Monday, February 25, 2019

Environmental Ethics

February 25, 2019

Anthropocene: A Very Short Introduction by Erle Ellis

Surviving Humans

The world as we know it, is changing rapidly right before our eyes. Erle Ellis described it as a "great force of nature". Scientists believe that Earth has entered a new chapter in its history. The great force of nature is us humans and the new chapter is called the Anthropocene Epoch.

The impact that humans have had on Earth is detrimental. We humans have altered Earth’s climate, polluted Earth's atmosphere, oceans, freshwater, and soils, driven thousands of species extinct, and spread weeds, pests, and diseases around the world. I wonder what it will be like to visit the ocean in 2045. Will their be more plastic then fish in the sea? This question is valid because that is what our world is coming to.

Can humans make a change  in their life to reverse this tragedy for a better future? Will Anthropocene become the sad story of how us humans destroyed the Earth, or a story to awaken the people of the Earth to make a change to better the Earth?

Lets not forget the times when Earth shaped the way of life for humans, not the other way around. What happened to the times when humans depended on the Earth for shelter, warmth, nutrition, water, etc. We have lost site of how big of an impact the Earth has on our way of life. If we realized how vital it was to keep our planet in good graces, we wouldn't continue to destroy it.


3 comments:

  1. "The impact that humans have had on Earth is detrimental." Has been. Will it be, going forward? What's your assessment, based on Ellis's book and others?

    Perhaps you'll want to go back and look at some of the other works you've mentioned, raising the same question.

    A suggestion: you might tackle a chapter per week and go into greater depth on the specific forms of harm he and others have documented, looking forward to posting a final essay in April discussing (among other things perhaps) the conditions necessary for minimizing or reversing our detrimental impact.

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    1. And just in time to echo my question, Ellis will be speaking at MTSU on Feb. 28 on "Evolving Toward a Better Anthropocene" - 1 pm, Student Union.

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    2. Based on Ellis's book I do believe that it will only get worse. Us Humans are going to have to make a major change for the condition of the Earth to do a turn around.

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