{"id":3061,"date":"2025-01-09T10:29:45","date_gmt":"2025-01-09T10:29:45","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/bullseye.ac\/blog\/?p=3061"},"modified":"2025-01-09T10:29:48","modified_gmt":"2025-01-09T10:29:48","slug":"the-intersection-of-humanity-and-nature-a-new-era","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/bullseye.ac\/blog\/philosophy-literature\/the-intersection-of-humanity-and-nature-a-new-era\/","title":{"rendered":"The Intersection of Humanity and Nature: A New Era"},"content":{"rendered":"\n<p>Number of words: 2,654<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>We are stealing nature from our children.&nbsp;Now, when I say this, I don&#8217;t mean that we are destroying nature&nbsp;that they will have wanted us to preserve,&nbsp;although that is unfortunately also the case.&nbsp;What I mean here is that we&#8217;ve started to define nature in a way&nbsp;that&#8217;s so purist and so strict&nbsp;that under the definition we&#8217;re creating for ourselves,&nbsp;there won&#8217;t be any nature left for our children&nbsp;when they&#8217;re adults.&nbsp;But there&#8217;s a fix for this.&nbsp;So let me explain.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Right now, humans use half of the world&nbsp;to live, to grow their crops and their timber,&nbsp;to pasture their animals.&nbsp;If you added up all the human beings,&nbsp;we would weigh 10 times as much as all the wild mammals put together.&nbsp;We cut roads through the forest.&nbsp;We have added little plastic particles to the sand on ocean beaches.&nbsp;We&#8217;ve changed the chemistry of the soil with our artificial fertilizers.&nbsp;And of course, we&#8217;ve changed the chemistry of the air.&nbsp;So when you take your next breath,&nbsp;you&#8217;ll be breathing in 42 percent more carbon dioxide&nbsp;than if you were breathing in 1750.&nbsp;So all of these changes, and many others,&nbsp;have come to be kind of lumped together under this rubric of the &#8220;Anthropocene.&#8221;&nbsp;And this is a term that some geologists are suggesting&nbsp;we should give to our current epoch,&nbsp;given how pervasive human influence has been over it.&nbsp;Now, it&#8217;s still just a proposed epoch, but I think it&#8217;s a helpful way&nbsp;to think about the magnitude of human influence on the planet.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>So where does this put nature?&nbsp;What counts as nature in a world where everything is influenced by humans?&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>So 25 years ago, environmental writer Bill McKibben said&nbsp;that because nature was a thing apart from man&nbsp;and because climate change meant&nbsp;that every centimeter of the Earth was altered by man,&nbsp;then nature was over.&nbsp;In fact, he called his book &#8220;The End of Nature.&#8221;&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>I disagree with this. I just disagree with this.&nbsp;I disagree with this definition of nature, because, fundamentally, we are animals.&nbsp;Right? Like, we evolved on this planet&nbsp;in the context of all the other animals with which we share a planet,&nbsp;and all the other plants, and all the other microbes.&nbsp;And so I think that nature&nbsp;is not that which is untouched by humanity, man or woman.&nbsp;I think that nature is anywhere where life thrives,&nbsp;anywhere where there are multiple species together,&nbsp;anywhere that&#8217;s green and blue and thriving and filled with life&nbsp;and growing.&nbsp;And under that definition,&nbsp;things look a little bit different.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Now, I understand that there are certain parts of this nature&nbsp;that speak to us in a special way.&nbsp;Places like Yellowstone,&nbsp;or the Mongolian steppe,&nbsp;or the Great Barrier Reef&nbsp;or the Serengeti.&nbsp;Places that we think of as kind of Edenic representations&nbsp;of a nature before we screwed everything up.&nbsp;And in a way, they are less impacted by our day to day activities.&nbsp;Many of these places have no roads or few roads,&nbsp;so on, like such.&nbsp;But ultimately, even these Edens are deeply influenced by humans.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Now, let&#8217;s just take North America, for example,&nbsp;since that&#8217;s where we&#8217;re meeting.