Archive for ‘evolution’ Category

Center for Humans and Nature co-sponsors lecture by noted paleoecologist, David Burney, in New York City, November 30

November 16th, 2010

David Burney is Director of Conservation at the National Tropical Botanical Garden, Kalaheo, Kaua’i , Hawai‘i. For two decades, he and his wife Lida Pigott Burney have led an excavation of Makauwahi Cave on the island of Kaua‘i, uncovering the amazingly varied wealth of plants and animals that have inhabited Hawai‘i throughout its history. Burney has focused his investigations on the dramatic ecological changes that began after the arrival of humans almost one thousand years ago and are reaching a crescendo today. He is the author of Back to the Future in the Caves of Kaua‘i: A Scientist’s Adventures in the Dark.

The event will be held on Tuesday November 30, 2010 at 6:00 pm at the City University of New York Graduate Center, Fifth Avenue (between 34th and 35th Streets), Room 4102, New York, NY. Admission is free, but preregistration is required. To register please click here.

The event is co-sponsored by The Nature Network of New York, the Center for Humans and Nature, the CUNY Graduate Center, and the Wallerstein Collaborative for Urban Environmental Education at New York University.

CHN Returns from Successful Launch of the Biosphere Ethics Initiative

The Biosphere Ethics Initiative

March 9th, 2010

Kathryn Kintzele presenting at the formal launch of the BEI

Kathryn Kintzele presenting at the formal launch of the BEI

Kathryn Kintzele, Director of CHN’s North American Global Responsibilities Program, and George Rabb, CHN Board Member, recently returned from the successful launch and development meeting of the Biosphere Ethics Initiative (BEI). The workshop and ceremony was hosted 15-18 February 2010 by the Paris Muséum nationale d’Histoire naturelle (MNHN), with support from the IUCN Comité français, CHN and the Ethics Specialist Group of the IUCN Commission on Environmental Law (CEL). The participants began development of the BEI’s Action Plan and finalized the structure and foundational substance of the evolving Biosphere Ethic. On the final day, the evolving Biosphere Ethic was presented by the four BEI Co-Chairs and the CEL Chair Sheila Abed to IUCN Director General Julia Marton Lèfevre, IUCN President Ashok Khosla, MNHN Director General Bertrand Pierre Galey, Director of the IUCN Comité français Sebastien Moncorps, President of the IUCN Comité français François Letourneux, the Director General of l’aménagement, du logement et de la nature for the government of France, Jean-Marc Michel and France’s Ambassador for Environment, Laurent Stefanini. A full story covering the event will be in the upcoming edition of CHN’s Minding Nature. Drafts of the developing BEI Action Plan will be made available on the project homepage.

CHN Launches New Project on Ecological Political Economy

Ideas of Humans and Nature, Humans, Nature, and Democracy: Ecological Political Economy

February 12th, 2010

If nature were understood as a living system with natural limits instead of raw material, how would economic and governance institutions and practices be organized? What would a right relationship between human activities and natural systems be? These are the basic questions posed by a new research project on Ecological Political Economy recently begun by the Center. This project is being done in collaboration with scholars from Yale University and the New School and is co-directed by Bruce Jennings and Peter Brown, CHN Senior Fellow and professor at McGill University. The first meeting of the project research group was held on December 9, 2009 at Yale. Presentations addressed basic shifts in scientific/ontological paradigms, modes of ethical reasoning, and approaches to democratic governance. A project hypothesis is that these shifts of worldview and ethics will be required for building a new political economy based on ecological perspectives. For more information about the project, click here.

There is no ‘Last Word’

December 20th, 2009

I begin with a caveat, one given by Wendell Berry this past October to a crowd of 2000 gathered to hear him read some of his writing in Madison, Wisconsin.  “There is no Last Word,” Berry said.  In that spirit, I offer these thoughts.

As I write this, it is almost Christmas.  Perhaps more than 2 billion people worldwide are liturgically anticipating the life of an unborn child, a child who comes so “that they may have life, and that they may have it more abundantly” (John 10:10)

What is life?  And what about it’s abundance?

I recall a blustery winter night when I was invited to give a lecture at the Lutheran School of Theology in the midst of the University of Chicago campus.  After a journey through heavily falling snow, I was met by several dozen divinity students, gathered to learn about ecology and evolution.

One of the things I wanted to share that night was my understanding of the interconnectedness among living things.  The science on the relatedness between humans and chimpanzees, for example, has become widely accessible.  What amazes me about these studies is not just the percentage of relatedness between humans and various living things (which is remarkable), but that there is relatedness at all.  We share the stuff of life, not just with chimpanzees, but with daffodils and yeast. While we sometimes do not easily recognize other living creatures as kin, we are all intimately related.

