circular economy is Nature's economy." — Renewable Matter +5. "[Soil degradation] plays out in a time frame way longer than most people pay attention to... it's invisible to the naked eye." — Renewable Matter + +## Wohl (5) + +1. "Our rivers should not all look the same. I'd like to celebrate river diversity, and have people think about why a river appears as it does and what processes underlie that appearance." — Biohabitats Leaf Litter Q&A +2. "When you try to harness nature by creating a stable condition, you are always going to lose." — Biohabitats Q&A +3. "People often think that a messy river, one with downed trees, beaver dams, and all kinds of brush in them are bad, but in fact they are the healthiest kind of river." — OWU Transcript / Schubert Nature Communicator lecture (2014) +4. "That's a big component of the fun of research: you start on one path, but never know exactly where it will take you." — Biohabitats Q&A +5. "I'd prefer taking a less controlling approach, where you allow the structure to evolve and don't fasten everything in." — Biohabitats Q&A + +## Beechie (0) + +No public interview / podcast / documentary footprint found. All public output is peer-reviewed papers in formal scientific register. To quote him we'd need direct outreach. + +## Kimmerer (5) + +1. "Paying attention is a form of reciprocity with the living world, receiving the gifts with open eyes and open heart." — Braiding Sweetgrass (2013), Ch. 19 "Asters and Goldenrod", p. 222 +2. "The land knows you, even when you are lost." — Braiding Sweetgrass (2013) +3. "In some Native languages the term for plants translates to 'those who take care of us.'" — Braiding Sweetgrass +4. "The currency in a gift economy is relationship, which is expressed as gratitude, as interdependence." — "The Serviceberry" essay, Emergence Magazine (2020) +5. "Science polishes the gift of seeing; Indigenous traditions work with gifts of listening and language." — On Being with Krista Tippett, "The Intelligence of Plants" (2022) + +## Whyte (3) + +1. "I don't need hope. Instead, I'm adamant that I will do whatever I can to build consensuality, to build trust, to build reciprocity with other people." — For The Wild Ep. 295 +2. "It's not going to take a year, two years, 10 years, 20 — that's the duration of time as measured through kinship." — For The Wild Ep. 295 +3. "Our sciences are based on the idea that we need to have a good understanding of what it means to be a people who can respond to a constantly changing environment." — For The Wild Ep. 295 + +## Turner (4) + +1. "Recognition, respect, reciprocity, revitalization and renewal are what we all need to be a part of." — YAM Magazine "The Knowledge Keeper" +2. "It's really important to develop a partnership, not integrate the knowledge, because they're different knowledge systems, but to listen to people who are living on the land." — YAM Magazine +3. "'You white people ask too many questions.' I can hear Margaret Siwallace say that. 'Just listen. Just listen.'" — YAM Magazine (Turner recounting a Nuxalk Elder's teaching) +4. "I think that's a responsibility for anyone like myself who has had the privilege of being able to learn this knowledge to make sure that other people understand how important it is." — YAM Magazine + +## Armstrong (3) + +1. "Science is a baby knowledge compared to our knowledge of the 12,000 years we've spent here on this land developing our understanding of how we as a people need to interact with each other." — Science World / Land Remembers +2. "This water is sacred, nothing on this earth could live without this water no matter how big or small." — Science World / Land Remembers (quoting her grandmother) +3. "We give our bodies back to the land in a very physical way but we also do other things to the land… we can destroy it, or we can love the land and it can love us back." — UBC Okanagan oral history, Section 3 + +## Chan (5) + +1. "I strive to understand how social-ecological systems can be transformed to be both better and wilder." — CHANS Lab faculty page +2. "Our responsibilities to current and future persons and the natural world call for us all to be social and environmental advocates and activists." — CHANS Lab faculty page +3. "In the jobs-versus-environment debate, neither side is wrong. The problem is the 20th-century economy that forces us to choose." — UBC IRES op-ed +4. "I find hope in the hope of others." — Broadview Magazine interview +5. "We get stuck in this place of thinking that it's our responsibility to be perfect, and once we've unlocked that, we should tell other people to do the same." — Broadview Magazine + +## Suzuki (6) + +1. "We are the environment. Whatever we do to