&nbsp;So between about 15,000 years ago when people first came here,&nbsp;they started a process of interacting with the nature&nbsp;that led to the extinction of a big slew of large-bodied animals,&nbsp;from the mastodon to the giant ground sloth,&nbsp;saber-toothed cats,&nbsp;all of these cool animals that unfortunately are no longer with us.&nbsp;And when those animals went extinct,&nbsp;you know, the ecosystems didn&#8217;t stand still.&nbsp;Massive ripple effects changed grasslands into forests,&nbsp;changed the composition of forest from one tree to another.&nbsp;So even in these Edens,&nbsp;even in these perfect-looking places&nbsp;that seem to remind us of a past before humans,&nbsp;we&#8217;re essentially looking at a humanized landscape.&nbsp;Not just these prehistoric humans, but historical humans, indigenous people&nbsp;all the way up until the moment when the first colonizers showed up.&nbsp;And the case is the same for the other continents as well.&nbsp;Humans have just been involved in nature&nbsp;in a very influential way for a very long time.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Now, just recently, someone told me,&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>&#8220;Oh, but there are still wild places.&#8221;&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>And I said, &#8220;Where? Where? I want to go.&#8221;&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>And he said, &#8220;The Amazon.&#8221;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>And I was like, &#8220;Oh, the Amazon. I was just there.&nbsp;It&#8217;s awesome. National Geographic sent me to Man\u00fa National Park,&nbsp;which is in the Peruvian Amazon,&nbsp;but it&#8217;s a big chunk of rainforest, uncleared, no roads,&nbsp;protected as a national park,&nbsp;one of the most, in fact, biodiverse parks in the world.&nbsp;And when I got in there with my canoe, what did I find, but people.&nbsp;People have been living there for hundreds and thousands of years.&nbsp;People live there, and they don&#8217;t just float over the jungle.&nbsp;They have a meaningful relationship with the landscape.&nbsp;They hunt. They grow crops.&nbsp;They domesticate crops.&nbsp;They use the natural resources to build their houses,&nbsp;to thatch their houses.&nbsp;They even make pets out of animals that we consider to be wild animals.&nbsp;These people are there&nbsp;and they&#8217;re interacting with the environment&nbsp;in a way that&#8217;s really meaningful and that you can see in the environment.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Now, I was with an anthropologist on this trip,&nbsp;and he told me, as we were floating down the river,&nbsp;he said, &#8220;There are no demographic voids in the Amazon.&#8221;&nbsp;This statement has really stuck with me,&nbsp;because what it means is that the whole Amazon is like this.&nbsp;There&#8217;s people everywhere.&nbsp;And many other tropical forests are the same,&nbsp;and not just tropical forests.&nbsp;People have influenced ecosystems in the past,&nbsp;and they continue to influence them in the present,&nbsp;even in places where they&#8217;re harder to notice.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>So, if all of the definitions of nature that we might want to use&nbsp;that involve it being untouched by humanity&nbsp;or not having people in it,&nbsp;if all of those actually give us a result where we don&#8217;t have any nature,&nbsp;then maybe they&#8217;re the wrong definitions.&nbsp;Maybe we should define it by the presence of multiple species,&nbsp;by the presence of a thriving life.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Now, if we do it that way,&nbsp;what do we get?&nbsp;Well, it&#8217;s this kind of miracle.&nbsp;All of a sudden, there&#8217;s nature all around us.&nbsp;All of a sudden, we see this Monarch caterpillar&nbsp;munching on this plant,&nbsp;and we realize that there it is,&nbsp;and it&#8217;s in this empty lot in Chattanooga.&nbsp;And look at this empty lot.&nbsp;I mean, there&#8217;s, like, probably,&nbsp;a dozen, minimum, plant species growing there,&nbsp;supporting all kinds of insect life,&nbsp;and this is a completely unmanaged space, a completely wild space.