
We
travel together, passengers on a little space ship, dependent upon its
vulnerable reserves of air and soil, all committed for our safety to
its security and peace, preserved from annihilation only by the care,
the work, and I will say the love we give our fragile craft. We cannot
maintain it half fortunate and half miserable, half confident, half
despairing, half slave to the ancient enemies of mankind and half free
in a liberation of resources undreamed-of until this day. No craft, no
crew can travel safely with such vast contradictions. On their
resolution depends the survival of us all.
-- Adlai Stevenson, 1965 It
takes great courage for an environmentalist of any political stripe to
come out in favour of wilderness. The overwhelming orthodoxy of our
times is the four great myths of civilization:
- That the Earth is the centre of the universe, a unique and 'chosen' place
- That humans were created separately from, and are uniquely different from, all other animals on the planet
- That
Earth and everything on it was created for the use of humans -- for our
consumption, for our entertainment, or to do our labour
- That
development of the Earth -- more people 'improving' more land to
produce more human consumables -- makes life better, and is our
manifest destiny
An orthodoxy of any kind is extremely
difficult to dislodge, because all human systems -- political,
economic, religious, educational, even sometimes the 'agnostic'
artistic and scientific systems -- reinforce the orthodoxy and fiercely
resist any arguments that might undermine the orthodoxy's defining
myths. This was true in the 16th and 17th centuries when Copernicus and
Galileo paid a huge price for debunking the first myth. At the time not
only were scientists persecuted for espousing such heresy, but the very
validity of the scientific method was called into question: If science
did not support the orthodoxy that the planet made specifically by God
for man was the centre of the universe, well, then, there must be
something wrong with science.
Skip ahead to the 19th century and
a similar violent reaction, continuing to this day, greeted Charles
Darwin when he used science again to debunk the second myth, and cast
some serious doubts about the third. Again, religious zealots bent over
backwards to try to suggest that the science was flawed, and we see
today, 150 years later, in the ludicrous fiction of 'intelligent
design', a continuing frenzied attempt to rationalize away science and
re-establish the myth of 'divine' creation. Myths die hard.
By
Darwin's time, the main job of maintaining the orthodoxy had shifted
from the church, which had bungled the job badly, to industry, which
was content to use science rather than trying to repudiate it, and to
use science to strengthen what remained of the orthodoxy. So the third
and fourth myths remain substantially intact, and modern laws and
business activity exemplify and perpetuate these myths. Economics books
promoting GDP as the ultimate measure of human 'success', and the holy
books of the major organized religions, remain the unquestioned
propaganda manuals for our reckless civilization.
So when the
environmental movement began seriously in the 1960s to question the
third and fourth myths, they decided to focus on the fourth rather than
the third, and not bite off too much of a challenge at once. They
immediately encountered ferocious resistance from the business elite,
whose wealth has always depended on continuous and accelerating
development, and from economists, the new preachers of the remaining
two myths of the orthodoxy, and from the religious establishment, whose
future survival depended on its members continuing to have lots of
philosophically pliable babies and continuing to believe in the
orthodoxy. Perhaps not surprisingly, the environmentalists blinked --
they were not scientists or economists, and had limited scientific
evidence to support their beliefs.
What emerged was a kind of
'soft environmentalism', a warm and fuzzy movement that argued that
perhaps skinning baby seals alive was excessive enforcement of the
third myth, that we needed to keep replanting and conserving resources
at least until we had invented new ones to use when they ran out, and
that our spiritual health required that we keep a few trees and samples
of animals around to contemplate what life was like before we conquered
nature, and for human 'recreation' (perhaps the most ironic word in the
English language).
Most environmentalists therefore abandoned
the more contentious challenges to the third and fourth myths -- that
human population growth threatened the planet and that growth and
development were simply not sustainable. Orwellian oxymorons like
'smart growth' and 'sustainable development' were invented that
environmentalists were all too eager to embrace. So environmentalists
really had no expectation that any wilderness agreement, such as the
agreement not to drill in the ANWR, would be honoured once it appeared
to be in conflict with myths 3 and 4, and their pessimism has been
justified.
The preservation of wilderness is seen as elitist,
anti-human (especially in struggling nations that are encouraged to
'develop' their way out of the desperate overpopulation and
environmental devastation that they, and their colonial exploiters,
have wreaked), impractical, romantic, and unaffordable.
As a
consequence, in the areas of high biodiversity on this planet, only
three areas of significant wilderness remain -- in Northern South
America, Central Africa, and the island of Papua New Guinea. These
areas, shown in dark green on the map above in the equatorial areas of
the planet, are being 'developed' at a frightening rate, converted
recklessly, mostly by slash & burn techniques, into 'farmland' that
is ill-suited for that purpose. At current rates of 'development' it
will be gone by the middle of this century.
The wilderness areas
of more marginal biodiversity -- mostly the boreal forests and tundra
of the Northern and Southern high latitudes and the world's most
inhospitable deserts, also shown on the map above, will survive perhaps
another century or two, but even when they remain most of the planet's
astonishing diversity will already have been squandered and lost.