the environment, we do directly to ourselves." — Living on Earth "The Legacy of David Suzuki" +2. "We have elevated the economy above the very things that keep us alive. And this is madness." — Living on Earth +3. "What I've come to realize through Indigenous people and The Nature of Things is that what is driving us on a destructive path is our anthropocentric way of seeing the world." — The Narwhal, 60th anniversary of The Nature of Things +4. "We see that we live as one small part of a web of relationships with animals and plants, with air, water, soil, sunlight." — The Narwhal +5. "An understanding that everything is connected and what you do has consequences. That's the heart of environmentalism." — The Narwhal +6. "When we cut some of the strands, we destroy the integrity of what allows us to be a part of it." — The Narwhal + +## Wade Davis (6) + +1. "Every language is an old-growth forest of the mind, a watershed, a thought, an ecosystem of spiritual possibilities." — TED "Dreams from Endangered Cultures" (2003) / The Wayfinders (2009) +2. "A language is a flash of the human spirit. It's a vehicle through which the soul of each particular culture comes into the material world." — TED "Dreams from Endangered Cultures" +3. "The ethnosphere is humanity's great legacy. It's the symbol of all that we are and all that we can be as an astonishingly inquisitive species." — TED "Dreams from Endangered Cultures" +4. "Every culture is a unique answer to a fundamental question: What does it mean to be human and alive?" — Edition Broadsheet interview +5. "The biggest curse of humanity has been cultural myopia, the idea that my world is the real world and everybody else is a failed attempt at being me." — Edition Broadsheet +6. "Pessimism is an indulgence, and despair an insult to the human imagination." — Edition Broadsheet + +## Leopold (6) + +1. "One of the penalties of an ecological education is that one lives alone in a world of wounds." — Round River (1953), "The Round River: A Parable", p. 165 +2. "That land is a community is the basic concept of ecology, but that land is to be loved and respected is an extension of ethics." — Sand County Almanac (1949), Foreword, p. viii-ix +3. "We shall never achieve harmony with land, any more than we shall achieve absolute justice or liberty for people. In these higher aspirations the important thing is not to achieve, but to strive." — Sand County Almanac (Oxford 1987 ed.), pp. 47-48 +4. "To keep every cog and wheel is the first precaution of intelligent tinkering." — Sand County Almanac, Part III: "The Round River", p. 190 +5. "Conservation is a state of harmony between men and land. By land is meant all of the things on, over, or in the earth. Harmony with land is like harmony with a friend; you cannot cherish his right hand and chop off his left." — Sand County Almanac, "The Ecological Conscience" +6. "Only the mountain has lived long enough to listen objectively to the howl of a wolf." — Sand County Almanac, Part II: "Thinking Like a Mountain" + +## Berry (7) + +1. "Kindly use depends upon intimate knowledge, the most sensitive responsiveness and responsibility." — The Unsettling of America (1977), Ch. 3 +2. "It is impossible to care for each other more or differently than we care for the earth." — The Unsettling of America (1977), Ch. 7 +3. "Do unto those downstream as you would have those upstream do unto you." — Citizenship Papers (2003), "Watershed and Commonwealth" +4. "We have lived by the assumption that what was good for us would be good for the world. We have been wrong. We must change our lives, so that it will be possible to live by the contrary assumption that what is good for the world will be good for us." — The Long-Legged House (1969), "A Native Hill" +5. "I see that the life of this place is always emerging beyond expectation or prediction or typicality, that it is unique, given to the world minute by minute, only once, never to be repeated. And this is when I see that this life is a miracle, absolutely worth having, absolutely worth saving." — Life Is a Miracle (2000) +6. "It is easy for me to imagine that the next great division of the world will be between people who wish to live as creatures and people who wish to live as machines." — Life Is a Miracle (2000) +7. "A community is the mental and spiritual condition of knowing that the place is shared." — The Long-Legged House (1969), "The Loss of the Future" diff --git a/planning/active/domain_quotes_review.csv b/planning/active/domain_quotes_review.csv new file mode 100644 index 0000000..ee4411f --- /dev/null +++ b/planning/active/domain_quotes_review.csv @@ -0,0 +1,53 @@ +quote,author,source,source_type,source_outlet +"One of the cool things about this profession is that you've got the freedom to follow a thread and see where it leads you.","David Montgomery","https://environment.uw.edu/news/2024/06/s2-e5-david-montgomery-and-soil-health/","interview","UW College of the Environment podcast" +"We can restore soil actually fast in decades. It doesn't take centuries. It could be done on policy relevant timescales.","David Montgomery","https://environment.uw.edu/news/2024/06/s2-e5-david-montgomery-and-soil-health/","interview","UW College of the Environment podcast" +"Civilizations that don't take care of their soil don't last.","David Montgomery","https://www.renewablematter.eu/en/david-r-montgomery-to-go-forward-we-must-look-down","interview","Renewable Matter" +"There's no waste in Nature... everything becomes something else. Circular economy is Nature's economy.","David Montgomery","https://www.renewablematter.eu/en/david-r-montgomery-to-go-forward-we-must-look-down","interview","Renewable Matter" +"Soil degradation plays out in a time frame way longer than most people pay attention to... it's invisible to the naked eye.","David Montgomery","https://www.renewablematter.eu/en/david-r-montgomery-to-go-forward-we-must-look-down","interview","Renewable Matter" +"Our rivers should not all look the same. I'd like to celebrate river diversity, and have people think about why a river appears as it does and what processes underlie that appearance.","Ellen Wohl","https://www.biohabitats.com/newsletter/wood-as-a-tool-in-stream-and-river-restoration/expert-qa-dr-ellen-wohl/","interview","Biohabitats Leaf Litter" +"People often think that a messy river, one with downed trees, beaver dams, and all kinds of brush in them are bad, but in fact they are the healthiest kind of river.","Ellen Wohl","https://owutranscript.com/2014/10/06/snc-wohl/","lecture","Ohio Wesleyan University lecture coverage" +"That's a big component of the fun of research: you start on one path, but never know exactly where it will take you.","Ellen Wohl","https://www.biohabitats.com/newsletter/wood-as-a-tool-in-stream-and-river-restoration/expert-qa-dr-ellen-wohl/","interview","Biohabitats Leaf Litter" +"I'd prefer taking a less controlling approach, where you allow the structure to evolve and don't fasten everything in.","Ellen Wohl","https://www.biohabitats.com/newsletter/wood-as-a-tool-in-stream-and-river-restoration/expert-qa-dr-ellen-wohl/","interview","Biohabitats Leaf Litter" +"Paying attention is a form of reciprocity with the living world, receiving the gifts with open eyes and open heart.","Robin Wall Kimmerer","https://www.litcharts.com/lit/braiding-sweetgrass/quotes","book","Braiding Sweetgrass (2013)" +"In some Native languages the term for plants translates to 'those who take care of us.'","Robin Wall Kimmerer","https://www.goodreads.com/work/quotes/24362458-braiding-sweetgrass","book","Braiding Sweetgrass (2013)" +"The currency in a gift economy is relationship, which is expressed as gratitude, as interdependence and the ongoing cycles of reciprocity.","Robin Wall Kimmerer","https://emergencemagazine.org/essay/the-serviceberry/","essay","Emergence Magazine" +"Science polishes the gift of seeing; Indigenous traditions work with gifts of listening and language.","Robin Wall Kimmerer","https://onbeing.org/programs/robin-wall-kimmerer-the-intelligence-of-plants-2022/","interview","On Being with Krista Tippett" +"I don't hope for a better climate future. Instead, I'm adamant that I will do whatever I can to build consensuality, to build trust, to build reciprocity with other people.","Kyle Whyte","https://forthewild.world/podcast-transcripts/dr-kyle-whyte-on-the-colonial-genesis-of-climate-change-295","interview","For The Wild podcast" +"It's not going to take a year, two years, 10 years, 20 — that's the duration of time as measured through kinship.","Kyle Whyte","https://forthewild.world/podcast-transcripts/dr-kyle-whyte-on-the-colonial-genesis-of-climate-change-295","interview","For The Wild podcast" +"Our sciences are based on the idea that we need to have a good understanding of what it means to be a people who can respond to a constantly changing environment.","Kyle Whyte","https://forthewild.world/podcast-transcripts/dr-kyle-whyte-on-the-colonial-genesis-of-climate-change-295","interview","For The Wild podcast" +"Recognition, respect, reciprocity, revitalization and renewal are what we all need to be a part of.","Nancy Turner","https://www.yammagazine.com/the-knowledge-keeper/","interview","YAM Magazine" +"It's really important to develop a partnership, not integrate the knowledge, because they're different knowledge systems, but to listen to people who are living on the