&nbsp;This is a kind of wild nature right under our nose,&nbsp;that we don&#8217;t even notice.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>And there&#8217;s an interesting little paradox, too.&nbsp;So this nature,&nbsp;this kind of wild, untended part&nbsp;of our urban, peri-urban, suburban agricultural existence&nbsp;that flies under the radar,&nbsp;it&#8217;s arguably more wild than a national park,&nbsp;because national parks are very carefully managed&nbsp;in the 21st century.&nbsp;Crater Lake in southern Oregon, which is my closest national park,&nbsp;is a beautiful example of a landscape that seems to be coming out of the past.&nbsp;But they&#8217;re managing it carefully.&nbsp;One of the issues they have now is white bark pine die-off.&nbsp;White bark pine is a beautiful, charismatic &#8212;&nbsp;I&#8217;ll say it&#8217;s a charismatic megaflora&nbsp;that grows up at high altitude &#8212;&nbsp;and it&#8217;s got all these problems right now with disease.&nbsp;There&#8217;s a blister rust that was introduced,&nbsp;bark beetle.&nbsp;So to deal with this, the park service has been planting&nbsp;rust-resistant white bark pine seedlings in the park,&nbsp;even in areas that they are otherwise managing as wilderness.&nbsp;And they&#8217;re also putting out beetle repellent in key areas&nbsp;as I saw last time I went hiking there.&nbsp;And this kind of thing is really much more common than you would think.&nbsp;National parks are heavily managed.&nbsp;The wildlife is kept to a certain population size and structure.&nbsp;Fires are suppressed.&nbsp;Fires are started.&nbsp;Non-native species are removed.&nbsp;Native species are reintroduced.&nbsp;And in fact, I took a look,&nbsp;and Banff National Park is doing all of the things I just listed:&nbsp;suppressing fire, having fire,&nbsp;radio-collaring wolves, reintroducing bison.&nbsp;It takes a lot of work to make these places look untouched.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>And in a further irony, these places that we love the most&nbsp;are the places that we love a little too hard, sometimes.&nbsp;A lot of us like to go there,&nbsp;and because we&#8217;re managing them to be stable&nbsp;in the face of a changing planet,&nbsp;they often are becoming more fragile over time.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Which means that they&#8217;re the absolute worst places&nbsp;to take your children on vacation,&nbsp;because you can&#8217;t do anything there.&nbsp;You can&#8217;t climb the trees.&nbsp;You can&#8217;t fish the fish.&nbsp;You can&#8217;t make a campfire out in the middle of nowhere.&nbsp;You can&#8217;t take home the pinecones.&nbsp;There are so many rules and restrictions&nbsp;that from a child&#8217;s point of view,&nbsp;this is, like, the worst nature ever.&nbsp;Because children don&#8217;t want to hike&nbsp;through a beautiful landscape for five hours&nbsp;and then look at a beautiful view.&nbsp;That&#8217;s maybe what we want to do as adults,&nbsp;but what kids want to do is hunker down in one spot&nbsp;and just tinker with it, just work with it,&nbsp;just pick it up, build a house, build a fort, do something like that.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Additionally, these sort of Edenic places&nbsp;are often distant from where people live.&nbsp;And they&#8217;re expensive to get to. They&#8217;re hard to visit.&nbsp;So this means that they&#8217;re only available to the elites,&nbsp;and that&#8217;s a real problem.&nbsp;The Nature Conservancy did a survey of young people,&nbsp;and they asked them, how often do you spend time outdoors?&nbsp;And only two out of five spent time outdoors&nbsp;at least once a week.&nbsp;The other three out of five were just staying inside.&nbsp;And when they asked them why, what are the barriers to going outside,&nbsp;the response of 61 percent was,&nbsp;&#8220;There are no natural areas near my home.&#8221;&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>And this is crazy. This is just patently false.&nbsp;I mean, 71 percent of people in the US&nbsp;live within a 10-minute walk of a city park.&nbsp;And I&#8217;m sure the figures are similar in other countries.&nbsp;And that doesn&#8217;t even count your back garden,&nbsp;the urban creek, the empty lot.&nbsp;Everybody lives near nature.