Monday, May 20, 2013

Adieu


Saying goodbye is an inevitable part of the journey. This is not without reason. Goodbyes are so hard--you don't know how much emotion to show, what to say in those last moments. You are torn between navigating grey emotional area and honoring the present. Sometimes goodbyes are silent cognitive tips of the hat to one another. Sometimes they are curt and rushed because of a welling tear. Sometimes they aren't realized until you remember the last time you saw their face when you casually waved goodbye. Sometimes they are full of tears, and deep belly giggles; the kind when you have to get out of the car multiple times and run into their arms, squeezing and soaking up each others energy. 

I have said many goodbyes these past weeks. I bid farewell to my family, to college-life, my apartment, the rolling Missoula belly-trails I trampled life-miles on, silly thirsty-thursdays, lenient schedules full of yoga-workshops, infinite intriguing reading assignments and hour long runs. Today, I said goodbye to my two dear friends. And I've recognized how much I have changed even in the time of my knowing them; also, how my relationships have facilitated a 'settling' into myself. And although I am anxious as to what the future holds, I must remember that the good ones never get away. 

It feels like a whole life is ending and in reality that is true--because you never come back the same person after the world shakes up your soul-bones. I've found that anticipating that deep change is like a drug; it heightens your senses to the blessings around you. And I've learned to not fear change or goodbyes because the ones who really matter morph right along with you, flourishing in themselves. And when you meet again as Whole Beings, you can reflect on the progress and celebrate how life always rings round. The night before I left for NZ as a 16 year old, I went to the movies with Mom and my sisters--there is a quote from that movie, Benjamin Button that has always stuck with me, 

"We have to lose the ones that we love--how else would we know how important they are to us?"

And it is poetic in that all endings sprout new beginnings. We can't hold on forever, but have to adapt--transform our relationships and keep on growing. Holding on engenders pain. We must surrender to the flux of change embrace the new while honoring the necessity of the old. Slowly building blocks, priming for a celebration of the glorious present self. Change is scary, but stagnation is scarier. 

india bound

On a synergy bottle in my last days in Missoula, I encountered a quote that resonated with me,

In any moment, you can choose either fear or love. Choose.

And so here I sit, in a hotel in Spokane, Washington, wrestling between the two.

It is interesting about these journeys--for so long there is talk about the future. You repeat, again and again, the meanderings of an insecure, but audibly pleasing future. Yet, when grains of sand find their final spaces to inhabit, you realize you have to actually step up to the plate.

It is in these moments that the true self is encountered--between security and fear of the future. And so at this point, I can only help but breath deep and choose love.

Or revel in the vibrance of this balance between fear and love--for why else to I keep seeking these adventures but for the high I get pre-departure. The unknown is unlike any substance in that it involves you're entire life-path.











Sunday, May 12, 2013

Biomimicry is the Tits




Nothing Good Gets Away-- John Steinbeck on Love

John Steinbeck on Falling in Love  in a letter to his son from one of my favorite websites Brain Pickings


New York
November 10, 1958
Dear Thom:

We had your letter this morning. I will answer it from my point of view and of course Elaine will from hers.
First — if you are in love — that’s a good thing — that’s about the best thing that can happen to anyone. Don’t let anyone make it small or light to you.
Second — There are several kinds of love. One is a selfish, mean, grasping, egotistical thing which uses love for self-importance. This is the ugly and crippling kind. The other is an outpouring of everything good in you — of kindness and consideration and respect — not only the social respect of manners but the greater respect which is recognition of another person as unique and valuable. The first kind can make you sick and small and weak but the second can release in you strength, and courage and goodness and even wisdom you didn’t know you had.
You say this is not puppy love. If you feel so deeply — of course it isn’t puppy love.
But I don’t think you were asking me what you feel. You know better than anyone. What you wanted me to help you with is what to do about it — and that I can tell you.
Glory in it for one thing and be very glad and grateful for it.
The object of love is the best and most beautiful. Try to live up to it.
If you love someone — there is no possible harm in saying so — only you must remember that some people are very shy and sometimes the saying must take that shyness into consideration.
Girls have a way of knowing or feeling what you feel, but they usually like to hear it also.
It sometimes happens that what you feel is not returned for one reason or another — but that does not make your feeling less valuable and good.
Lastly, I know your feeling because I have it and I’m glad you have it.
We will be glad to meet Susan. She will be very welcome. But Elaine will make all such arrangements because that is her province and she will be very glad to. She knows about love too and maybe she can give you more help than I can.

And don’t worry about losing. If it is right, it happens — The main thing is not to hurry. Nothing good gets away.

Love,
Fa

A little advice from Ed Abbey


http://www.rogerwendell.com/images/abbey/abbey_tv.jpg  

Do not burn yourself out. Be as I am-a reluctant enthusiast... a part time crusader, a half-hearted fanatic. Save the other half of yourselves and your lives for pleasure and adventure. It is not enough to fight for the land; it is even more important to enjoy it. While you can. While it is still there. So get out there and mess around with your friends, ramble out yonder and explore the forests, encounter the grizz, climb the mountains. Run the rivers, breathe deep of that yet sweet and lucid air, sit quietly for a while and contemplate the precious stillness, that lovely, mysterious and awesome space. Enjoy yourselves, keep your brain in your head and your head firmly attached to your body, the body active and alive, and I promise you this much: I promise you this one sweet victory over our enemies, over those deskbound people with their hearts in a safe deposit box and their eyes hypnotized by desk calculators. I promise you this: you will outlive the bastards.

The Great Gatsby Soundtrack



 

The movie was superb---really reminded me of Moulin Rouge. Do  yourselves a favor and smoke a spliff before you head to the theater though.

I dont think this song order is right. 

