Wednesday, September 5, 2012

Silent Spring at 50

The great Rachel Carson, a few years before the first Earth Day, had a lot to do with turning conservation into "divisive" environmentalism.
"Like many of her contemporaries, Carson was wedded to the idea of the "balance of nature," the now quaintly obsolete notion that nature will heal itself if only man would leave it alone. "The inescapable fact that the decline of wildlife is linked with human destinies is being driven home by conservationists the nation over," Carson wrote in 1938. "Wildlife . . . is dwindling because its home is being destroyed." Today, nature's natural state is known to be constant change. And man, of course, is a major change agent, for ill—and for good."
The WSJ's headline writer (or maybe ALD's) calls her a "prophet of doom." But this review's conclusion is the real  headline: Carson surely improved the land, water and air we all share.

Book Review: On a Farther Shore | Silent Spring at 50 - WSJ.com

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