Proposes one of four ways to live better in balance with the Earth.
by R. F. Nash
October 16, 2008.
¦ = paragraph ÐÐÐÐÐÐÐÐÐÐÐÐÐÐÐÐÐÐÐÐ essential meaning
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1 Òwe donÕt often think in the wider angles that encompass our species as a whole
2 Òextend our concernÉto put forward a strategy for occupation of this planet long-run
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3 Òa self willed landÓ that did not exist before domestication but is now in our minds
4 Òan environmental transformation that left wilderness is scattered remnantsÓ
5 Òtechnological, capitalist-driven culture in its cancer-like tendency to self-destruct.Ó
6 Thoreau, Marsh, Muir, each extended the idea of wild as essential 1890 frontierÕs end – Òbig industrial cities losing their luster."
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7 Òpassing over a tipping point from liability to asset
8 Òthe Wilderness Act of 1964 was revolutionary—its point was theÓ peopleÕs benefit setting aside over 9 million acres of Federal Land.
9 ÒA new bio-centric rationaleÓ for ÒwildernessÓ to have intrinsic value gesture oÕ modesty
10 ÒWildness is a civilization other than our own,Ó Holy Earth – ethical equality, a step toward ecology
Liberty Hyde Bailey
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11 A LeopoldÕs Òbiotic arrogance.Ó Carson -uncontrolled & unutilized environs =value
12 1972 MMPA & 1973 Endangered Sp. A-ESA- members in the biotic community
13 ÒCivilization appeared as vulnerable.Ó To ecological cutural /\disaster & social disintegration
14 wilderness is Òwhere most of the thirty-odd million species sharing earth reside.Ó
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15 wasteland scenario (Business as usual) ÒGrowth was confused with progress.Ó
16 garden scenario (homogenization, led to biotic impoverishment to feed our own appetites)
17 future primitive (the loss of 10,000 years of civilized feat, as the hunter gatherer prevails
18 Island civilization ÓBetter tools mean peace rather than war with nature.Ó
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19 Check population growth by giving women reproductive rights–reduce to 1.5 billion
20 100 mile closed circle units supporting say 3 million people
21 ÒIt is not necessary to go back to the Pleistocene to live with a low ecological impact.Ó
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22 ÒweÕd surrender some freedomsÓ – leave the islands to enjoy minimal impact wild
23 ÒFor some five million years the planet was self-willedÓ 10K years ago experiment controlling
24 preserve+conservation biology & the rewilding idea—full implications of these ideas = IC
25 ÒThe upward-trending curves cannot be sustained.Ó Made deliberately or desperately
26 We stand at the crossroads Éof the entire evolutionary process.Ó
Conclusion – divorce; live separately but in harmony, love but to love enough to be freed from our control
ÒMaybe biocentric ethics and reverence for self-willed nature could turn us from cancerous to caring.Ó
ÒÓSome now view this not just as a violation of the rights of humans to enjoy wild nature but the rights of other species and self willed environments themselves.Ó
ÒTheir value was intrinsic and their membership in the biotic community indisputable.Ó
Ò ÔenvironmentalismÕ took a broader view of utilityÓ
Ibid.
Òput our dominion into the realm of morals. It is now in the realm of trade.Ó
Liberty Hyde Bailey, 1915
Ò changing American attitude toward nature.Ó Conservation 1907.
Ibid.
Ócelebrated tools of an environmental transformation that left wilderness in scattered remnants.Ó
ÒRestructuring of human lifestyles and expectations.Ó
Nash, Island Civilization, 2008.
1582 when we started using
millennia
1851 Thoreau – ÒIn Wildness
is the preservation of the world."
1864 Marsh Man and Nature – humans as an artifact
equal in impact to geological forces
1890 Closing of the frontier
– as the line of
uninterrupted settlement between east and west
1907 the word Conservation is
coined by McGee & Pinchot to comprehensively use resources
1915 Liberty Hyde BaileyÕs
characterization of our dominion in Holy Earth: stewardship.
1927 Òfood chainsÓ first used in ecological literature
1936 Òecosystem: coined by Tansley
1949 A Sand County Almanac published posthumously by Aldo Leopold
1950 BOOM in population –
one billion increase every 15 years / 6000 acre per day loss
1962 Silent Spring by Carson warns of the wasteland of chemicals we are
feeding the earth & one other.
1964 The Wilderness Act becomes
law setting aside circumscribed & bounded areas for wilds
1969 NEPA (not in the article)
1972 Marine Mammal Protection Act
1973 Endangered Species Act
Wild | Climate | Biodiversity | nature as an asset | reflecting ecologically | Airs, Waters and Places