No Church in the Wild- Kanye West & Jay-Z--Ft. Frank Ocean 
 Back To Black – Beyonce x Andre 3000---sidenote: they killed me with this one! beyonce and amy like could it get any better?
100$ Bill – Jay Z
  Bang Bang – will.i.am
A Little Party Never Killed Nobody (All We Got) – Fergie + Q Tip + GoonRock
Young And Beautiful – Lana Del Rey
Love Is The Drug – Bryan Ferry with The Bryan Ferry Orchestra
Over The Love – Florence + The Machine
Where The Wind Blows – Coco O. of Quadron
Crazy in Love – Emeli Sande and The Bryan Ferry Orchestra
Together – The xx
Hearts A Mess – Gotye
Love Is Blindness – Jack White
Into the Past – Nero
Kill and Run – Sia

Land Ethic

"Perhaps the most serious obstacle impeding the evolution of a land ethic is the fact that our educational and economic system is headed away from, rather than toward, an intense consciousness of land. Your true modern is separated from the land by many middleman, and by innumerable physical gadgets. He has no vital relation to it; to him it is the space between cities on which crops grow. Turn him loose for a day on the land, and if the spot does not happen to be a golf links or a 'scenic' area, he is bored stiff."

--Aldo Leopold  A Sand County Almanac pg223-224

Wednesday, May 8, 2013

Nature & Society--A Final Learning Synthesis

 
           
I just recently returned from a trip to Jackson Hole, WY—a place not unlike scenic Missoula, filled with outdoor enthusiasts, proud dog owners, and beer connoisseurs. In an effort to spark inspiration for this paper, a final learning synthesis, I inquired with individuals whom I encountered as to their choice in living locale. I was greeted with an almost unanimous answer— “uhhh, have you looked around,” pause for a smile or a swig; “the nature here man, I tell you it’s where the magic happens.” The environment of Teton County truly is magical— moose troll around your backyard in the shadow of insurmountable jagged peaks, while national forests, parks, and private preserves border the township. Yet what makes places like Jackson Hole so special is the vibe in which its inhabitants connect with raw nature.  
            On my drive back up to Montana, I was contemplating the similarities between Missoula and Jackson—the folk are likeminded and wilderness abundant. However, the most salient similarity I found was the deep connection people feel to the environment in which they live. Coming from Colorado, I have always defined myself as a mountain girl—there is something about the safety of deep river valleys nestled between rugged peaks that gets under your bones.  Perhaps it is the crisp air, or the fresh headwaters; maybe it’s the infinite trails less traveled or the encounters with forest creatures, going about their lives in no rush above 12,000 feet. Spending a smidgen of time in nature enlightens you as to its true intrinsic value.
            It wasn’t until I traveled a bit, poked my head around, that I recognize what a blessing my ‘home’ has been in the formation of my ecological worldview. I have always lived in a place where wilderness is accessible and life laid back. It is only through recurring jolts of historical contextualization and bare-bones reality checks that I can acknowledge the extent of my multifaceted privilege. I interact with my surroundings with a new consciousness, one laden with socio-historical breadth and geopolitical depth. And as I have found with many intellectual endeavors, once the pot is stirred, questions of contradiction arise: how is it possible that so many individuals, myself included, adulate their natural surroundings also participate daily in a system that is destroying the very object of their ardor?
            The drawing of these parallels, adjacent tangents from the relationship between nature and society were etched in a darker shade after exploring ‘the explaining story,’ as laid out in Professor Spencer’s course, instigated with the intriguing novel, Ishmael, by Daniel Quinn. The book Ishmael provided a framework of key terms and ideas to siphon through the convolutions of history, philosophy, religion, and science flushed out through the semester. Ishmael poses many critical questions whose nascence lies in the labyrinth of environmental thought and action. And while the depth of this tale will not be given due course within the confines of this essay, I will seek to identify the key turning points in Euro-American history that led us to our current ideological and behavioral setting. While contemplating and elaborating on the historical bricks laid in the path to our modern Western paradigm, for the sake of brevity I will fast-forward through thousands of years of humanities’ dynamic relationship with nature and focus on paramount shifts.
. Many revolutions mark the history of our species: Neolithic, urban, industrial, technological, globalizing, etc. What they all have in common is their ecological complexity that can be viewed through the sociological acronym, POET, which stands for population, organization, environment, and technology (Palen 76). To use the Neolithic revolution as an example: the technology of food storage allowed for a surplus of food, the surplus in food enabled an increase in population, which created a space for new social and political organization into hierarchal city-states, which all in turn had numerous effects on the environment such as soil degradation and pollution. This model is useful for examining the complexities between nature and society; where advances may occur in one letter may proliferate impediments in another. Such is the paradoxical nature of our world’s current predicament. Many people benefit from the current organizational system ruled by corporate monopolies; technological advances continually raise the bar on desirable living standards; population soars, providing a cheap workforce for the production of more goods for the privileged; the environment and ‘Othered’ individuals, rendered morally obsolete by the powers that be, are heinously exploited.
            Call it philosophy, mythology, religion, or pragmatic reasoning, it is essential to unearth the cerebral nuggets of the aforementioned system, which can be understood as an amalgamation of Judeo-Christian and Enlightenment rhetoric. I have come to understand Christianity as a mĂ©lange of Hebrew biblical values and Classical Greek philosophy. While it is difficult in modern times to recognize the extent of Christian influence on our worldview, many key themes persist— particularly those of dominion, transcendence, and dualism. One specific theme from Hebrew texts is the ‘p-story’ of the genesis—in which God entrusted man with the duty of dominating the earth (Genesis 1). This theme was reflected in Ishmael with the myth, “the earth was made for man, and man was made to rule it (Quinn, 61).” The notion of dominion is a prodigious base for our modern Western paradigm and will be examined through a feminist lens later in the essay.
Other contributions the Hebrew religion made to our Western paradigm were notions of monotheism and transcendence. Due to recurring displacement in various environments, the Hebrew people came to see overarching patterns in nature; this was reflected in their belief of a monotheistic god who was transcendent from the natural world. This separation of the ethereal from nature played out in numerous ways, most importantly casting anything reminiscent of the natural world in a pejorative light. Since nature was not of god, it was devalued as a mere instrumental object of satisfaction in the present physical world before eternal rewards in heaven. And due to contributions from Socrates and Aristotle, definitions of nature were expanded to include anything beyond pure reason, such as emotional subjectivity (an obvious micro-insult at feminine comportment), which was conveniently a capacity only possessed by privileged [white] men. Therefore, the mistreatment of animals and ‘beastly’ humans alike was morally legitimized by Judeo-Christian doctrine (Marshall 189).
This separation also inspired another influential ‘split’ as laid out by Descartes cogito, “I think, therefore I am.” Descartes’ fascination with reason finds its roots in the work of Plato, Socrates, and Aristotle. This dualistic mind-frame as reflected by Hebrew notions of transcendence is vital for understanding our Western ‘story’ because it defines humans in terms of the mind, as separate from the body. This step-back, to extol mind over matter so to speak, led to a deleterious logic well-articulated by Metropolitan John of Pergamon, a modern eco-theologian and priest; “Since the human being may be conceived without its relation to the natural world, in the final analysis it matters not at all whether or not the natural world surrounding him will be annihilated,” (Pergamon, 2010).
 Cartisian thought also contributed to the exaltation of objective truths, which brings us to the current arbiter of nature and humanity: science. The idea of an overarching god also segued into early scientific pursuits for absolute laws of nature. Science and technology quickly became the new religion as people sought to become masters and possessors of nature; this was due to the growing consensus that, in the words of Francis Bacon, ‘knowledge is power.’ Note nuances of the dominion story as articulated by the genesis; it was seen as human’s moral duty, “to improve and perfect fallen nature through…science,” (184).
With the advent of science, nature became something to be studied to further manipulate and control resources for the benefit of humans. This utilitarian view of nature is very Aristotelian, who attributed value to nature insofar as it could benefit the flourishing of humans; I daresay many humans would still agree with this statement. And even though Darwin significantly de-centered humans from the main evolutionary stage, notions of man’s superiority and right to ‘dominate,’ remain entrenched. Currently, the scientific paradigm is two-faced; science can be used for further destruction of the earth and each other, or science can realign humans with nature by enlightening us with new information and/or technologies for a sustainable future.
Despite histories’ tendency to bog down students in calamitous ruts, I will shift the focus of this essay towards great American thinkers to whom we owe our unremitting gratitude for cumulatively spearheading any notions of environmentalism. Thinkers such as Ralph Waldo Emerson, and Henry David Thoreau totally reshaped our vision of nature. It was made beautiful again, something to be appreciated, protected, glorified, and revered. One could even go so far to say that without Thoreau, environmentalism would have never emerged with such vigor, for all subsequent environmental students or enthusiasts surely quote his work: Aldo Leopold, Bob Marshall, Rachel Carson and the like made colossal progress to protect, promote, and preserve nature through top-tier interventions. These environmental advocates politicized the degradation of the natural world and put the value of nature at the forefront of generalized discussions of justice.  

