Environmental Philosophy
Many authors throughout history have expressed their, or society’s,
yearning
towards a simpler life: a life without responsibilities or
obligations, a life
without worry or regret. Sigurd Olson expresses such a
yearning in his essay
"Contemplation", where through reading Lao Tzu, he had
discovered that
in order to understand and relate to wilderness, we only need
a contemplative
mind, which is simple and easy. He suggested that life in
wilderness is a
continual contemplation and communion with God and Spirit.
Moreover, in his
essay, "Wholeness", he suggested that "wholeness is being in
tune
with the wind, sands, and stars," and "wholeness is part of
simplicity
and silence, and of all the components of a wilderness
experience." He also
compares our daily life as trivial and only with the
contemplation of wilderness
that we can achieve the wholeness and serenity.
Annie Dillard is another
environmentalist that writes about wilderness with
deep passion. In her essay,
"A Passion for this Earth", she wrote about her
childhood experiences
with a grove of birch trees. Through her daily routine
of sitting by the trees,
she came to a close connection with the earth and
nature. She realized that with
every human mood "there is a corresponding
season and that our lives are
seamlessly connected to the great life of the
earth." In other words, we
are a part of the nature and that the way we act
and feel are all intertwine
with the evolving of the earth. Moreover, Dillard
also drew a connection between
our "guilelessness of childhood and the
revelation of land". She
suggested that in one’s childhood, we would roam the
land, run around
landscapes and be in touch with nature. However, as we grow
older, we become
more engaged in the daily "civilized" routine and forget
about the
beautiful wilderness. Dillard suggested that we should all reawaken
the memory
of the earth that we experienced during childhood, and be able to
establish
again a connection with the land. Restoration and Reunion with
nature is the
main idea that Carolyn Merchant wants to get through in her
essay. Her idea of
restoration is "a spectrum of emerging disciplines based
on imitation,
synthesis, and a creative reciprocity between humans and
non-human nature."
Human are the one who have the power to destroy and
alter nature, therefore we
should also have the ability to restore it back to
the way before. However,
before restoring the nature, we need to understand
it and also through
understanding, reunion with wilderness as a whole. She
further explains this by
giving an example of a doctor healing a patient. The
doctor must first
understand the structure of human body before being able to
repair it; it is the
same with us trying to restore our earth. Moreover,
Merchant also suggested two
theories: agroforestry and permaculture. Since
the amount of energy needed to
support our technology in farming often
surpasses the calories the foods
themselves supply, agroforestry imitate the
way farming traditionally were and
restore the "complementary arrangements of
trees, crops, and animals in
accord with ecological principles in order to
maintain productivity without
environmental degradation." On the same plane,
permaculture restores the
way trees are leveled and tries to provide the
necessary energy through this
setting. The principle of mimesis also come
through very strongly in her essay,
she suggested that "people can use the
environment to fulfill real needs,
while non-human nature acts reciprocally
as partner." Nature should be
treated with respect, and we human are not
superior and should not manipulate
and dominant the nature. Thomas Berry
expresses similar view about the way that
we are too much engaged in our
modern civilization "businesses" that
we forget the beauty of wilderness in
his essay "Returning to Our Native
Place". Thomas Berry’s view on
wilderness is very much a combination of
the theories discussed above. He
suggested that nature is the true center of all
things and human having been
wandering away long enough should seek reunion with
nature. There is a
feeling of intimacy and a sense of presence when we realize
that we and the
nature are one, we are one "wilderness community" and
we share our "existence
with the animals and with all natural
phenomena." Through connecting with
various living forms of the earth,
Berry suggested that we are not only
establishing an acquaintance with the
general life, but we are also
developing an intimate rapport, an co-existing
relationship. He also agreed
with the restoration idea of Merchant. Strongly
admiring the natives and
their traditions, he found that the natives are the
only ones who are able to
continue their existence outside the constraints of
our civilization and stay
in touch with nature. He suggested that we should
restore things to their
traditional ways and call the entire world back to their
authentic mode.
Civilization, in Berry’s mind, can only imperilise the
wilderness. The major
idea in "The Gift of Wilderness" is the idea of
bigness outside ourselves.
The authors uses experience of his granddaughter and
himself in illustrating
the overwhelming sense of smallness that wilderness
gives them. He thinks
that wilderness can tell us who we are and our identities
lie within
wilderness. He also suggested that among all the civilization,
Americans
are the ones who disturbed the wilderness most, they are merely
"people
remodeling the Alhambra with a bulldozer, and proud of their
yardage", and
their government have been known to endanger the very things
they ought to
protect. A very interesting idea is being put forward in this
essay, the
author regards wilderness as playgrounds, schoolrooms, laboratories,
and
shrine. We need not build these facilities, for they are already around
us
and we can certainly learn from it. In conclusion, in all the articles,
the
authors stressed on the beauty of the wilderness. They all agree that in
front
of nature, we are indeed very small and insignificant. Humans and other
animal
species are all part of the wilderness, and in order for the world to
be in
harmony, we should forget the civilization and our lifestyle nowadays
and
restore it to our authentic mode. For then, we will be united with the
world and
be able to feel the wholeness and intimacy with it. Part 2: It is a
fast-paced
world we live in, define by schedules, choices and options. We
awaken at the
sound of an alarm clock, stop and go at the whim of a street
light, and spend
the day under the thumb of our bosses. As we race down the
road of life hoping
we are to the path to success, so distracted are we by
the intersections of
choice and the potholes of despair and confusions that
we forget what we were
racing toward in the first place. For those of us who
do take time to stop and
think about where we are headed, we realize, as
Annie Dillard did, that on the
road of life, we may have just lost sight of
what we are living for and the
origin of where our lives come from.
