Stewart Brand: We Are (Still) As Gods
The former Merry Prankster and Whole Earth Catalog founder talks about psychedelics, computers, bringing back woolly mammoths, and his new documentary.

Has anyone lived a more interesting, influential, and inspiring life than Stewart Brand?
Born in 1938 and educated at Stanford and by the United States army, Brand was a Merry Prankster who helped conduct Ken Kesey's legendary acid tests in the 1960s. His guerilla campaign of selling buttons that asked "Why haven't we seen a photograph of the whole earth yet?" pushed NASA to release the first image of the planet from space and helped inspire the first Earth Day celebrations. From 1968 to 1971, he published the Whole Earth Catalog, which quickly became a bible to hippies on communes and techno-geeks such as Steve Jobs, who famously quoted its parting message: "Stay hungry, stay foolish."
Brand has rightly been called "the intellectual Johnny Appleseed of the counterculture." He helped shape early techno-culture and cyberspace by reporting on the personal computer revolution and interacting with many of its key figures early on. His ideas were instrumental in the creation of the Well, one of the earliest online communities and he helped found The Long Now Foundation, which seeks to lengthen and deepen the way we all think about the past and the future.
In a series of books on everything from the MIT Media Lab to how buildings learn to "eco-modernism," he has delineated a unique strain of ecological thought that embraces technology as a means of salvation and liberation rather than a destructive force that must be stopped. His current passion is Revive & Restore, an organization that is leading the "de-extinction movement" by using biotechnology to bring back plants and animals including the American Chestnut tree, the passenger pigeon, and the woolly mammoth.
Brand is the subject of the new documentary, We Are As Gods—a line from the first issue of the Whole Earth Catalog—which takes a long, critical look at his life and work. For today's podcast, Nick Gillespie talks with with Brand and the directors of the film, David Alvarado and Jason Sussberg, about his long, strange trip over the past 60 years that has taken place exclusively at the frontier of social and cultural change.
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Far out, man.
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I appreciate his honesty about the failure of the communes.
All ofthe editions of The Whole Earth Catalog also gave a fair and equal voice to libertarian publications and 'zines such as Reason, Liberty/i>, and Jim Stumm's ultra-off-grid Living Free. Gotta love it!
Libertarian publications were then actually libertarian. There would have been no Sally Satel article and interview.
The boyfriend of a close friend of my wife's investigated communes when it came time for him to retire. Being a life-long wannabe-hippie, this seemed natural lol. Most of the communes he investigated, meaning ones which had been around for a while, had very strict rules concerning behavior (one such organization, as part of the "contract," had a rule that birth-control was not permitted. Another had a "join fee" just short of one hundred thousand dollars.
What I take from this is that communes can work as long as they recruit fairly wealthy people who don't mind giving up some, or even all, of their wealth and their rights for some kind of unsure, non-guaranteed, sort-of happiness.
Sounds familiar, somehow.
(To be fair, I do know of one commune near where I used to live that has been around for fifty years or more. A friend of mine lived there. But: everyone there had a job or owned a business. They were also clothing-optional. So, more like a gated community than a commune.)
"They were also clothing-optional. "
I can be libertarian about most things, but not clothing-optional retirement communities.
Not my gig, either.
One great thing about The WELL (Whole Earth 'Lectronic Link) that they created: They had a policy called YOYOW (You Own Your Own Words.) If only that were the policy of every ISP, Web Server, and platform, then the real 1st Amendment could be the Internet's 1st Amendment. Like wow, Man!
Exactly what Section 230 says is YOYOW. And all the people who feel like they are being privately censored on social media hate it.
Eh, no. Section 230 pertains to the liability of internet businesses vis-a-vis posted content.
Besides when you look at them side by side...Magna Carta...U.S. Constitution...The Bill of Rights...Section 230...just not the same vibe.
Goo dinfromation
love Brand. acid testing is still fun lol.
Where can the movie be seen?
Thank you for sharing this! I share the opinion of Stuart Brand and really appreciate the thoughts of this person. Indeed, there are not enough such personalities in our world, along with love and care for one's neighbor. I hope that every day there are more and more people with the philosophy of love and peace every day. Read the article medium.com/theymakedesign/top-branding-agencies-bcf12154af9b about brand agencies, if you are interested. Good luck and take care of your health!
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