            During the decades of consciousness-raising with the American public, as well as with elected officials, an ecological mind-frame emerged. Ecology as described by Nash, “enables [us]…to conceive of nature as an intricate web of interdependent parts, a myriad of cogs and wheels each essential to the health operation of the whole,” (195). This was particularly salient for Aldo Leopold, who took it a step further in extending ecology’s reach to the ethical realm, which this quote fluently encapsulates:

 “One of the penalties of an ecological education is that one lives alone in a world of wounds. Much of the damage inflicted on land is quite invisible to laymen. An ecologist must either harden his shell and make believe that the consequences of science are none of his business, or he must be the doctor who sees the marks of death in a community that believes itself well and does not want to be told otherwise,” (Leopold, A Sand County Almanac).

I currently find myself in that ‘world of wounds,’ as Leopold describes— sifting and melding my personal ecological worldview to balance many tracks of consciousness. While I have a personal affinity for the promotion of social services, books like Ishmael, along with countless other readings from this course, have allowed me to recognize the ecological nature of my actions—that I cannot be concerned with the trials of humans without connecting them to the tribulations of nature. In the words of Peter Marshall, “[the earth] is a living whole,” and in an ever Gestaltian manner I must proclaim that the sum is greater than its individuals parts—that is, holism must be central to the way we identify, define, and approach social and ecological problems alike (Marshall, pgs. 391, 406).