&nbsp;Every kid lives near nature.&nbsp;We&#8217;ve just somehow forgotten how to see it.&nbsp;We&#8217;ve spent too much time watching David Attenborough documentaries&nbsp;where the nature is really sexy &#8212;&nbsp;and we&#8217;ve forgotten how to see the nature that is literally right outside our door,&nbsp;the nature of the street tree.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>So here&#8217;s an example: Philadelphia.&nbsp;There&#8217;s this cool elevated railway&nbsp;that you can see from the ground, that&#8217;s been abandoned.&nbsp;Now, this may sound like the beginning of the High Line story in Manhattan,&nbsp;and it&#8217;s very similar, except they haven&#8217;t developed this into a park yet,&nbsp;although they&#8217;re working on it.&nbsp;So for now, it&#8217;s still this little sort of secret wilderness&nbsp;in the heart of Philadelphia,&nbsp;and if you know where the hole is in the chain-link fence,&nbsp;you can scramble up to the top&nbsp;and you can find this completely wild meadow&nbsp;just floating above the city of Philadelphia.&nbsp;Every single one of these plants grew from a seed&nbsp;that planted itself there.&nbsp;This is completely autonomous, self-willed nature.&nbsp;And it&#8217;s right in the middle of the city.&nbsp;And they&#8217;ve sent people up there to do sort of biosurveys,&nbsp;and there are over 50 plant species up there.&nbsp;And it&#8217;s not just plants.&nbsp;This is an ecosystem, a functioning ecosystem.&nbsp;It&#8217;s creating soil. It&#8217;s sequestering carbon.&nbsp;There&#8217;s pollination going on.&nbsp;I mean, this is really an ecosystem.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>So scientists have started calling ecosystems like these &#8220;novel ecosystems,&#8221;&nbsp;because they&#8217;re often dominated by non-native species,&nbsp;and because they&#8217;re just super weird.&nbsp;They&#8217;re just unlike anything we&#8217;ve ever seen before.&nbsp;For so long, we dismissed all these novel ecosystems as trash.&nbsp;We&#8217;re talking about regrown agricultural fields,&nbsp;timber plantations that are not being managed on a day-to-day basis,&nbsp;second-growth forests generally, the entire East Coast,&nbsp;where after agriculture moved west, the forest sprung up.&nbsp;And of course, pretty much all of Hawaii,&nbsp;where novel ecosystems are the norm,&nbsp;where exotic species totally dominate.&nbsp;This forest here has Queensland maple,&nbsp;it has sword ferns from Southeast Asia.&nbsp;You can make your own novel ecosystem, too.&nbsp;It&#8217;s really simple.&nbsp;You just stop mowing your lawn.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Ilkka Hanski was an ecologist in Finland, and he did this experiment himself.&nbsp;He just stopped mowing his lawn,&nbsp;and after a few years, he had some grad students come,&nbsp;and they did sort of a bio-blitz of his backyard,&nbsp;and they found 375 plant species,&nbsp;including two endangered species.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>So when you&#8217;re up there on that future High Line of Philadelphia,&nbsp;surrounded by this wildness,&nbsp;surrounded by this diversity, this abundance, this vibrance,&nbsp;you can look over the side&nbsp;and you can see a local playground for a local school,&nbsp;and that&#8217;s what it looks like.&nbsp;These children have, that &#8212;&nbsp;You know, under my definition,&nbsp;there&#8217;s a lot of the planet that counts as nature,&nbsp;but this would be one of the few places that wouldn&#8217;t count as nature.&nbsp;There&#8217;s nothing there except humans, no other plants, no other animals.&nbsp;And what I really wanted to do&nbsp;was just, like, throw a ladder over the side&nbsp;and get all these kids to come up with me into this cool meadow.&nbsp;In a way, I feel like this is the choice that faces us.&nbsp;If we dismiss these new natures as not acceptable or trashy or no good,&nbsp;we might as well just pave them over.&nbsp;And in a world where everything is changing,&nbsp;we need to be very careful about how we define nature.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>In order not to steal it from our children,&nbsp;we have to do two things.&nbsp;First, we cannot define nature as that which is untouched.