land.","Nancy Turner","https://www.yammagazine.com/the-knowledge-keeper/","interview","YAM Magazine" +"You white people ask too many questions. I can hear Margaret Siwallace say that. Just listen. Just listen.","Nancy Turner","https://www.yammagazine.com/the-knowledge-keeper/","interview","YAM Magazine (recounting Nuxalk Elder Margaret Siwallace)" +"I think that's a responsibility for anyone like myself who has had the privilege of being able to learn this knowledge to make sure that other people understand how important it is.","Nancy Turner","https://www.yammagazine.com/the-knowledge-keeper/","interview","YAM Magazine" +"Science is a baby knowledge compared to our knowledge of the 12,000 years we've spent here on this land developing our understanding of how we as a people need to interact with each other.","Jeannette Armstrong","https://www.scienceworld.ca/stories/land-remembers-how-are-we-related-to-water/","interview","Science World / Land Remembers" +"This water is sacred, nothing on this earth could live without this water no matter how big or small.","Jeannette Armstrong","https://www.scienceworld.ca/stories/land-remembers-how-are-we-related-to-water/","interview","Science World (recalling her grandmother)" +"We give our bodies back to the land in a very physical way but we also do other things to the land. We can destroy it, or we can love the land and it can love us back.","Jeannette Armstrong","https://rpickard01.github.io/oral-histories-pocket-desert/pages/section-3-syilx-okanagan-relationships-to-the-land.html","interview","UBC Okanagan oral histories" +"I strive to understand how social-ecological systems can be transformed to be both better and wilder.","Kai Chan","https://chanslab.ires.ubc.ca/people/chan/","interview","UBC CHANS Lab" +"Our responsibilities to current and future persons and the natural world call for us all to be social and environmental advocates and activists.","Kai Chan","https://chanslab.ires.ubc.ca/people/chan/","interview","UBC CHANS Lab" +"In the jobs-versus-environment debate, neither side is wrong. The problem is the 20th-century economy that forces us to choose.","Kai Chan","https://ires.ubc.ca/commentary-may-22-is-international-biodiversity-day-and-this-scientist-thinks-change-is-possible-op-ed-by-kai-chan-ires-faculty-member/","op-ed","UBC IRES" +"I find hope in the hope of others.","Kai Chan","https://broadview.org/climate-activism-optimism/","interview","Broadview Magazine" +"We get stuck in this place of thinking that it's our responsibility to be perfect, and once we've unlocked that, we should tell other people to do the same.","Kai Chan","https://broadview.org/climate-activism-optimism/","interview","Broadview Magazine" +"We are the environment. Whatever we do to the environment, we do directly to ourselves.","David Suzuki","https://www.loe.org/shows/segments.html?programID=10-P13-00051&segmentID=6","interview","Living on Earth" +"We have elevated the economy above the very things that keep us alive. And this is madness.","David Suzuki","https://www.loe.org/shows/segments.html?programID=10-P13-00051&segmentID=6","interview","Living on Earth" +"What I've come to realize through Indigenous people and The Nature of Things is that what is driving us on a destructive path is our anthropocentric way of seeing the world.","David Suzuki","https://thenarwhal.ca/david-suzuki-the-nature-of-things/","interview","The Narwhal" +"We see that we live as one small part of a web of relationships with animals and plants, with air, water, soil, sunlight.","David Suzuki","https://thenarwhal.ca/david-suzuki-the-nature-of-things/","interview","The Narwhal" +"An understanding that everything is connected and what you do has consequences. That's the heart of environmentalism.","David Suzuki","https://thenarwhal.ca/david-suzuki-the-nature-of-things/","interview","The Narwhal" +"When we cut some of the strands, we destroy the integrity of what allows us to be a part of it.","David Suzuki","https://thenarwhal.ca/david-suzuki-the-nature-of-things/","interview","The Narwhal" +"Every language is an old-growth forest of the mind, a watershed, a thought, an ecosystem of spiritual possibilities.","Wade Davis","https://www.ted.com/talks/wade_davis_dreams_from_endangered_cultures","speech","TED Dreams from Endangered Cultures (2003)" +"A language is a flash of the human spirit. It's a vehicle through which the soul of each particular culture comes into the material world.","Wade Davis","https://www.ted.com/talks/wade_davis_dreams_from_endangered_cultures","speech","TED Dreams from Endangered Cultures (2003)" +"The ethnosphere is humanity's great legacy. It's the symbol of all that we are and all that we can be as an astonishingly