Something to keep in mind while digesting this sweeping panorama of Western ideological history is that humans are a fairly young species in terms of Earth’s history. And although we act, as though our existence on Earth has been the headlining performance of evolutionary bravado, there is hope in humility (Quinn 56-58); we don’t have all of the answers, and there much to learn from the very forces we have been attempting to dominate. As our guest lecturer from BioMimicry Institute, Briony Schwan, related, “everything we need to do [to reverse the damage we have wrought] has already been done in nature,” (5-3-2013).
Thoreau once said, “in wilderness is the preservation of the world,” (Marshall 403). To follow this rumination, I look to nature for a metaphor to encapsulate my idea of what human’s relationship with nature should look like. There is a well-known biological phenomenon in nature called mutual symbiosis; this is a particular type of long-term interdependent relationship can be thought of as a ‘biological barter,’ in which each tradesman behaves as to enhance the well-being of the other. We need to find our mutualistic balance with nature. We need to transform our culture so that people organically act in sustainable ways. Having a little brother has taught me that if you try and tell him what to do, he may grudgingly partake, but if he is inspired to act, it is a beautiful thing. We need to be inspired to act on the behalf of the environment and our fellow humans. I think everyone has a particular chord that need to be struck. For me, it is the linkage between social and environmental oppression as illustrated by the environmental justice readings. 
To paraphrase the ever eloquent Jack Turner, who fortuitously echoes ideas in Ishmael, the current environmental crisis is one of character, not social or political crisis—and the paradox of this conclusion is that we have yet to determine what a ‘modern character’ is, “and since character is determined by culture, [we face a] crisis of modern culture,” (Turner, 1996). I believe this crisis to be institutionalized patriarchy in a society where the ‘highest good’ is equated with masculinity and masculinity is defined by dominance and control.
Yet, I believe many individuals are hesitant to recognize the connection between ecological, institutional, and interpersonal violence and our western conceptualizations of masculinity. Environmentalists and women’s advocates alike often confront defensiveness when they speak out about the crisis at bay; this is because humans do not see themselves as active participants in pernicious behavior and seek to separate themselves from the ever-insidious blame game often observed within petitions for change. Here I will once again take from Ishmael to reiterate that humans themselves are not the problem, it is the system in which humans operate and the ‘stories’ we enact that perpetuate men’s violence against women and/or ecological destruction.
            Taking from a lecture I attended last fall by feminist advocate Jackson Katz, we must recognize how norms go unquestioned. Katz articulated this in reference to the pervasiveness of men’s violence against women—that we have become to accustomed to hearing about a man committing an act of violence and don’t even pay attention to the gendered nature of the crime. Similarly, we have become desensitized to the atrocities committed against our natural world as a result of cultural norms. We experience the destruction of nature in a similar way we experience a bout of psychological illness—it is something statistically common, almost expected. We take a pill and continue with business at hand without ever stepping back to question a society that profits off pathology or condones the decimation of our mother earth.
Given the depth of philosophical frameworks for viewing nature, I suppose I am now equipped with the language to identify myself as a radical ecologist; as described by Marshall, I am calling for, “a fundamental reorientation in the way we think and act in the world,” founded on (what I would prefer to be) a moderately holistic view of the self as, to contradict biblical ideation as Ishmael does (John 17:6-16), in the world and of the world—not partitioned by Cartisian dualism or deemed superior by reasoning metabolics. We must also begin to shift our views of humans towards a more humanist understanding of individuals as inherently good. Simultaneously, to resonate with eco-feminist demands, we should seek to dissolve entities that promote the four pillars of patriarchy: sexism, racism, class exploitation, and ecological destruction.
I believe that for the human species to move forward, we have to start protesting what is normalized in seeking to build a world where social, political, and environmental justice is possible and in fact, quotidian. Martin Luther King once said, “the arc of the moral universe is long, but it bends towards justice.”  I truly believe our society is capable of change; if anything, to name a few examples in a stupendous stockpile— courses like Nature & Society available at the University of Montana, bestselling books like Ishmael, Walden, Silent Spring, the mere exponential growth of farmers markets, and the coining of phrases such as ‘local is the new global,’ are all testaments to the fact that culture is capable of transformation and indeed is currently undergoing dramatic shifts.
The ‘explaining story’ is one of patriarchal dominance; much of the suffering we cause one another and to the environment is the result of systemic oppression and institutional violence. And while many psychological studies support the notion that violence generalizes, that is the violence we perpetrate against nature can be correlated to intra-personal violence, psychology also claims that violence is a learned behavior. There is hope in that all of our dysfunctional behaviors and worldviews can be unwritten and reconditioned in future generations to come. From Jackson Hole to Missoula, Montana, I sense a new ecological consciousness with which we towards the future, thankful for the current spaces we inhabit, yet invigorated to amass and contribute to a collective awareness that will prove the impetus for a final bend in that arc towards justice for Earth’s community.

References- (beyond course readings)
Pergamon, John. Address of Metropolitan John of Pergamon at the Sixth Ecological Symposium on the Amazon River, "Humanity and Nature: Learning from the Indigenous" Accessed May 7, 2013 http://www.patriarchate.org/documents/humanity-and-nature

Turner, Jack. (1996). The Abstract Wild. University of Arizona Press.

****ask me for the references to class texts if you are curious!!!

Human Rights: An Exploration of Awareness at UM





In an effort to spark awareness about the lack of language about Human Rights in the current education system, I sought out fellow students, friends, and faculty at the University of Montana to gauge their impressions.

Professors who spoke--Janet Finn, Paul Lauren

Music-in order:

Freedom-Jurassic 5
Days to Come-Bonobo
Nostrand-Ratatat
Wings-Jack Tolan
Bron-Yr-Aur-Led Zeppelin
Junktion-Beats Antique
Interlude 2-Alt-J
Voyager- Daft Punk

Thursday, May 2, 2013

Address of Metropolitan John of Pergamon at the Sixth Ecological Symposium on the Amazon River, "Humanity and Nature: Learning from the Indigenous"

this guy is awesome.


We are gathered, by the grace of God, in this sixth ecological symposium of Religion and Science which is held under the auspices of His All Holiness the Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew and his Excellency Kofi Anan, the Secretary General of the United Nations. Our meeting this time is taking place in a geographic area marked with extraordinary beauty of the natural environment – a beauty, however, which is threatened more and more by the activity of “civilized” humanity. We are, therefore, here not simply in order to admire and enjoy, but also to lament. We are here to reflect together on the causes of the environmental crisis as it is manifested in this particular part of the world, and ask ourselves the disturbing question why it is that the indigenous people have managed to protect the natural environment better than we, civilized Christians, have been able to do.

Several answers to this question could be given. The one that comes first to our minds is the ethical one: it is human greed and the desire for economic development that has led to the exploitation of nature in such a devastating way. This is undoubtedly true. But behind this there lies a deeper reason. It is the fact that in our Western culture a crisis has occurred between the human being and nature. We no longer understand ourselves as parts of nature. This seems to be our fundamental difference from the indigenous people of this land as well as of other lands. We are here, therefore, to learn from those we have tried to convert to our way of thinking. The ecological crisis cannot be overcome unless we are ready to question some of our fundamental philo-sophical principles by taking into account what other cultures can teach us.

