Soil And Health Library
Health
begins in the soil; Healing begins with hygiene; Liberty begins with freedom.
This website provides free e-books, mainly
about holistic agriculture, holistic health and self-sufficient homestead
living. There are secondary collections about social criticism and transformational
psychology. No fees are collected for this service. The library's subject seemingly-diverse topic areas actually connect agricultural methods to the consequent health or illness of animals and humans, shows how to prevent and heal disease and increase longevity, suggests how to live a more fulfilling life and reveals social forces working against that possibility. The Free Digitalized Library: There are four major subject areas: Radical Agriculture. The nutritional qualites of food and consequently the health of the animals and humans eating that food are determined by soil fertility. This section's interest is far wider than organic gardening and farming; other health-determined approaches to food-raising are also included. Go to the Agriculture Library The Restoration and Maintenance of Health. Nutritional medicine heals disease, builds and maintains health with diet—and sometimes heals with fasting or other forms of dietary restriction. There are many approaches represented in this collection. There is also a collection concerning longevity and nutritional anthropology. A new medical reference library has been added to this collection. Go to the Health Library Achieving Personal Sovereignty. Physical, mental, and spiritual health are linked to one's lifestyle. This collection focuses on liberating activities, especially homesteading and the skills it takes to do that—small-scale entrepreneuring, financial independence, frugality, and voluntary simplicity. There is also a collection of social criticism, especially from a back-to-the-land point of view. Go to the Personal Sovereignty Library Achieving Spiritual Freedom. There are many seemingly-different self-betterment roads. The books in this collection seek to empower a person to effect their own development in an independent manner. Go to the Spiritual Freedom Library. Additionally Clippings and Miscellaneous. Since this library's beginning patrons have sent information and URLs where interesting bits of information and viewpoints could be found. Here you will find articles and essays and etc. that support and enhance the information found in our book collections. Go to the Clipping File. Latest E-Books Added. Digitalized titles added to the online Soil and Health Library in the last few months, click here: Soil And Health Discussion Group Here, a wide ranging discussion goes on about how different agricultural and gardening methods change nutritional qualities of the foods being grown, about the resulting health of the animals and humans that eat those foods, about the best ways to homestead, to grow food, about how the current New World Order is suppressing homestead success. This Yahoo group is gently moderated by Steve Solomon. All points of view and opinions are welcome so long as they exhibit a respect for sustainability and human health and respect the viewpoints of others. You are welcome to post your own essays, refer to other's writings, engage in dialogues. To join the group, click here. The Purpose of Soil And Health Library
The wisest student learns
from the originators of a body of knowledge because those who later follow in
the founders' footsteps are not trailblazers of equivalent depth. This is
especially true of the writings from many post WWII academics and professors
who mainly write because they must publish . . . or perish. Even when
the earliest works in a field contain errors because their authors lacked
some bit of data or had a fact wrong, their books still contain enormous
wisdom. If nothing else, study of older books lets us discover that the
conditions that prevail today aren't the way things always were—whilst on
some levels, some things hardly ever change at all.
There are powerful forces on
Earth obscuring the foundations of knowledge. That would be okay if there
were better knowledge and wiser wisdoms coming on line to replace them. But
usually the opposite is the case. As the sort of person Sir Albert Howard
called "the laboratory hermit . . . someone who knows more and more
about less and less" . . . increasingly dominates ever-wider areas of
scholarship, the focus of scholarship gets ever narrower, and less wise.
Manipulative social-political-economic interests attempt to create Orwellian
realities that suit them; their domination of academia and media makes people
forget the fundamentals. Ferdanand Lundberg's book The Rich and the Super
Rich explains exactly how this works. You may find Lundberg's book in the
Social
Criticism collection.