So
what? Why should we care about wilderness? Biodiversity has been
disappearing from the planet for a century at a rate faster than that
of the known Great Extinction events of the past, and, except for a few
consequences like global warming that the Lomborgian defenders of the
orthodoxy are all-too-willing to shrug off as of no consequence,
humanity has hardly missed it.
In the remarkable essay
Healing Time on Earth by the late David Brower, which I would encourage
readers to spend an hour and absorb fully, especially his re-enactment
of the entire history of the planet time-compressed to six days,
naturalist Brower makes the following arguments for wilderness:
- We don't know what we're destroying.
The high-biodiversity areas of the planet have been the source of most
of the world's most important medicines, without which humanity would
still be suffering from the horrendous scourges that have decimated
societies and made life almost unlivable for billions. It is very
possible that the cure for AIDS has already been destroyed. The Cost of Not Knowing is just too high.
This argument does not really question myths 3 and 4 of the
orthodoxy, but the common counter-argument is that humans are so
ingenious we will invent an 'artificial' cure for diseases faster than
we can discover a 'natural' one.
- A world without wilderness is unsustainable.
Throughout all of history, in all species, in all organisms at all
levels from microcosm to macrocosm there has never been a society that
has grown without limit, and the most 'successful' ones (measured by
longevity and quality of life, not by GDP) are those that are
steady-state, not unchanging but changing in balance, with a shifting
equilibrium, not mortgaging the future and other interdependent parts
of the ecosystem for the furtherance of one part in the present. This
argument attempts to debunk myth 4, but is countered by the orthodoxy's
dreamy technophiles and believers in the rapture: We will create a new
equilibrium, they say, one in which wilderness is unnecessary, one in
which perhaps even carbon-based life is unnecessary, as humans will
evolve to post-human, cybernetic form, capable of living forever. Or if
that fails, a Super-Human will rescue us, not only saving us from
ourselves, but re-establishing the first and second myths of the
orthodoxy through His presence and miracles.
- A
world of wilderness in which humans were re-connected with the rest of
life on Earth would be healthier and happier for all life, including
humans. Heretical new theories from economists and anthropologists suggest that pre-civilization man was much
healthier than civilized man, and except for being eaten by predators
(a fact that was accepted with equanimity by our ancestors, much as it
is accepted by all other creatures on the planet) had as long a healthy
and fully-participating life-expectancy, and lived an easy, care-free
(one hour a day of work) life. The orthodoxy has orchestrated a Great
Forgetting (as Daniel Quinn calls it) of these facts, depicting
prehistoric man's life as "short, nasty and brutish". Why? Because the
Great Forgetting was essential to the acceptance of the four myths, and
the four myths were essential to the establishment of civilization --
for who in their right mind would accept to be part of early
civilization's savage hierarchy, disease-crippled 'cities', stooped
farm slavery, malnutrition, frequent starvation, poverty, scarcity and
misery, if there was a known alternative of walking away and reverting
to a pre-civilization lifestyle of health, abundance and ease?
Civilized man had to exterminate all 'uncivilized' peoples to reinforce
the Great Forgetting and ensure there were no examples of other ways to
live. This argument, if accepted, would debunk myths 3 and 4
completely and bring about the end of the orthodoxy after its brief,
violent 30,000 years of ascension and dominance in human society. Not
surprisingly, supporters of the orthodoxy argue that the Great
Forgetting is itself a myth (and until recently most scientists were on
their side in this argument), and that it is not only unwise, romantic
folly, but simply impossible to 'go back' to pre-civilization ways of
living even if we wanted to.
It seems to me that environmentalists -- or perhaps we might better call ourselves 'naturalists' in a new sense of the word meaning those
believing that a way of living that is respectful of, and balanced
with, all life on Earth is the healthiest and sanest and most
sustainable way to live -- need to pay less attention to
arguments 1 and 2 for wilderness, and more to argument 3. Arguments 1
and 2 are essentially clinical, and it is difficult to get people
excited about clinical arguments. Argument 3 is essentially emotional,
spiritual, and intuitive, but still not outside the domain of
scientific argument.
It seems to me that
- if we got the
artists and writers working to depict a world of new wilderness in
which (many fewer) humans lived in harmony with the rest of life on
Earth without abandoning the miracles of human technology (medicines,
communications tools and fabrics, notably), and
- if we got the
scientists to run simulations contrasting what such a world might look
like contrasted with today's fucked-up world, and
- if we got
the people to create natural enterprises and intentional communities
that pioneered ways to re-enter and re-integrate with wilderness,
we
just might have a chance of convincing humanity (other than the
political, economic and religious elite wedded until their deaths to the orthodoxy) to
quickly and voluntarily reduce human numbers so that such
re-integration was possible, and to reduce human consumption so that
wilderness could again flourish.
Everything -- my instincts, my acquired knowledge, my emotions -- everything
tells me that Thoreau was right when he said "In wilderness is the
salvation of the world". I see no other way to prove it, in time -- to
debunk forever myths 3 and 4 and end the well-intentioned but now
disastrous hold of the orthodoxy on humanity, and to save the world.
Like
Copernicus and Galileo, like Darwin, we have a difficult and important
task ahead, changing the fundamental thinking of our species, showing
there is a better answer. And we have no time to lose. |