I disagree that by trying to better the world that we make it worse. Human quality of life is much better today because of human efforts: increased lifespan (75 years today compared to 40 back in Native American days); increased opportunities for knowledge with books & internet (compared to just learning your culture's oral tradition thousands of years ago); more leisure time so we can ponder spirituality instead of 80 hours per week of hard labor just to feed our family.
I have said that we should be investing our resources into less harmful forms of energy. For me, this is the only way forward, it is plainly obvious that our use of fossil fuels is damaging the world. It is utterly greedy that we are refusing to transfer to another resource simply because the current hasn't been totally used up yet.
I think that, on the surface, our lives are much improved. They appear far more beneficial and worth while, and yet suicide rates and homicides are escalating per capitol. Our technology is bringing us further apart, but making it seem like we are closer - I think this is having a negative effect on our psyches.
Overall, no, I do not want us to go backwards, but I am not sure that it is so clear cut that our lives are superior to those that came before. At best, we can only say they are different. I do not say "good old days", they are past and looking backwards for me is a sin. I just hope that going forward we are more wise to how we might effect life on this planet, I hope we are more compassionate to life wider than just the human race.
I personally think the main driver towards making the world worse is overpopulation. Humans were just another part of nature when we numbered in the millions (300 million at the time of Christ). Now with increased technology and population near 7 billion, we cumulatively have some major impacts which will only get worse as global population increases to 10 or 15 billion. Ironically, some of the areas of greatest population growth are the areas with the fewest natural resources and least means to feed themselves. (see interactive map at
NOVA | Human Numbers Through Time).
We actually can perfectly sustain 10 billion on this planet simply by becoming vegetarian. The food we give to animals that eventually are killed to be put in our grocery stores is vastly higher than the nutrients we extract. At the same time, they are giving off a lot of gas and of course we breed them in high numbers because so many want to eat them. Much can be improved by this simple measure, but Pythagoras started saying this 2500 years ago and it is not catching on still.
That said, it maddens me a great deal that the Catholic Pope has the nerve to preach about contraception being evil. Most of the religious organizations are this way though, we fear death and so we make life sacred. When life is sacred, we must continue to breed in large number. This simply isn't sustainable and these out dated religious ideas need to be re-evaluated. Life is not sacred at all, this is a stupid idea. Life is merely the middle ground between birth and death, it is another structure of reality, only the eternal is sacred but we are all that - science has proven energy cannot be removed, it can only change form.
Reminds me of another Lennon quote
"Imagine there's no countries
It isn't hard to do
Nothing to kill or die for
And no religion too
Imagine all the people
Living life in peace..."
- JOHN LENNON (1940-1980)
I completely agree with him, religious organizations are just like politics, they are just two examples of the prisons we go on ignoring. The politician puts socialism against capitolism, communism against democracy. The religious leaders put Hindu against Muslim, Christian against Buddhist. The government puts India against Pakistan, Greece against Turkey. It is stupid, because we actually seek out these prisons. We become proud of our particular prison, we identify so much with them. It is a very strange situation.
Lunitik - it seems as though you share many pantheist beliefs. Would you be willing to clarify whether you consider "God" and Nature to be the same thing? If not, how do they differ in your view?
I have no beliefs at all, I have experienced something like pantheism. Existence is one being, it is not divided at all, cannot be divided. For me, God is merely another word for existence, it is the cosmic consciousness that many have experienced down the ages. They differ only depending on your definition of existence. God is not the gross world we experience on a day to day basis, God is the subtle aspect of reality scientists are calling quanta.
For me, however, it is not particularly useful to discuss God. You are attempting to see some confirmation of your own ideas, but my answer cannot help you experience God. You can find God if you are open to it, simply allow it.
Think of a circle, things like good/bad, rich/poor, birth/death, health/illness, these are as lines through the circle but they remain on the circumference. From each point, imagine a radius to the middle of each, if you can do this you will find your own center. Surrender to that, inquire deeply into that, and you will find reality, the true nature of existence, and your true self. This is what religions call God/Dharmakaya/Brahman/Allah/Yehweh/etc - what you call it is utterly irrelevant.
Lunitik you are contradicting yourself here. Obviously you wouldn't advocate for green energy, small carbon footprint, veganism, etc if you didn't want to make the planet better a better place, would you?
I seem contradictory because you have a certain idea of what should be stated, do not try to force me into a box!
What I have been doing is trying to remove the self-righteousness of charity statements in this thread, and pointed out that this person is probably not even doing what they can do in their immediate surroundings.
I am attempting to show that both are egotistical, the charity is given because it makes people feel less guilty, but the more direct things aren't done because it directly affects them and makes life less comfortable.
I have not really made any personal statements in this thread, I am merely making points that show the flaws in the current system.
I do agree with many of your stated environmental viewpoints (I have a M.S. in Environmental Science, am a hunter-vegan, spend 20 days/year solo in the wilderness, and strive towards self-sufficiency). However, if you truly think it's "not possible to change the world" and that nature finds its own balance and "can take care of itself perfectly without our input", why would you worry about and advocate for living sustainably? Why not just let nature run her course, whatever result that may bring for humanity?
I have already answered why I seem to be arguing for sustainability. For me, though, if we are damaging the planet too much, the planet will simply destroy us. We see this in the natural disasters, nature is not at our whim. The natural order insists that things are always in balance, if we change that too much, it will correct on its own. Our own steps are an attempt to show we are more powerful, that we are in control, and I simply disagree with any such sentiments.
That said, I would prefer not to see such suffering, so if we can manage a certain balance ourselves nature needn't intervene. We have to lose this attitude that we are important though, we simply do not matter at all. It is more about the attitude we have within the process, rather than the process itself.
Do you believe some environmental degradation is acceptable in order that humans have increased quality of life? (i.e. Thoreau's axe - he always complained about the environmental impact of trains but yet they carried quality-of-life items such as his axe) From reading your posts you apparently think we've overreached in modern times; where on the timeline of human "progress" do you think this balance was reached?
No, we are not more important than nature, we are a part of that. If we degrade nature, our lives will inevitably suffer. I also do not say we have overreached, I just think we are making stupid decisions that will cost us dearly if not corrected. I do not look backwards: the past is dead, its only remnant is the effects it has on today. In my life time, we are going to run out of petroleum, I see no infrastructure being prepared for another form of electric. This is not smart at all, the entire world needs to be converted and it will take a long time. We need to be switching now and using the old resources in areas that have not yet been converted. In Cities like Los Angeles they are directly linking fumes to cancer and other cardiovascular issues, yet we are in no rush to clean things up. We saw a whole school of fish simply die off the shore of California but apparently this hasn't alarmed anyone...