Here's an example of the
result of foundation- and industry-influenced "science." Despite
all the apparent advances in broadacre industrial agriculture, the
nutritional qualities of our basic foodstuffs have been declining during this
century. That's largely because most agronomists focus on bulk yield and
profitability of the crop, whilst knowing next to nothing about animal/human
nutrition. However, there's a little-appreciated "law" about this
area: nutritional value usually drops in direct relationship to the increase
in bulk production. Or, in agriculture at any rate, "quality" seems
the opposite of "quantity."
Industrial agriculture
has devastated self-sufficient, independent lifestyles. Take the U.S. as an
example. In 1870, something like 90 percent of all Americans lived on
free-and-clear farms or in tiny villages. And in consequence, enjoyed
enormously greater personal liberty than today. The current decline in
personal rights in America, Canada and in Australia is NOT the result of
there being more people dividing up a fixed and limited amount of total
possible liberty into smaller and smaller slices. It is a consequence of
financial insecurity, financial dependency and wage slavery. Persons lacking
financial independence rarely possess the strength to forthrightly demand
social liberties.
This is what happened:
since 1870 as the industrial food system became ever more
"efficient" it lowered the price of basic agricultural
commodities. Consequently most country folk rejected their
self-sufficient-farm birthright for a better-paying job in town, abandoned
their technologically primitive free-and-clear homestead in favour of a city
apartment (with electric power and running water) and soon became
wage-enslaved. The ones who remained on the farm borrowed to invest in
capital-intensive production methods and so became debt slaves. Wage- and
debt-slaves, like all other kinds of slaves, feel insecure and think that in
order to survive they must not reveal their true feelings, must suppress
themselves whilst pleasing those in authority.
The global industrial
system's imperative is balance-sheet efficiency in all areas,
including farming, but the apparent cheapness of economically-rational
agriculture does not reflect a true accounting of costs. Despite the
statistical increase in average lifespan, our average health and feelings of
wellness have been declining. Consider as an example the large proportion of
your neighbours whose mental awareness seems wrapped in fat. Americans
especially are disdained world wide for being hugely obese. Australians and
Canadians are going the same way, spending ever-larger portions of their
productivity on the treatment and cure of disease. This whole activity of
"health" care is not a productive use of human attention, but in
reality constitutes enormous waste, pain, and suffering, suffering whose main
source, poor nutrition, is almost entirely unappreciated.
Dr. Isabelle Moser, who
spent 25 years conducting a clinical practice using holistic approaches,
suggested in private conversations that what she termed the
"constitution" of her older patients was typically much stronger
than the constitution of her younger ones. Each generation got a poorer start
than the one before it as each generation built the foundation of their
health from foods produced on ever-more degraded soils grown ever-more
"scientifically," and more and more consisting of processed,
denatured fodder. (The full text of Dr. Moser's book How
And When To Be Your Own Doctor, is in the Health Library.) (For a
good discussion of the concept of "start," read Wrench's Wheel
of Health in the Longevity Library. See also: Shelton's Orthotrophy,
Chapter
36.)
It was a sage who quipped:
"if they can stop you from asking the right questions, you'll never come
up with the right answers." In this library you will encounter
individuals who DID ask the right questions and even came up with some of the
answers. Modern higher education points people's attention away from the
Truth and toward an ever-increasing confusion created by too much data. This
library restores the availability of key books written by amazing
individuals, books that offer major illumination to those who can already
see, books that speak the truth to those who can still hear.
How
You Can Help
If you admire what is being done here and wish to assist this effort:
Who Is Creating This Site?
The
library began in 1997 by Steve Solomon. In 2010 the effort was taken over by
Justin Crawford who now owns the library. Click here to communicate via e-mail.
Write
via ordinary mail to:
Justin Crawford Soil and Health Library PO Box 464 Launceston Tasmania 7250 Australia
The
library maintains a personal
web page for Steve Solomon that also contains an e-mail form should you
wish to write to Steve.
Agriculture Library INDEX
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1 comment:
Thanks John, for posting this! It is one of your very best posts. I have been studying sustainable farming and natural health, therein lies the basis of most of our freedoms. The quality of books here is excellent, love this!
Thanks from the bottom of my heart!
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