Since 1923 • For a greater Loyola

The Maroon

Since 1923 • For a greater Loyola

The Maroon

Since 1923 • For a greater Loyola

The Maroon

Column: Humans are part of nature

Why do my environmental studies classes make me uncomfortable? According to Rush Limbaugh the BP oil spill cleanup was just a huge waste of time. “It’s natural,” he said, “it’s as natural as the ocean water.” When I first heard this, I dismissed it as more absurdist rhetoric from the king of talk radio, but as time passed I began in shame to agree with him.

If we accept that humans and their actions exist in an ecological framework, then wouldn’t the BP oil spill technically be a natural event? Is the gulf ruined or just changed? Rather than clamoring over a gulf ecosystem that has been thoroughly morphed, why aren’t we trying to adapt to these changes? Why must we jump to make value statements about one ecological configuration over the other?

As I sit in my classes, listening to my fellow classmates go on about their strictly organic grain diets and how the “radical” integration of an environmental ethic has changed their view of self, I can’t help but think about the massive contradictions of environmental/ ecological movements.

For all the railing against humanist philosophies, Cartesian dualism and the criticism of the west’s anthropocentric worldview, I don’t see how an environmental movement that idealizes and romanticizes “nature” and is the first to scream about the existential stakes

of environmental destruction is not anthropocentric.

In many ways I feel like a lot of interpretations of “ecological ethic” are really just a rearticulation of humanistic values. The underlying goal is the betterment of human health-adopting a notion of ecological awareness is a means to an end.

There is also a pervasive notion of “how nature should be,” which is, of course, “healthy,” “green,” and configured in a mutually beneficial way for both humans and animals- back to (or closer to) the natural equilibrium that must have existed before human consumption began its destructive course.

The problem is that this equilibrium never existed, while selfishness likely has for some time. Richard Dawkins argues in “The Selfish Gene” that even seemingly altruistic behavior works only to further the reproductive goals of our individual genes.

Acting out of self-interest has always been a trait of humans, animals and even plants. A weed doesn’t really give much thought to biodiversity as it engulfs your garden, does it?

The environmental movement benefits from the fact that it appears to be in our best interest to “save the earth” from ourselves so that we can continue to enjoy it. If we are to subtract the humanist element from this story and take ecology seriously, however, it becomes a little unclear exactly what and from whom we are supposed to be saving.

If we accept human actions as part of an ecological framework, rather than as calamities from without, how do we maintain the difference between what is “good” or “bad” for the environment?

If the actions of humans become effectively equated with other natural processes, the distinction between “natural” and “unnatural” becomes a question of personal belief rather than moral right.

I support this interpretation of ecological ethics because it forces us to come to terms the changes we have made to our surroundings and imbues human actions and ideas with the gravity of “natural force.”

This notion is reinforced by theories like the one put forth by biologist and historian Charles Mann that suggests that the “mini ice-age” of the 1700s was in fact facilitated by the collapse of Native American populations due to new germs brought over from the first European explorers.

Without these Native Americans, who had long practiced controlled burnings of North American forests, unabated growth ensued in the forested areas, causing massive amounts of carbon dioxide to be sucked out of the air, initiating cooling throughout Europe. If true, this proves that humans have been a force of change in nature since well before the industrial revolution.

Perhaps rather than striving to convert (or revert) society into a state ofsupposed”naturalequilibrium”and “sustainability,” environmentalism should concentrate more on the

environmental realities of progress. As rapid changes in the environment become more obvious, maybe the conversation should be more about what to do going forward and how best to live in the strange new world that is emerging more and more everyday. If humans are a force of nature, our current impact is kind of like a hurricane, and you can’t just tell a hurricane to “stop” or change direction-you just have to wait until it blows over and hope

you have something left.

As we continue to set in place

increasingly complex systems and technologies in our pursuit of resources, we will almost certainly see more disasters like the BP oil spill. With or without human influence, the world is constantly shifting, changing, growing, and dying. Maybe we should concern ourselves more with learning how to adapt and change accordingly, rather than harping on sustainability.

This idea may sound like pessimism, but I think it is an exciting chance to look at things in a new way. As we in New Orleans are all too familiar with, sometimes even the worst disasters offer opportunities to rebuild and reinvent. And we will- it’s only natural.

Rhodes Murphy is an english writing senior and can be reached at [email protected]

In My Opinion is a weekly column open to any Loyola student. Those interested in contributing can contact [email protected]

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