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What kinds of beliefs or values do you hold about some of the following contentious issues?
- Spotted owl, fires, wilderness preservation and resource use (logging, minerals)
- Measure 37 (private property rights versus land use planning, zoning restrictions)
- Global warming and drastic greenhouse gas reductions
- Snowmobiles in the National Parks
- Horses, hikers and bikers on the same trails
- Wolf re-introduction
- Breaching dams on the Columbia/Snake
- Factory animal farming
- Genetic engineering of agricultural crops
- Limits on use of waterways (even on rafting permits)
- Drilling for oil in ANWR
Now, what is an 'ethic?'
You might think of
it as a guiding principle, or set of principles, that govern behavior.
Maybe some examples will help:
- The golden rule
-- basically, treat others the way you'd like to be treated (this shouldn't
apply to sado-masochists, however);
- How about poachers?
Do they have ethics? Studies suggest that elk and deer poachers, because
they often hunt for meat, feel that hunting out of season is legitimate,
and that the real crimes are committed by trophy hunters who take the
heat and leave the carcass to rot.
- Thieves?
- The mafia, police
departments -- they each have a code of silence, designed to protect
those within the system. Police officers require the trust of their
partners, knowing that even if they break procedural rules, they won't
be reported--without the complete trust of a partner, operating in life
and death situations would be pretty dicey.
- Medical, research
professions: The principle of 'do no harm' operates.
- Governments: we
expect that politicians serve the public interest, and are not ruled
by conflicts of interest (and boy are we disappointed ...)
- Jewish diamond
dealers: This has been reported on in the sociological literature. Diamond
dealers will trust each other with hundreds of thousands of dollars
worth of jewelry to examine--because of a high level of trust and assurance
(backed by what would happen within the community should that trust
be violated ... ). They have high social capital.
In sociology, we also
call this a norm. Essentially ethics are a part of culture-shared
understandings, values. My own research uncovered the use of a 'subsistence
ethic' in rural African society. People are living near the margins in
agrarian societies, in harsh environments, and as a result, land and resources
should be made available to those who need them for survival. If I'm not
using a parcel of land, I should let someone else use it who wants to
clear and cultivate it. Resources not being 'used' should be made available,
regardless of who claims them as theirs. This is a way to ensure collective
survival at the community level.
So . . . do we have
an environmental ethic? We're looking at a few examples of ethical positions
this week. There are many, maybe for instance you've heard of the 'deep ecology' movement or 'ecofeminism,' of John Muir, Aldo Leopold or Rachel Carson. We will focus on the wise use movement, environmental stewardship, Edward
Abbey and his views on industrial tourism, and David Orr's concept of
ecological literacy (how can be have an environmental ethic without some
level of ecological literacy?).
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Wendell
Berry -- From solar farming to chemical farming
What we had ('traditional', pre-industrial practice):
- Solar energy was
cheap, clean-chemical inputs are not, and farmers have little control
over them.
- Farming practices
were more adapted to local conditions (rather than one size fits all).
- Addressing the
soil fertility issue-how to maintain fertility organically without fallowing?
(we haven't put much research into this)
We had a system of
production that took into account the environment. The industrial agricultural
model essentially is like using a cake mix--follow the instructions on
the back of the box, apply generous amounts of petrochemicals and inorganic
fertilizers, borrow huge sums from the bank, and hope that world commodity
prices are kind to you.
What we did--industrial
agriculture, supported by agribusiness research in land grant schools
- Mechanization
(tractors, heavy machinery)
- Mechanization led
to topsoil erosion--topsoil is a precious, non-renewable resource
- Massive chemical
inputs are required to farm the same land annually, if a farmer
wants to offset losses in soil fertility--essentially, the crops take
up the nutrients in the soil, allowing plants to grow and providing
them with the nutrients that make them worth eating, nutritionally speaking.
- Displaced laborers,
toxic chemicals and machinery, produced in factories--quite a change.
At the turn of the 20th century in the U.S., 50% of the labor force
was in agriculture. At the turn of the 21st century, this number was
between two and three percent. Clearly, technology has allowed for the
intensification of agricultural production--we're growing more crop
on a given piece of land in a given time period.
What has happened
Some effects of this
agricultural revolution include
- the disappearance
of the small farm (competition from corporations, economics of scale,
globalization make it difficult for the family farmer to compete--farming
is expensive, inputs cost)
- There is a subsequent
loss to farming communities, rural economic vitality.
- Consumers benefit
from cheap food. Right? Okay, so the store-bought tomatoes are a little,
how to say, waxy. But cheap, right?