In this presentation I shall focus on two points. The first one is self critical: how have we arrived at the alienation of the human being from nature and, consequently, at the present crisis in the relation between these two? The second point relates more directly to the place where our meeting is being held: what can we learn from cultures different from our own in order to restore our broken relationship with nature?

Our Western culture has been formed under influences from the Judeo-Christian religious tradition. We cannot free ourselves from this; neither should we convert to paganism in order to save the environment. And yet many elements from non-Christian cultures can be incorporated into our Judeo-Christian tradition. The time is gone – thank God for that – when Christian religion, in its missionary zeal, confronted other religions with a negative and exclusivist spirit. ”Inculturation” is now the aim and method of Christian mission. Let us listen with respect to those indigenous cultures which have managed to survive the zeal of our ancestors who conquered them almost to the point of extinction. This can apply not only to religion but to science as well, particularly to scientific method. Some reflections on this may be also useful.

I. The alienation of the human being from nature

The definition of the human being has been attempted many times in the past without reference or correlation to the natural environment. One classic instance is found in ancient Greek philosophy, chiefly in its Platonic guise, while there have also been numerous theological approaches through the centuries that, in the final analysis, always bore the direct or indirect influence of Platonism. The main form assumed by this definition relied on the concept of the soul. Human identity was seen to reside in the soul, which was thought to be existent and self-subsisting, rather than an organic part of the natural world, its essence being spiritual and not material, and its survival independent of the body’s relation to the natural world. This Platonic conception influenced Christian tradition deeply, and its implications were of momentous import to the ecological problem.

The identification of the human being with his soul led to the following assumptions during the course of history:

a)      The assumption that time and space, fundamental constituents of the natural world surrounding us, make up, along with the perishable body, the prison of the soul. To find himself man must break free from his body, from space and time, i.e. from his natural environment, and live an immaterial and atemporal existence, within an eternity that is not linked to the natural world.

b)     Since the human being may be conceived without its relation to the natural world, in the final analysis it matters not at all whether or not the natural world surrounding him will be annihilated. In fact, for many exponents of ancient Christian theology, such as Origen and Augustine, in the Kingdom of God, i.e. the ultimate destination and outcome of the world, only souls are to survive: the natural world, apart from the souls of human beings and the incorporeal angels, is destined to disappear.

The answer to the question “what is man” is in this case: insubstantial spirit, immortal and eternal soul, an entity that can be conceived without need of a body or the natural environment.

A similar attempt to identify and define the human being without reference to the natural environment, a modified form of Platonic idealism centered on the soul, was undertaken, mainly in the West from the Middle Ages into modern times, by the definition of man as a rational and intelligent being. The answer given in the case to the question “what is man” was: a rational animal, endowed with thought, self-awareness and awareness of the world. This definition, originating with Augustine and Boethius, came to its culmination with Descartes – an Augustinian monk, father of the Enlightenment and, to a large degree, of modern mathematics and physics – in the form of his illustrious dictum: “cogito ergo sum”. The consequences of this had a crucial impact on ecology. Thus:

a)      Ηuman beings developed their intellectual capabilities unilaterally, and independently of the body. The development of mathematics as an instrument producing pure “intelligence” led headlong to the emergence of “intelligent beings” that have no need for the human body in order to produce rational thought. The only issue now is whether any residual emotions or appetites remain in the being called man (weak intelligence) or whether even these have been sacrificed (strong intelligence) on the altar of pure, i.e. incorporeal, intelligence. Whatever the case, the important and salient point from an ecological aspect is that intelligence was wrested away from the human body so radically as to abrogate it and render it useless. This is the problem with computers and the internet, and it sharply calls to question the innocence of neutrality in which we usually regard these technological attainments. The great and awful risk attendant on these attainments is that the body is gradually canceled as an instrument of intelligence, given that we think, communicate, market, even fall in love without the body, this unique instrument that connects us with our natural environment – and with other people. As a consequence, the body is more and more incapable of following the amount of information provided by intelligence.

b)     The human being developed its intellectual capabilities to the detriment of its natural environment. This came about as the consequence of two factors. The first is that man realized the power enclosed in intelligence. It is not accidental that the mind that declared “cogito ergo sum”, namely Descartes, would as early as the seventeenth century, produce the following passage in Discours de la Methode: “(with the advancement of science) we can reach knowledge that would be very useful in life and could find a practical method, whereby the force and energies inherent in fire, water, air, the stars, celestial and all other bodies that surround us (=natural environment) might be used in the same manner in all suitable applications, and so we may become masters and possessors of nature (maitres et possesseurs de la nature)”.

The ecological burden in this pronouncement of Descartes is found in the last few words: “masters and possessors of nature”, precisely by dint of cogito ergo sum, i.e. the power of knowledge. Therefore Francis Bacon at about the same time addresses the human being in even blunter terms: “I bring you nature and all its progeny that you may bind it to your service and render it as your slave”. Is any more clear proof necessary then as to wherein lies the root of our ecological crisis? It lies in the elevation of intellectual capability to the point of its becoming the single, overwhelming determinant of human identity.

Assuredly, a critique of this view readily springs to mind: might it not be the dominion of intelligence but rather its misuse that is at fault? The same applies to the internet: might the problem actually lie in its misuse? If this is so then the burden falls on ethics. In other words the problem is not that we glorify our intelligence to the detriment of the natural world, but that we misuse it. The solution of the ecological problem is thereby to be found in the domain of ethics. But an ethic deprived of an ontological basis, i.e. lacking a foundation in Truth, is unacceptable from a theological and philosophical aspect. The matter thus is not whether man acts rightly or wrongly (=ethics) but whether he acts in harmony with the truth of his being, of his identity.