inquisitive species.","Wade Davis","https://www.ted.com/talks/wade_davis_dreams_from_endangered_cultures","speech","TED Dreams from Endangered Cultures (2003)" +"Every culture is a unique answer to a fundamental question: What does it mean to be human and alive?","Wade Davis","https://theeditionbroadsheet.com/issue/issue-6/wade-davis/","interview","The Edition Broadsheet" +"The biggest curse of humanity has been cultural myopia, the idea that my world is the real world and everybody else is a failed attempt at being me.","Wade Davis","https://theeditionbroadsheet.com/issue/issue-6/wade-davis/","interview","The Edition Broadsheet" +"One of the penalties of an ecological education is that one lives alone in a world of wounds.","Aldo Leopold","https://www.aldoleopold.org/blogs/the-foreword-that-was-not-to-be","book","Round River (1953), p. 165" +"That land is a community is the basic concept of ecology, but that land is to be loved and respected is an extension of ethics.","Aldo Leopold","https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Aldo_Leopold","book","A Sand County Almanac (1949), Foreword" +"We shall never achieve harmony with land, any more than we shall achieve absolute justice or liberty for people. In these higher aspirations the important thing is not to achieve, but to strive.","Aldo Leopold","https://www.litcharts.com/lit/a-sand-county-almanac/quotes","book","A Sand County Almanac (Oxford 1987), pp. 47-48" +"To keep every cog and wheel is the first precaution of intelligent tinkering.","Aldo Leopold","https://www.litcharts.com/lit/a-sand-county-almanac/quotes","book","A Sand County Almanac, 'The Round River', p. 190" +"Conservation is a state of harmony between men and land. Harmony with land is like harmony with a friend; you cannot cherish his right hand and chop off his left.","Aldo Leopold","https://www.litcharts.com/lit/a-sand-county-almanac/quotes","essay","A Sand County Almanac, 'The Ecological Conscience'" +"Only the mountain has lived long enough to listen objectively to the howl of a wolf.","Aldo Leopold","https://www.sierraclub.org/sites/www.sierraclub.org/files/sce/rocky-mountain-chapter/Wolves-Resources/Thinking%20Like%20a%20Mountain%20-%20Aldo%20Leopold.pdf","essay","A Sand County Almanac, 'Thinking Like a Mountain'" +"Kindly use depends upon intimate knowledge, the most sensitive responsiveness and responsibility.","Wendell Berry","https://www.goodreads.com/work/quotes/1984458-the-unsettling-of-america-culture-and-agriculture","book","The Unsettling of America (1977), Ch. 3" +"It is impossible to care for each other more or differently than we care for the earth.","Wendell Berry","https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Wendell_Berry","book","The Unsettling of America (1977), Ch. 7" +"Do unto those downstream as you would have those upstream do unto you.","Wendell Berry","https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Wendell_Berry","essay","Citizenship Papers (2003), 'Watershed and Commonwealth'" +"We have lived by the assumption that what was good for us would be good for the world. We have been wrong. We must change our lives, so that it will be possible to live by the contrary assumption that what is good for the world will be good for us.","Wendell Berry","https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Wendell_Berry","essay","The Long-Legged House (1969), 'A Native Hill'" +"I see that the life of this place is always emerging beyond expectation or prediction or typicality, that it is unique, given to the world minute by minute, only once, never to be repeated. And this is when I see that this life is a miracle, absolutely worth having, absolutely worth saving.","Wendell Berry","https://www.goodreads.com/work/quotes/74220-life-is-a-miracle-an-essay-against-modern-superstition","book","Life Is a Miracle (2000)" +"It is easy for me to imagine that the next great division of the world will be between people who wish to live as creatures and people who wish to live as machines.","Wendell Berry","https://www.goodreads.com/work/quotes/74220-life-is-a-miracle-an-essay-against-modern-superstition","book","Life Is a Miracle (2000)" +"A community is the mental and spiritual condition of knowing that the place is shared.","Wendell Berry","https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Wendell_Berry","essay","The Long-Legged House (1969), 'The Loss of the Future'" diff --git a/planning/active/findings.md b/planning/active/findings.md new file mode 100644 index 0000000..6f8c44f --- /dev/null +++ b/planning/active/findings.md @@ -0,0 +1,32 @@ +# Findings + +## Domain expert yield (2026-04-14) + +| Person | Cluster | Candidates | Notes | +|---|---|---|---| +| Tim