There is relatedness, and then there is relationship.  Our interconnection with the rest of life goes beyond genetics –  family ties, so to speak.  To me, this is one of the deeply beautiful revelations of evolutionary history.  We are not only related to the rest of life, but also we are in relationship with it.  Over time and across space, organisms shape one another and the world around them, just as they themselves are shaped by these interactions.  The upshot of this is not necessarily “survival of the fittest” as most people assume.  In fact, as evolutionary biologist Stephen Jay Gould has noted, the process of evolution shifts between forgiving periods where there is only “elimination of the worst” and more bleak periods of “survival of the fittest.”

What may come as a surprise is that we humans are shifting the evolutionary trajectory away from the more forgiving path, putting life on the harsh road of survival of the fittest.  And with that comes abundant suffering of life.  Viewing the history of humanity within the evolutionary context does not free humans from moral considerations, but on the contrary forces us to face our responsibilities to the rest of life and the relationships we are shaping within it.

We humans have a moral obligation to address the critical changes to the system of life we are affecting with respect to climate change, stratospheric ozone, land use change, freshwater use, biological diversity, ocean acidification, nitrogen and phosphorus inputs to the biosphere and oceans, aerosol loading and chemical pollution.  These are the nine “tipping points” recently outlined by the Stockholm Resilience Centre that are shifting life as we know it.  (For a review of these issues, see “Tipping Towards the Unknown” http://www.stockholmresilience.org/planetary-boundaries)  We humans are responsible for creating these tipping points and the accompanying negative relationships they create within the web of life.

When I finished my lecture, one of the students asked, “What do you want us to do with this information?”  It was a great question; I didn’t have an answer.  So, I stumbled on with a few sentences and then responded to several more questions.  Suddenly, it came to me how I wanted to answer.  I told the students I would share some of my core beliefs about Jesus.  I could see their curiosity piqued.

Jesus broke down barriers in ways that were unthinkable to the spiritual elite of his day.  St. Paul distilled the radicalism of Jesus’ teaching in the following way: “There is neither Jew nor Greek, there is neither slave nor free, there is neither male nor female; for you are all one in Christ Jesus” (Galatians 3:28).  What did I want the students to do with what I shared about ecology and evolution?  Jesus broke down barriers among different kinds of people, including all people in God’s love.  In the same way, I hoped these emerging faith leaders would break down barriers to love within the greater web of life.  I hoped for a time when our care for the poor, tired, and hungry would be extended to the entire family of life.  The Good Samaritan came to mind, and I told them I hoped we would begin to be neighbors to the plants and animals with whom we share this life journey, with whom we share both relatedness and relationship.

In this season, as we anticipate the birth of a child who comes to bring abundant life, let us expand our definition of “life” and how we will protect it.

Let us redefine ourselves as well – more humbly, not lording ourselves over the landscape but recognizing our place within it, as kin and neighbor to life.

Brooke Hecht, Ph.D.
President, Center for Humans and Nature

The End of Philosophy?

April 1st, 2009

What disciplines or frameworks of thought are most relevant to our current humans and nature sustainability crises? Perhaps scientific knowledge alone, without any emotional wrappings, enables us to take a more objective, longer-term view of issues such as climate change, landscape degradation, and waves of species extinctions. If we do turn to disciplines such as ethics and philosophy, will they be reliable guides or will they lead us to exaggerated, emotional reactions? I have heard these kinds of questions a number of times—from people in many different walks of life, from distinguished scientists to interested citizens.

An alternative perspective argues that reason and philosophical deliberation have little to do with our choices because our emotions largely dictate our decisions and actions. As David Brooks argues, in his April 6, 2009 New York Times column, “The End of Philosophy,” moral thinking is “more like aesthetics…You don’t have to decide if a landscape is beautiful. You just know. Moral judgments are like that. They are rapid intuitive decisions and involve the emotion-processing parts of the brain. Most of us make snap moral judgments about what feels fair or not, or what feels good or not. We start doing this when we are babies, before we have language. And even as adults, we often can’t explain to ourselves why something feels wrong. In other words, reasoning comes later and is often guided by the emotions that preceded it.”

The case for the importance of ethics, emotion, science and/or philosophy in approaching difficult choices about how we ought to live on earth should not be a case for exclusive jurisdiction. All of the disciplines bring insights into challenging dilemmas. Ethics, emotion, science, and other forms of knowledge should not be set in opposition to each other as an either/or choice for rational, thoughtful people.