&nbsp;This never made any sense anyway.&nbsp;Nature has not been untouched for thousands of years.&nbsp;And it excludes most of the nature that most people can visit&nbsp;and have a relationship with,&nbsp;including only nature that children cannot touch.&nbsp;Which brings me to the second thing that we have to do,&nbsp;which is that we have to let children touch nature,&nbsp;because that which is untouched is unloved.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>We face some pretty grim environmental challenges on this planet.&nbsp;Climate change is among them.&nbsp;There&#8217;s others too: habitat loss is my favorite thing&nbsp;to freak out about in the middle of the night.&nbsp;But in order to solve them,&nbsp;we need people &#8212; smart, dedicated people &#8212;&nbsp;who care about nature.&nbsp;And the only way we&#8217;re going to raise up a generation of people&nbsp;who care about nature&nbsp;is by letting them touch nature.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>I have a Fort Theory of Ecology,&nbsp;Fort Theory of Conservation.&nbsp;Every ecologist I know, every conservation biologist I know,&nbsp;every conservation professional I know,&nbsp;built forts when they were kids.&nbsp;If we have a generation that doesn&#8217;t know how to build a fort,&nbsp;we&#8217;ll have a generation that doesn&#8217;t know how to care about nature.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>And I don&#8217;t want to be the one to tell this kid,&nbsp;who is on a special program&nbsp;that takes Philadelphia kids from poor neighborhoods&nbsp;and takes them to city parks,&nbsp;I don&#8217;t want to be the one to tell him that the flower he&#8217;s holding&nbsp;is a non-native invasive weed that he should throw away as trash.&nbsp;I think I would much rather learn from this boy&nbsp;that no matter where this plant comes from,&nbsp;it is beautiful, and it deserves to be touched and appreciated.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><em>Excerpted from<\/em> <a href=\"https:\/\/www.ted.com\/talks\/emma_marris_nature_is_everywhere_we_just_need_to_learn_to_see_it?utm_source=tedcomshare&amp;utm_medium=email&amp;utm_campaign=tedspread\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noreferrer noopener\"><em>https:\/\/www.ted.com\/talks\/emma_marris_nature_is_everywhere_we_just_need_to_learn_to_see_it?utm_source=tedcomshare&amp;utm_medium=email&amp;utm_campaign=tedspread<\/em><\/a><em><\/em><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Number of words: 2,654 We are stealing nature from our children.&nbsp;Now, when I say this, I don&#8217;t mean that we are destroying nature&nbsp;that they will have wanted us to preserve,&nbsp;although that is unfortunately also the case.&nbsp;What I mean here is that we&#8217;ve started to define nature in a way&nbsp;that&#8217;s so purist and so strict&nbsp;that under &#8230; <a title=\"The Intersection of Humanity and Nature: A New Era\" class=\"read-more\" href=\"https:\/\/bullseye.ac\/blog\/philosophy-literature\/the-intersection-of-humanity-and-nature-a-new-era\/\" aria-label=\"More on The Intersection of Humanity and Nature: A New Era\">Read more<\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":3,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_eb_attr":"","_uag_custom_page_level_css":"","footnotes":""},"categories":[22,12],"tags":[],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v21.5 - https:\/\/yoast.com\/wordpress\/plugins\/seo\/ -->\n<title>The Intersection of Humanity and Nature: A New Era - BullsEye<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/bullseye.ac\/blog\/philosophy-literature\/the-intersection-of-humanity-and-nature-a-new-era\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"The Intersection of Humanity and Nature: A New Era - BullsEye\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"Number of words: 2,654 We are stealing nature from our children.&nbsp;Now, when I say this, I don&#8217;t mean that we are destroying nature&nbsp;that they will have wanted us to preserve,&nbsp;although that is unfortunately also the case.&nbsp;What I mean here is that we&#8217;ve started to define nature in a way&nbsp;that&#8217;s so purist and so strict&nbsp;that under ... 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