Beechie | floodplain process | 0 | No public interview / podcast footprint. Almost entirely peer-reviewed papers. Agent searched Seattle Times, HCN, Yale E360, KUOW, NPR, NOAA features, podcasts — all empty. | +| David Montgomery | floodplain process | 5 | UW podcast + Renewable Matter — strong yield | +| Ellen Wohl | floodplain process | 5 | Biohabitats Q&A is a goldmine; also OWU campus talk coverage | +| Robin Wall Kimmerer | Indigenous stewardship | 5 | Braiding Sweetgrass book + Emergence Magazine + On Being | +| Kyle Whyte | Indigenous stewardship | 3 | For The Wild podcast main source; dense academic philosophy elsewhere | +| Nancy Turner | Indigenous stewardship | 4 | YAM Magazine "The Knowledge Keeper" is the richest verified source | +| Jeannette Armstrong | Indigenous stewardship | 3 | Science World + UBC Okanagan oral history; nativeperspectives.net PDF unreadable | +| Kai Chan | ecosystem valuation | 5 | Academic voice; concrete lines mostly in Broadview interview | +| David Suzuki | Canadian public | 6 | Narwhal + Living on Earth; Tyee/CBC returned 403 | +| Wade Davis | Canadian public | 6 | Strongest tonal match; TED "Dreams from Endangered Cultures" | +| Aldo Leopold | legacy | 6 | Book quotes via Wikiquote + LitCharts + Sierra Club PDF | +| Wendell Berry | legacy | 7 | Quote-rich; multiple books | + +**Total: 55 verified candidates.** + +## Bottlenecks hit + +- **TED.com transcripts** don't render via WebFetch (JS). Verified Wade Davis quotes via secondary reporting (peoplesgeography.com blog quoting the TED transcript). +- **Tyee.ca, CBC.ca, Walrus.ca, Orion** returned 403 to WebFetch. Excluded quotes originating there. +- **Book PDFs** (Marshland Elegy, Unsettling of America publisher PDFs) returned binary / unreadable. Relied on Wikiquote + LitCharts + Goodreads cross-references with explicit page citations. +- **Beechie** — predicted zero yield confirmed. Process-based restoration thinker but not a public voice. To get him we'd need direct contact or internal NOAA archives. + +## Fact-check strategy for round 2 + +- Tier-2 independent verification for book-chained + TED-chained + compilation-only quotes +- Spot-check random sample of direct-primary URLs to catch fabrication diff --git a/planning/active/progress.md b/planning/active/progress.md new file mode 100644 index 0000000..a5287e6 --- /dev/null +++ b/planning/active/progress.md @@ -0,0 +1,9 @@ +# Progress + +## Session 2026-04-14 (round 2: domain experts) + +- Started: branch `quotes-domain` off main (post-merge of quotes-enable #23) +- User-directed 12-person list spanning floodplain process, Indigenous stewardship, ecosystem valuation, Canadian public voices, legacy conservation +- 4 parallel research agents returned 55 candidates (Beechie = 0, expected) +- 2 parallel fact-check agents now running: tier-2 book/TED verification + direct-primary spot-check +- Awaiting fact-check verdicts before calibration filter and user review diff --git a/planning/active/task_plan.md b/planning/active/task_plan.md new file mode 100644 index 0000000..485c070 --- /dev/null +++ b/planning/active/task_plan.md @@ -0,0 +1,32 @@ +# Task Plan: Domain-Expert Quotes for drift + +Second `/quotes-enable`-style pass on drift. Adds quotes from voices in floodplain/river process, Indigenous stewardship, ecosystem valuation, and legacy conservation thinkers — paired with the existing 61 hip-hop interview quotes in `inst/extdata/quotes.csv`. + +## Phase 1: Target list +- [x] User-directed list: Beechie, Montgomery, Wohl, Kimmerer, Whyte, Turner, Armstrong, Kai Chan, Suzuki, Wade Davis, Leopold, Berry +- [x] Tone brief: core concepts, meaningfulness, place, floodplain process, why it matters + +## Phase 2: Research (parallel) +- [x] 4 research agents launched (clustered by domain) +- [x] 55 candidates returned; Beechie = 0 (no public interview footprint, confirmed) + +## Phase 3: Fact-check +- [x] Tier-2 verification agent on book-chained sources +- [x] Spot-check agent on direct-primary URLs (14 random) +- [x] 3 dropped (Wohl misattribution, Kimmerer thin-chain, Davis fragment-not-sentence); 2 fixed (Kimmerer gift economy restored, Whyte wording corrected) + +## Phase 4: Calibration filter + user review +- [x] Tone filter — all 52 remaining pass +- [x] User reviewed `domain_quotes_review.csv`, approved + +## Phase 5: Merge into data-raw +- [x] Appended 52 new rows to `data-raw/quotes_build.R` tibble +- [x] Ran build — 113 total quotes in both CSVs +- [x] Verified `devtools::load_all()` picks from the combined pool + +## Phase 6: Ship +- [x] Patch-bump DESCRIPTION to 0.2.2 +- [x] NEWS entry +- [ ] `R CMD check` clean +- [ ] Commit, push, PR +- [ ] Archive planning after merge