Anthony : OccamsBarber

Re: MIT Skeptic Speaks

Anthony said Jun 30, 2007, 5:15 AM:

 

One of the biggest concerns is that it is not a few that get rich by activities that create pollution but rather that vast numbers of ordinary people will be held in abject poverty if denied the benefits of industry. That’s not a trivial argument, especially if (and I say if) human activity is not driving a disastrous change in climate.

One can certainly agree with the sentiment that it’s a dirty bird that fouls its own nest and, further, that we must cultivate and conserve the resources that we need. However, there are tradeoffs with everything. People always have and always will alter the environment and create waste. I agree we should try to minimize that waste, but at the same time, we shouldn’t trivialize the benefits we enjoy from fossil-fuel driven industry.

It is surely not true that “indigenous and aboriginal peoples” invariably “knew how to live in a sustainable symbiotic way with the world around them.” More often than not they had respect for the forces that they struggled with, though they still created tools to gain an edge against them. Certainly they lived in a “sustainable” way to the extent that they survived for some period, but they often destroyed their environments and had to adapt to changing circumstances or move on. Think, for example, of the extinction of the megafauna of North America, or the fact that some of the continent’s inhabitants used to drive herds of bison off precipices, killing more than they could use. But one doesn’t need the fantasy of the noble savage to argue good husbandry of resources.

The earth is full of diverse organic and inorganic things occurring together within the equilibrium of natural forces. I say equilibrium, but of course it is a dynamic state with some features rather static, many others very dynamic. To hypostasize this into something analogous to a very precisely wrought, self-identified and self-sustaining system such as the human body is fanciful. The earth teems with life, but it is not alive in the way we are.