The issue is directly related to the dialogue between science, philosophy and theology. It is very easy indeed – and that usually happens – for scientific truth and theological truth not to coincide, and for us to remain unconcerned whether they do coincide or not. The scientist has his or her own truth in the knowledge of nature, and the theologian possesses the “spiritual” truth, which springs from faith. If this is so, where can the scientist meet the theologian? Not of course on the point of truth, since two disparate truths are involved. Their meeting point then is usually found in ethics: both agree whether something is good or bad, permissible or not, etc. the criteria for that lying in the moral values and rules accepted by both sides.

Let us regard the issue particularly in respect of the problem of humanity and its natural environment. Scientists and theologians alike recognize that the natural environment is harmed by the dominion of human intelligence over material nature. If we desired to resolve the problem with the help of ethics we would say: It is not the dominion of intelligence in itself that is harmful, but the fact that it is ill-used. Yet, if we go deeper to the bottom of things, to the marrow of truth, scientists and theologians will ask together: could it be that the ascendancy of intelligence in opposition to man’s and the environment’s physical and natural substance impinges on the truth of what man is? We cannot let the theologian and the scientist each hold their own views on this matter. The truth about what man is must be common to science and theology. We cannot play with two truths: a truth of knowledge and a truth of faith. The scientist who is faithful to his prayer book, but indifferent as to whether what he observes in his laboratory is compatible with the tenets of his faith, has undergone a schizophrenic rift, and, in any case, has rendered the dialogue between science and theology impossible.

Thus, within any real dialogue of science and theology, the issue of humanity’s relation with the natural environment must be focused on the question: what relation of the human being with his natural environment is attuned to the truth of his identity? The answer to this question must achieve as great a convergence as possible between science and theology. Any deviation must be put to the proof and not be ascribed off hand to an incompatibility of underlying assumptions. This is the only way for theology’s and science’s common stance before the environmental problem to have a solid ontological, and not merely ethical, foundation.

Now, the crucial question in any discussion of humanity’s relation to nature is whether the body is essential to the definition of the human being. More specifically, the question is whether the human being has a body or is a body. If the answer lies in the latter, then the body is an element of the truth of his human being, of his identity. But if this is so, then man in the truth of his being is inextricably bound to his natural environment. For how might one conceive of the human body without the rest of material creation?

Those who believe that ultimately, the human body will resurrect, but that the material world will not survive, certainly have a mythical, unreal body in mind. Saint Methodus of Olympus in the fourth century A.D. maintained, in combating Origen, that it cannot be possible that God will resurrect bodies unless he saves material creation in its entirety. As we will see this point is particularly connected with the ecological problem. Any scientific and technological attainment that, in respect of knowledge, abrogates or weakens the role of the body contravenes not ethics, but the truth, the ontology of man.

Precisely because of this indissoluble and ontological relation of man with his body, and through it with his natural environment, the Church Fathers describe man as a ‘microcosm’, which contains the ‘macrocosm’ and links by means of his body the material with the intelligible world. It is not accidental that, in order to save man, the Son and Logos of God, became ‘flesh’ i.e. that He took upon Himself the element of man that links him to his natural environment. If the truth of man were to be found in his soul, then He would only assume a human soul. By taking a human body He demonstrated that man is inconceivable without his body and that He did not come only to save man but all of creation. There can be no greater proof of the importance of the natural environment.

These considerations prove man’s organic link with, one might call it dependency on, his physical environment. The fact that man does not ‘have’ a body but ‘is’ a body denotes that without his natural environment man himself ceases to be: the truth of man is inextricably bound with all of material creation. This truth is founded on the fact that man was created by God at the end of creation and once the creation of the material world and all the animal kingdom has preceded him. It is typical that in Gnostic systems man appears before the material and animal kingdoms are created. In the Holy Scripture the reverse is the case. This declares man’s dependence on all of the preceding creation and especially on the animal kingdom. Evolution theory presents no problems for theology from such an aspect. On the contrary, it is welcome insofar as it proves that man is indivisibly bound with the rest of material creation.


II. Restoring the Relation of Humanity with Nature: Learning from the
     indigenous

One of the characteristics which make up the identity of the indigenous, as described by the World Bank in 1991, is “close attachment to ancestral territories and to the natural resources in these areas”. What Western culture has lost for reasons which we have just indicated, the indigenous people have preserved, namely close relationship with nature. There is no sense with them of superiority, let alone domination of the human being over nature, as we find it in our Western culture; Bacon’s and Descartes’ arrogance which calls the human being to be “master and possessor” of nature is totally absent. As a consequence, there is no ecological crisis in the culture of the indigenous peoples. How was this achieved? What sort of world view has made this possible?

The thing that has struck those who have studied indigenous culture is the central role that mythology plays in the lives of tribal people. These mythical narratives foster a strong and creative relationship between the indigenous people and their natural environment. They help them develop a holistic approach to nature and, of course, a sense of deep respect for it.

Myth has been almost anathematized in our Western culture. It has been regarded as unworthy of rational beings who are supposed to think only in terms of history, i.e. of events that the human mind can grasp, prove and control. Art and literature, which cannot but operate with myth, are attributed to imagination, i.e. to something we are not supposed to take as true and real.

The most unfortunate result of this has been a split between time and space, and a division within time. Time in our culture is fragmented into past, present and future in order to be measured and thus comprehended and controlled by the human mind. Only what falls within this measurable and rationally controllable time is real and hence believable. Myth, on the other hand, transcends this fragmented time and redeems it. The tribal peoples can live in common union with their ancestors and be happy with that. Myth unites past, present and future into one reality. What the Western people find in art and literature as liberating and redeeming forces in their lives the indigenous people experience as an ordinary reality.

But myth does not unite only the fragmented time; it unites also time with space. All myths borrow their material from space; they liberate space from the bondage of fragmented time making it look eternal, filled with some kind of extratemporal “divine” presence. Space and time are unbreakably related to each other thanks to myth.

