by BigTex » Mon 27 Aug 2007, 14:51:59
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Shannymara', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('BigTex', 'A')re you suggesting that the resource mindset is less problematic if it's only applied to needs instead of wants?
The definition of "resource" implies wealth accumulation and/or drawdown. We don't
need wealth, and we don't need drawdown to live - when we aren't in overshoot.
I believe language has a lot of power. If you think of forests as a "resource," you immediately start trying to figure out ways to
use them.
Does that make sense? I'm trying to be clear but my son keeps distracting me so it's hard to maintain my train of thought...
You're touching on the very interesting idea of the difference between "the thing as a tool" and "the thing in itself."
This idea is applied to people in teaching how to disengage from seeing oneself as a tool and simply seeing oneself as existing.
Ultimately, however, the purpose of the exercise is not to completely disengage from being a tool, a gear in the machine, but to simply balance it with being a human being without a complete preoccupation with what you "do."
Likewise, with the forests for example, the purpose of the forest is both to be a forest, manifestation of nature, etc. as well as to be a member of the ecosystem of which it is a part. Being part of the ecosystem may mean that sometimes the forest gets burned up in a fire, gets blown away in a volcanic eruption, gets washed away in a flood, gets eaten by insects, cut down by a beaver, or possibly used by a group of humans for something like building a house, building a fire, making a weapon to hunt, etc. The forest is both a "thing in itself" with intrinsic value, as well as a tool for doing things, in the same manner that the person whose body is buried provides fertilizer to grow more trees. There is a symbiosis there between forests and humans that doesn't trouble me.
If what I am saying is true (nature is part tool, part thing in itself), then aren't we back to the question of "who decides" regarding what trees to cut down, when to cut them down, and what to use them for.
In other words, I can't imagine anyone saying we shouldn't cut down ANY trees (unless maybe the person lived in a cave in a mild climate).