To the
problem of ecological consciousness
Senior teacher of department to philosophy of
the Êostanai state university the name of ÀBaitursinov. city Êîñòàíàé. Republic
of Kazakhstan
ECOLOGICAL CONSCIOUSNESS is the awareness that
nearly every aspect of our way of life affects the environment so decisively
that we now must choose whether to let the effects go unchecked, or we change
the way we live in order to arrest the damage.
It is the growing awareness that the planet
Earth is a finite place we share with other peoples?and indeed with all living
creatures?and that if, by our ignorance and carelessness, we destroy it, we
thereby also destroy ourselves.
The basic science we learn in grade school tends
to lull us into a form of complacency that blinds us to ecological problems. My
earliest recollection of carbon dioxide is that it is food that plants need,
along with sunlight and water. The plants absorb CO2 from the atmosphere, and,
in return, they give out the oxygen that humans need. Such, we are taught, is
the wonderful self-regulating design of Nature.
Yet today we are told that this relationship
between humans and their environment has not been going well at all. We are
told that we have been releasing dangerous levels of greenhouse gases like CO2
into the atmosphere as a result of our furious effort to improve the conditions
of human existence, and that this has led to global warming.
What seems obvious to scientists, however, is never
always obvious to the rest of us. There is a reason for this. While the
environment is directly affected by human activity, it does not have the
capacity to directly ?communicate? with humans.
Nature and man do not share a common language;
humans hear messages from the environment only in their own human languages. On
top of this, whatever messages the environment transmits are necessarily
filtered by the multiple cultures and belief systems, and varying systems of
cognition that characterize human societies.
Thus, natural phenomena like unusual rainfall
levels, strong typhoons, rising seas, droughts, tsunamis, volcanic eruptions,
etc. are viewed in different lights and treated with varying degrees of concern
by different societies. The responses they trigger are never the same. Indeed,
even within the same society, these phenomena are not uniformly interpreted by
the different institutional spheres of society.
Environmental issues do not have the same
resonance in law, religion, the economy, and politics, as they often do in
science. Not even the most modern society can be said to have a central nervous
system that is specifically attuned to changes in environmental conditions, and
can control societal response. Indeed, even in an advanced country like the
United States, the politicians and businessmen differ with the scientists in
their appreciation of the urgency of global warming.
In view of this, it is a wonder how anyone can
imagine that the 193 nations meeting in Copenhagen for the UN-sponsored summit
on global climate change could arrive at any agreement on the dimensions of the
problem, its causes and solutions, or, much less, on what every nation must do,
when, and by what means, in order to confront the problem. It does not require
any sophistication to think that every definition of the problem of climate
change, every piece of knowledge that is advanced, far from being objective, is
implicated in a system of power.
This is not to deny the existence of the
problem. But if global warming were the self-evident and objective phenomenon
it is supposed to be, there would be little negotiation about its magnitude,
origins, and the shape and direction of the requisite global response. There
would be no need to call urgent attention to its gravity. But the poor and the
rich countries meeting in Copenhagen precisely cannot agree on what every
nation needs to do to check global warming, and who will pay for the
adjustments that must be made, because there is no common understanding?and
there never will be?of the sources, scale, and seriousness of the problem.
The United States blames China for being the
biggest producer of carbon dioxide emissions since 2006. China counters that
America remains the largest CO2 producer per capita and has been so since it
became an industrial power. American scientists charge that massive
deforestation occurring in the poor countries is releasing more CO2 into the
atmosphere than all the combined vehicles and industrial plants in the world.
Taking their cue from this, rich countries are offering money to help the poor
countries stop deforestation. On the surface, this looks like an altruistic
solution to a global problem. But critics have accused rich nations of trying
to buy their way out of binding commitments to slash their own carbon
emissions. Climate change is clearly not a simple scientific issue. It is
embedded in political and economic questions, and is routinely used by
countries as a proxy in the global struggle for political and economic
supremacy.
Yet none of this diminishes the value of
ecological consciousness. Indeed, it only highlights the need for every nation
and every individual, as citizens of this planet, to examine their respective
ways of life with a view to altering those practices that destroy the earth?s long-term
viability as a place in which to live. The earth is a dying planet, but, alas,
we cannot hear its gasping or recognize its morbid state except through the
narrow bounds of our all-too-human sensibilities. There is no cure for this
other than to allow the earth?s tears to flood our consciousness. Then,
hopefully, we may see that the environment is not the other; it is us.