Now, our Western culture has the rced myth from reality to such an extent that the consequences for the human attitude to nature are becoming serious. Nature is treated either as real or as imaginative. Science is assigned to the former, art and literature to the latter, the two remaining always apart. Religion is caught up somewhere in between the two, rejected by science when it leans towards myth, and despised by art when it claims to have reason on its side. If art and science could interpenetrate with the help of myth, the natural environment would benefit enormously.

This leads us to say a few words about the scientific method. There seem to be two possible attitudes of the human being to nature in scientific operation. One is to treat nature in the spirit of Bacon and Descartes as an object to be possessed, grasped, conceived and analyzed. This is what Western science seems to do. With the emergence of technology this has reached an extreme form. As Heidegger, who has so deeply penetrated into the subject, has put it, technology differs from previous attitudes to nature in that thanks to it the human being for the first time in history abstracts energy from nature and stores it as “standing reserve” (Bestand) which can be used for purposes other than those “intended” by nature itself. Chemistry, hydroelectricity, etc. are the extreme results of this scientific treatment of nature.

The indigenous cultures employ an entirely different attitude to nature. Here the key words are observation and relationality rather than con-ception and analysis. The scientific method consists in this case in observing how nature works, what each natural element, treated as a living being, does to other beings, including humanity itself. Thus, the indigenous people develop a remarkable knowledge of the pharmaceutical effects of the various plants without analyzing things into their chemical components, as a Western scientist would do, respecting their integrity as if they were divine. This leads to a more holistic approach to nature, something that Western scientists are only now beginning slowly to speak about.

Finally, I shall mention one more characteristic of indigenous cultures which has much to do with the natural environment. It is the place of ritual in these cultures. Ritual is another thing that Western culture has treated with contempt. Even the Orthodox Christians think of it as unworthy of educated people, avoiding to cross themselves or to attend Church services which, in the case of the Orthodox, are loaded with ritual. And yet, there is a very deep connection between ritual and respect for nature. For all ritual acts involve nature in man’s relationship to God, while all forms of worship which leave out ritual exclude automatically nature as well. The human being cannot go to God alone, without its natural environment. Humanity is part of nature, and therefore a liturgical being. The recovery of liturgical ethos is the best way to obtain environmental consciousness and sensitivity.

Conclusion

I have tried to show in the limited space of my paper how serious is for our attitude to the environment the dissociation of the human being from nature in our Western culture and how open we should be to what the indigenous cultures can teach us in this respect. As I have already indicated, we do not have to convert to paganism in order to save the natural environment. Paganism respects nature but it also cultivates a fear of it. Respect and fear must be distinguished from each other. Western culture has liberated humanity from the fear of nature but it has at the same time destroyed all respect for it. We must learn from indigenous cultures to respect nature and feel that we are part of it. We must free ourselves from the only dangerous myth there is, namely that the human being through its mind and reason can grasp reality and control it. Reality and nature itself are much broader than our human minds can grasp and comprehend, and, whether we believe in a personal God or not, we must treat with respect all that escapes our reason, including nature itself.

As we set foot on these lands of the Amazonian river we all feel the damage that our Western Christian world has done to the native peoples and their land. The exploitation of natural resources that is taking place is beginning to worry those who care for the environment. But perhaps we should worry even more that there is very little left of the culture from which we can learn. For the ecological crisis is above all a matter of culture, and in order to overcome the crisis we must be willing to learn from each other.