One problem with David Brooks’ approach of giving primacy to emotional response is that he fails to acknowledge the concurrent development of emotion and knowledge, both of which work together to create meaning and intuitive decisions. In other words, the emotional development of human beings does not occur in a vacuum. A baby feels angry when the sharp knife she was holding is taken away. It feels unjust to her, but as she grows older and her knowledge expands, she recognizes that taking a knife away from a baby is not unfair, but in fact the very opposite; it is the right thing to do. The child’s growing understanding of the world around her is the key to this diametric shift in emotional response.

“Scientists have failed to help us to face human ignorance with respect to the effects of large scale corporate, economic, and public policy initiatives. In the main, the scientific community has fed our economic and technological boosterism and left us bulls in the China shop of nature. Here evolutionary biologists and ecologists should particularly feel the moral sting. They have failed effectively to grab us citizens by the throat and forcibly make us understand and take to heart that human communities and their activities, economic and otherwise, are nestled within wider and vulnerable living systems.”
—Strachan Donnelley, Scientists’ Public Responsibilities

Interestingly, Brooks relies (as do others) on the evolutionary paradigm to justify his position of emotional primacy. “What shapes moral emotions in the first place?” he asks. “The answer has long since been evolution….” Brooks acknowledges that the evolutionary process has brewed up morality, so to speak, including the development of noble emotions such as cooperation, loyalty, and respect. However, he then uses this as a jumping off point for discarding philosophy and informed choice, giving emotion central (though not absolute) primacy in how we choose to live our lives.

Like many others, Brooks has failed to consider some of the most important insights of the evolutionary paradigm, which if taken seriously, would preclude him from discarding the importance of philosophic thinking. Most importantly, acceptance of an evolutionary world view includes the knowledge that we are members and kin to all life within an interdependent community. Aldo Leopold’s Land Ethic captures the revolutionary nature of this idea, which “changes the role of Homo sapiens from conqueror of the land-community to plain member and citizen of it.”

One might still argue, haven’t species emerged and gone extinct countless times over the course of the earth’s history? And hasn’t our climate fluctuated dramatically during this same time? Why should it matter if we humans are the cause of these changes? Who is to say that this is not our evolutionary role? And why should we care? These questions follow the line of thinking that we should put morality aside altogether because evolution, driving the fundamental processes resulting in the emergence of life and extinction of species, should be allowed to “take its course.”

However, we humans are currently not doing that at all. We are dramatically shifting the evolutionary process, from a process of elimination of the most unfit species to survival of the few. Are we comfortable shaping the evolutionary process itself, having just held it up as one of the most fundamental of life’s processes?

Knowledge is central to our emotional responses and the subsequent choices we make about how we should live on earth. Evolution may shape emotion, but what happens when the organisms shaped by evolution have insight into the process itself? How might the knowledge of our origins and interdependencies affect our responses to species extinctions, landscape degradation, and destabilizing climatic changes? Do we recognize ourselves, Homo sapiens, as the baby with the sharp knife? Furthermore, do we acknowledge our ability to grow?

Evolution has given us the capacity to be both destructive and responsible animals. Ethically right conduct is as “natural” to our species as ethically wrong conduct. We are not doomed to wrong conduct, nor are we doomed to ignorance about basic earthly realities about the origins of life and our place within it. It is now up to us to embrace this knowledge and put down the knife.

Brooke Hecht, Ph.D.

CHN joins International Meeting at Humboldt University to discuss Human Existence and Ecological Integrity

July 20th, 2008

CHN Senior Fellow Ron Engel, and CHN colleague Kathryn Kintzele, participated in the Global Ecological Integrity Group (GEIG) 2008 annual conference meeting at the historic Humboldt University, Berlin. The Global Ecological Integrity Group (GEIG) includes more than 250 scholars and independent researchers worldwide, from diverse disciplines, including ecology, biology, philosophy, epidemiology, public health, ecological economics and international law. The theme of the conference this year was “Reconciling Human Existence and Ecological Integrity.” Dr. Kintzele presented her in-process work, “Is Nature Alive in International Law? A Legal, Scientific and Philosophical Critique of the Language Used to Describe Natural Values in International Law.” Dr. Engel had the privilege of joining Bill Rees, Beata Weber (a former member of the European Parliament and the current mayor of Heidelberg) and Heinrich Fuchs (a Green party member of the German parliament and the President of the Boll Foundation) in addressing several hundred Berliners on “Is the World at a Tipping Point?” In 2009, CHN will join the group at the Institute of European Universities in Florence, Italy to discuss State Sovereignty, International Law and Ecological Integrity, and to convene a special session on international protected areas and sacred spaces.