- 'Cheap food' is
the result of externalized costs--chemicals in the food and in the food
chain, for instance, or the eutrophication of waterways (sewage and
human settlement help this as well--eutrophication is the loss of oxygen
to plant and microbial life, making it more difficult for other organisms
such as fish to survive)
- Farmers are as
a result subject to low prices, high costs, and overproduction.
What course of action?
According to Berry,
we must
- pay attention to
nature, adapt farming to local conditions, rather than adapting local
conditions to industrial farming and one-size-fits-all techniques.
- base the food production
system on ecosystem and community health, not the health of the economy
or of industry.
- 're-learn' the
meaning and significance of stewardship, using local knowledge as a
base on which to build.
- appreciate the
value of diversity, diversification, in terms of our own species' survival
and the survival of other species and crop varieties (why is diversity
of value?)
- 'localize' regeneration
of fertility, rather than relying on inputs conceivably from around
the world.
- foster cooperation
between local farmers and consumers.
- learn to control
production. Overproduction leads to low prices for producers. Those
who sell the inputs (chemicals, machinery) benefit, though--there is
no overproduction problem there!
What's stopping
this from happening?
- lack of political
clout-in framing issues, addressing them
- lack of understanding
- big processes-such
as globalization, run counter to trends toward more local production.
Who is likely to win out, and why? Or can different models of production
and consumption co-exist?
For Berry, key issues
include not only preserving the land, but preserving the producers. Farmers are
not technicians following the directions on the back of the box, and once
they're gone, their kind will be difficult to replace.
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of page
Ron Arnold
(Overcoming ideology)-the wise use movement
According to Arnold,
the founder of the wise
use movement, the environmental movement challenges the dominant Western
worldview and its three assumptions:
- Unlimited economic
growth is possible and beneficial.
- Most serious problems
can be solved by technology.
- Environmental and
social problems can be mitigated by a market economy with some state
intervention.
Hence, following this logic:
- Growth must
be limited.
- Science and
technology must be restrained.
- Nature has
finite resources and a delicate balance that humans must observe
According to Arnold,
The 'environmental ideology' is based on the following principles:
- All things are
connected. "[N]ever will we understand completely the spin-off
effects of the environmental changes that we create, nor will we measure
our own, independent influence in their creation." Similar to Barry
Commoner's rule, 'everything is connected to everything else.'
- Earthly goods are
limited. "As applied to people, carrying capacity is the number
of individuals that the earth can support before a limit is reached
beyond which the quality of life must worsen and Homo, the human animal,
becomes less human. One reason we humans--unlike animals in the wild--are
prone to exceed carrying capacity is that our wants exceed our needs."
- Nature's way
is best. "Woven into the fabric of environmentalism is the
belief that natural methods and materials should be favored over artificial
and synthetic ones, when there's a clear choice. Witness the vast areas
of the globe poisoned or degraded by the technological economy of our
century."
- The survival
of humankind depends on natural diversity. "Although species
by the billions have vanished through natural extinction or transformation,
the present rate of extinction is thought to be at least 400 times faster
than at the beginning of the Industrial Age. Humankind's destruction
of habitats is overwhelmingly to blame." Diversity means that disruptions
in the environment will meet a wide range of responses from organisms
and species--some will fare better than others, but the more diversity,
within an ecosystem and even within a species, the better the probabilities
of survival of the ecosystem or of the species.
- Environmentalism
is radical "in the sense of demanding fundamental change. It
calls for changes in present political systems, in the reach of the
law, in the methods of agriculture and industry, in the structure of
capitalism (the profit system), in international dealings, and in education."
Fighting the 'wolf
in the garden' (in sheep's clothing, to boot): who's fighting this fight against environmentalism?
- Property rights
groups (that believe in private property and use of that property with
few restrictions),
- anti-regulation
legal foundations,
- trade groups of
large industries,
- motorized recreation
vehicle clubs,
- federal land users,
- farmers, ranchers,
- fishermen, trappers,
small forest holders,
- mineral prospectors
and others who live and work in the middle landscape
These are the 'articles
of faith' of the wise use movement:
- Humans, like
all organisms, must use natural resources to survive. 'This fundamental
verity is never addressed by environmental ideology. The simple fact
that humans must get their food, clothing and shelter from the environment
is either ignored or obliquely deplored in quasi-suicidal plaints such
as, "I would rather see a blank space where I am--at least I wouldn't
be harming anything." '
'If environmentalism were to acknowledge our necessary use of the earth,
the ideology would lose its meaning. To grant legitimacy to the human
use of the environment would be to accept the unavoidable environmental
damage that is the price of our survival. Once that price is acceptable,
the moral framework of environmental ideology becomes irrelevant and
the issues become technical and economic. '
- Nature isn't
fragile. The earth and its life are tough and resilient, not fragile
and delicate. Environmentalists tend to be catastrophists, seeing any
human use of the earth as damage and massive human use of the earth
as a catastrophe. An environmentalist motto is "We all live downstream,"
the viewpoint of hapless victims.