Wednesday, May 1, 2013

Ishmael: Reflecting on Nature & Society




-->
Daniel Quinn’s Ishmael is an exploration of modern myths perpetuating unsustainable behavior. It is through crass interviews between protagonists, Ishmael and ‘man,’ that the reader flushes out the founding stories of our excessively consumptive society—stories fostering apathy and impunity. Full of symbolism and anecdotes, Ishmael serves as an impetus for investigating man’s true role as a community member of this precious planet.
The novel begins in the mind of a stoic narrator who interestingly remains unnamed. This makes it easy for any reader to put himself or herself in the place of ‘man,’ to take this cosmic journey towards bio-acumen. In response to a newspaper ad, our ‘man’ comes into contact with his mentor Ishmael, who just so happens to be a half-ton gorilla adroit in Socratic style telepathy and the Judeo-Christian persuasion. 
Not surprisingly, as a creature of the entertainment industry, Ishmael claims his subject of expertise to be captivity. This is relevant to saving the world, he claims, because, “[humans] are captives of a civilizational system that…compels you to go on destroying the world in order to live,” (25). This is an important point, no one deliberately wants to contribute to the ecological devastation of the planet, but our societal structure is such that participation renders global calamity. Ishmael is going to argue that this tragic lifestyle is the product of an ingeniously crafted web of self-evident myths and the enactment of their ensuing stories.
Pre-launch of their metaphysical adventure, Ishmael concretizes a few key concepts and terms. First, he differentiates between the ‘Takers’ and ‘Leaver’ within humanity; this can be thought of as civilized versus primitive cultures. He then coins the term ‘Mother Culture’ to represent an almost Jungian collective unconscious or mechanism of socialization. Mother Culture subliminally whispers a certain ‘story’ into our minds: “a scenario interrelating man, the world, and the gods.” Humans, in turn, ‘enact’ this story or, “live so as to make…[it]…a reality.” Ishmael umbrellas said enactment under the term ‘culture,’ which is informed by the messages of Mother Culture—one could foresee potential cyclical dysfunctional with a pernicious plot. The particular stories of interest in this endeavor are those encompassing ideas of meaning, divine intention and human destiny; Ishmael labels these rudimentary tales ‘myths’ (40-43).
The creation myth is of paramount cultural significance: billions of years ago, a big bang, unicellular organisms and photosynthetic cells evolved into increasingly complex and varied species, all building blocks for the pinnacle of creation and evolution, mankind. Ishmael points out that while our creation story is factual in essence, the mythical element is derived from an anthropocentric arrangement and perspective of events. This myth alludes to the basic premise of the ultimate Mother Culture parable: “the world was made for man,” and therefore man’s destiny is to rule it, (60).
It is important to note here that humans are 1 of about 30 million species on the planet yet we use 99% of the world’s resources for superfluous ends (Spencer 1-30-13). Taker culture truly ‘enacts’ this myth to our detriment and that of the planet because Mother Culture instills two contradictory, yet coercively delicate cognitive scripts. The first: fulfilling our destiny to rule the earth is a fundamental constituent of being human; it is our duty to morph this chaotic world into a technological paradise. The second: humans are inherently flawed due to original sin, therefore, enacting destiny of global despot will catalyze imminent tragedy. Ishmael makes a pivotal rebuttal here, “there’s nothing fundamentally wrong with people. Given a story to enact that puts them in accord with the world, they will live in accord with the world,” (84). That is to say, it is not human-‘beings’ that needs to change, it is human-‘culture’.
Upon recognizing the Taker culture’s notion of divine intention and man’s destiny, Ishmael encourages his student to explore ideas about how Taker mythology exempts mankind from absolute laws of nature. Ishmael’s student hashes out some cantankerous Taker pastimes: exterminate competitors; systematically destroy competitor’s food-source to make room for their own; deny competitors access to food. This behavior unequivocally contradicts the most basic law of life, which Ishmael refers to as the peace-keeping law: “[organisms] can compete but they can’t wage war,” (129). The laws of ecology maintain balance and promote biodiversity, which are, in the words of Ishmael, “survival factor[s] for the community itself,” (130). This is the irony in the Taker story, when we wage war against the earth we are inevitably waging war against ourselves, “you end up in a community in which diversity is progressively destroyed in order to support the expansion of a single species,” (133). Ever since Descartes cogito, Humans understood mind and body as mutually exclusive, Ishmael seeks to breakdown this dualism; humans are inextricably linked to the repercussions from an expanding bio-necropolis.
Student and teacher delve into the nascence of these dysfunctional ideologies by analyzing some core biblical stories. The human species had been inhabiting the earth for millions of years before Adam and Eve, yet ‘the fall,’ is a momentous occasion for Taker culture because it explains how man obtained the knowledge of good and evil—who shall live and who shall die. There is powerful symbolism in the story of ‘the temptation.’ As Ishmael explains, Eve literally means ‘life’ in Hebrew, while Adam means ‘man.’ When Adam was giving into temptation with Eve, he was truly saying yes to ‘life’—endorsing growth without limit and exemption from the laws of nature. In the words of Ishmael, “Adam wasn’t the progenitor of our race, he was the progenitor of our culture,” (184). Adam symbolizes that ideological separation of man from nature due to this newfound knowledge only previously had by the gods. Adam giving into temptation also illustrates the ‘original sin,’ the catch22—even though man was made to rule the earth with this knowledge, he is intrinsically flawed because he gave into temptation and therefore he will never truly know how to wield it like a god.
Of course, man could never know such absolute truths, but it is interesting how man arrogantly created religion, conveniently appointed himself divine ruler, and then wrote his own laws on how to exist. Ishmael makes a salient point here, while the logic of divine appointment is clearly dysfunctional, to renounce it, “would mean that all along…[man had] never known how to rule the world,” (168). Although humans aren’t necessarily flawed, they are definitely proud; fessing up to thousands of years of defective groupthink would be an ineffable paradigm shift.
Ishmael points out the flipside to another misconceived biblical story, that of Cain and Abel. Cain was an agriculturalist and Abel was a pastoralist. When the two came to offer their sacrifices to God, he only accepted Abel’s and in vengeful wrath, brother slayed brother. Ishmael believes this, and the fall, was once a Leaver story, written to explain the barbarous actions of early Taker society. Eden was a garden from which man could reap the fruits of the gods without work. In other words, Eden represented the pastoral or hunter/gatherer lifestyle. As is described in the bible, banishment to agricultural existence was a severe punishment. The heathen agriculturalists acted like as if they were gods and left the Leavers without choice, assimilate or be destroyed. 
This classic biblical parable has been perpetuated throughout the centuries, taking different forms, slavery, genocide, colonialism, deforestation, war, pollution, racism, corporation, Americanization, globalization, “and every time the Takers stamp out a Leaver culture, a wisdom ultimately tested since the birth of mankind disappears from the world (206). Just as we disrespect nature, we disrespect those who oppose Mother Culture doctrine. This systemic and inter-cultural violence is a result of two clashing ideologies: the world belongs to man versus man belongs to the world. Taker culture, “cling[s] with fanatical tenacity to the specialness of man,” as opposed to recognizing the human species as just another life form (146).
I appreciate Quinn’s vehement standoff towards modern day meta-cognition. He makes very salient points about the contradictory nature of our automaton existence. While his neo-Biblical thesis is captivating, Ishmael seems to be an ideological thought experiment without any operational framework for transformation from which to proceed. Ishmael alludes to consciousness raising, which is no doubt an effective impetus of change. However, many issues akin to climate change, structural oppression, corporatism, inequality, poverty bigotry, globalization, and systemic injustice (to name a few), are profusely simplified.
Quinn advocates for population control, which, anyone in the international arena can attest is politically volatile. Truly regaining our Leaver roots would mean famine and death for millions of people; it wouldn’t be the top-tier Takers who suffer either. How can we expect to transform society for the environment when we can’t even transform society to ensure human rights? Quinn would most likely respond that it is not our job to play god, but at the same time he feels it is his job to write this book, aimed at a Western audience, in order to inspire those in control to instigate change. He forgets that non-action is also a choice; while we may claim we are not responsible for the death and suffering of millions of people, we cannot deny that we chose not to help them.
              Ishmael provides a provocative commentary on the relationship between ideology and sustainability. The jury is still out as to whether there will be hope for man, without gorilla.