by Ibon » Wed 29 Dec 2010, 14:21:37
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('mos6507', ' ')You know, sacred demise. However, the human part of me, the compassionate part of me, can not hold onto this perspective for that long. The trick is to find some middle-path that allows one to have empathy both for the ecosystem and for your fellow man.
That middle path means understanding that the morality applied to sustainability requires a different cognitive part of our brains than the compassion we have evolved when applied to our fellow man. In times of overshoot we arrive at a level of instability that the unimaginable can occur where a moral act for a human can be an immoral act for humanity as a whole. There was no design that lead to 7 billion on the planet but the lack of design does not mean we are collectively not culpable to the potential exponential suffering of our children and grand children. If we play god in times of affluence dispensing compassion we ultimately can and will be held morally responsible for the human suffering that comes from the consequences of collapsing ecosystems. Will we not be judged in exactly these terms one day when our descendants pass through the bottleneck? I can assure you we will.
Note that I am not even addressing the suffering of our fellow species. The moral questions when applied to biodiversity means not just corrections in populations but addressing the purest forms of genocide……extinction.
Is it truly and really misanthropic to put the extinction of species on a level of moral and ethical importance equal to that of preserving your own species numbers at unsustainable high numbers?
Can you really claim a higher moral ground than positions taken by Montequest or myself in reference to this most sensitive and complicated topic?
Or my current position questioning the morality of the application of green technologies if it only results in an increase in the resiliency of our species. Without answering this moral dilemma I see the "green technologies" of the 21st century in the exact same light as the "green revolution" of agriculture from the 1960's.
Patiently awaiting the pathogens. Our resiliency resembles an invasive weed. We are the Kudzu Ape
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