"Wilderness is a human concept an idea
about a place and its effect on us. It
is a state of mind devoted to an
experience and the contemplation of natural
places and processes. There is
common theme in these wilderness interests,"
as A. Anderson has suggested.
I think of a wilderness as a spot or place
in our world in which I can put my
existence in perspective of nature. I
think that we need wilderness because it
is full of life and mysteries.
Wilderness is where our life sprung from. As
Annie Dillard suggested, we
need wilderness because our emotions and feelings
are all intertwined with
the natural world, "for every mood there is a
corresponding season and that
our lives are seamlessly connected to the great
life of the earth." We should
not treat the earth and human separately,
because we are actually a single
body, working with each other and providing
each other with what we need. We
also need wilderness because as Wallace Stegner
has suggested in "The Gift of
Wilderness", wilderness is our
playground, schoolrooms, laboratories and we
can learn so much about both the
natural world and ourselves from it. Since
wilderness are inside us, we should
try to connect and reunion with it. In
order to be "in tune with the wind,
sand, and stars," and to experience the
sense of wholeness and serenity
with the nature, one need to understand the
theory of "wilderness
contemplation". Wilderness contemplation is a form of
meditation in the
nature. Sigurd Olson suggested that through wilderness
contemplation, we can
learn to commune with one’s inner self and stressing
the detachment or
divorcement of self from all disturbing environment.
However, unlike Yoga, this
wilderness contemplation is much simpler. All we
need, is to be in the
wilderness, and when we are alone, we can feel in
continual contemplation and
communion with God and Spirit. No particular
stance and incarnations or repeat
over and over words are neccesary in order
to reach the same level as Yoga,
since these are all devices to make people
feel at peace, and when we are in
wilderness, peace is all around. Through
wilderness contemplation, we can seek
wisdom and there is usually a sense of
peace, removal and a happiness beyond
understanding from it. In order to
rekindle an earth-human relationship, Carolyn
Merchant suggested that we
should restore our earth to the authentic mode, to
the way it use to be.
Instead of "analyzing nature of dominating and
controlling it,
restorationists are synthesizing it for the sake of living
symbiotically
within the whole." She is suggesting that, in order to
restore the nature, we
have to first, understand it. Through understanding, we
can also connect and
reunion with the earth, the origin of our lives. She
encourages mimesis,
which is the process of imitation through which restoration
takes place. This
principle of mimesis encourages people to use the environment
to fulfill real
needs, while non-human nature acts reciprocally as partner. In
order to
rekindle earth-human relationship, nature should be treated with
respect, and
we human are not superior and should not manipulate and dominant
the nature.
We should neither act as the helpless victim of a polluted
environment nor
arrogant dominators of nature, "but active participants in
the destiny of the
system of which are a part." Moreover, Wallace Stegner
thinks that we could
look forward to a better and more rewarding national life,
i.e. to rekindle a
better relationship between earth and human if we learned to
renounce
short-term profit, and practice working for the renewable health of
our
earth. We should regain our sense of courtesy toward the earth and
inhabitants,
our sense of gratitude and our willingness to recognize the
sacred character of
habitat. Thomas Berry suggested that we should establish
not only "an
acquaintance with the general life and emotions of the various
species, but also
an intimate rapport." Human’s role in the natural world had
was
traditionally inside the chain of ecosystem, providing to the wilderness
what it
needs and at the same time benefiting from it. Human and earth are in
harmony
and in mutual understanding. However, as our civilization expand,
human begin to
take a superior position and dominated and manipulated the
land. Instead of a
"helpless victims" or "arrogant dominator" human
should
restore to their traditional role in wilderness. Human are indeed very
small in
the realm of wilderness, but together with our forces, we can be
very powerful.
Since we had been selfish and arrogant, the wilderness is
extensively exploited.
Before restoring to our traditional roles, I think
that we should first take on
the position as the restorationists and the
conservationists. My environmental
ethic lies strongly on the issue of using
animals in research designed to
benefit human beings. The issue of the use of
animals in research is an integral
part of the framework of animal rights or
animal liberation within the large
structure of environmental ethics.
Ecocentric ethics holds that the earth is the
nurturer of life, a great
interlocking order, and a web of life in which humans
are but one strand. The
earth, according to this philosophy, is alive, active
and sensitive to human
action and sacred. Thus, all things are connected to all
their other things,
and internal relations and process take primacy over parts.
Human are
unseperated from the rest of nature. I think that humans do not occupy
a
privileged place in nature. Nature has its intrinsic value, independent
of
human values and human consciousness; thus limits should be place on the
extent
of human prerogatives to use and alter nature. Animals are created
equal to
human, we should not use our dominant rule in the world to
manipulate other
non-human nature’s life. This is both selfish and
uncivilized. Animals also
have the right to enjoy their live free from
threats and dangers. I also believe
that wilderness is like our mother who
nurture us and provide us with unlimited
resources, it supports our needs. We
should do the same to the nature. Instead
of manipulating and dominating over
it, I think we should live in harmony with
nature. Limited exploitation
should be allow, however, we should never
over-exploit our land or kill
animals to benefit human kind.