- We only learn
about the world through trial and error. The universe did not come
with a set of instructions, nor did our minds. We cannot see the future.
Thus, the only way we humans can learn about our surroundings is through
trial and error. Even the most sophisticated science is systematized
trial and error. Environmental ideology fetishizes nature to the point
that we cannot permit ourselves errors with the environment, ending
in no trials and no learning.
'There will always be abusers who do not learn. People of good will
tend to deal with abuse by education, incentive, clear rules and administering
appropriate penalties for incorrigibles. '
- 'Our limitless
imaginations can break through natural limits to make earthly goods
and carrying capacity virtually infinite. Just as settled agriculture
increased earthly goods and carrying capacity vastly beyond hunting
and gathering, so our imaginations can find ways to increase total productivity
by superseding one level of technology after another. Taught by the
lessons learned from systematic trial and error, we can close the loops
in our productive systems and find innumerable ways to do more with
less.' According to this tenet, imagination defies the laws of thermodynamics!
- Man's reworking
of the earth is revolutionary, problematic and ultimately benevolent.
'Of the tenets of wise use, this is the most oracular. Humanity is itself
revolutionary and problematic. Danger is our symbiote. Yet even the
timid are part of the human adventure, which has barely begun.
Humanity may ultimately prove to be a force of nature forwarding some
cosmic teleology of which we are yet unaware. Or not. Humanity may be
the universe awakening and becoming conscious of itself. Or not. Our
reworking of the earth may be of the utmost evolutionary benevolence
and importance. Or not. We don't know. The only way to see the future
is to be there. '
These two views--of
environmentalists and the wise use movement--are quite different. Can
you critique them?
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Edward Abbey and
progress-what does it mean for the national parks?
Abbey talks about
the ecological costs of progress. By progress, he's referring to the development
of the National Parks, making them more accessible to the public and to
their motorized vehicles, whether they be RVs, SUVs, ATVs, jetskis, snowmobiles,
etc. How does this affect the quality of the experience of national parks
and the natural treasures? He talks about Capitol
Reef National Park and how the Fremont River Valley was graced with
a road, the main road going through the park. Arches, where Abbey worked,
now has a pretty well-developed network of roads leading tourists to the
main attractions--few people stray from these, partly because during the
high season it is extremely hot and uncomfortable in the desert.
Ethics
Abbey advocates preservation
of wilderness, intact and undiminished, and contends this is part of
the mission of the National Park Service. Without wilderness, he says,
civilization loses its meaning. But doesn't the government have an obligation
to make the parks and their resources available to a wide variety of people,
not just those with the physical capacity to trek it on foot or on bicycle?
What's wrong with building roads, hotels, toilets, electricity, tourist
infrastructure, so that more people can enjoy the parks? Making parks
accessible to the car culture is certainly good for the local economies
around parks as well.
What to do?
Nevertheless, Abbey
has a few ideas he'd like to see implemented:
- eliminate cars
in National Parks - bicycles or other non-destructive forms of transportatio
would be allowed.
- no new roads in
NPs (use them for services, bicycles). this would -encourage hiking,
and actually change the quality of the experience most people get out
of a visit to a park.
- put rangers to
work, get them out of the office. They should be turning tourists on
to what parks have to offer, not managing crowds or emptying toilets.
Are these ideas feasible?
What would it take for them to be taken seriously? Remember, Abbey wrote
this book inthe 1960s. The parks have changed a great deal since then,
and not in the ways he envisioned.
Can you see how a certain ethical approach can influence how the National
Park system developed?
So, we have three
to four markedly different views of how humans should relate to their
environments. What kind of an ethic could you advocate, and why? How would
you go about educating others? Clearly there are many competing ethics
in the U.S. alone, among different groups, with varying levels of political
clout. They cover a wide range of attitudes about the environment and
our relationship to it, from the view that humans are just another species
with no special privileges over other creatures (deep ecology), to a decidedly
human exemptionalist view that humans know best and will work things out
because of their vast ingenuity and resourcefulness as a species (wise
use).
The idea is not so much to apprehend these three specific ethical frameworks, but to understand more generally how most any policy initiative embodies, at least implicitly, some ethic principles that can be 'unpacked' so to speak, and evaluated. Even in such cases as the 'wise use' movement, which has little to do with wisdom and much to do with economic exploitation for human utility--if it is so noble, why not state this up front as an ethical principle?
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