Earth's Alarm Calls For Deeper Values
By Jane Lampman, Staff writer
Copyright 1998 Christian Science Monitor
October 1, 1998
A minister in Alaska took a break from the demands of his pastoral work to go
hunting. In the wilds, he suddenly came upon a bear, and when he raised his
gun, it jammed.
"Dear God," he prayed,
"make him a Christian." The bear, lumbering rapidly toward him, stopped in his
tracks, clasped his paws together, looked upward and said,
"Lord, thank you for the gift I am about to receive."
The Far Side sensibility of this story - told recently at a conference here on
religion, ethics, and the environment - hints at how conventional approaches to
religion may
fall short in helping solve the problems that confront us, and particularly the
crisis in our relation to the natural world.
"If the rest of the world lived as we do [in the United States]," says renowned biologist Edward O. Wilson,
"we would need two more planet Earths."
Yet much of the rest of the world wants to live like Americans, who show few
signs of living any differently. China, with a quarter of the
world's population, has set a goal of matching current US gross domestic
product by 2050, says Karim Ahmed, a deputy director at World Resources
Institute in Washington. (And the US auto industry, urged on by the Department
of Commerce, hopes to fill
China's streets with cars, he adds.)
The result of this
"progress" is persistent worldwide environmental degradation -
"the disruption of habitats, the dismantling of ecosystems, and the extinction
of 30,000 species a year," says Niles Eldrege, a curator at the American Museum of Natural History in New
York.
While the planet has faced
earlier mass extinctions due to
climate change and asteroid impact, today's cosmic force is human beings - and particularly
the industrialized world, its methods of production, and its rate of
consumption.
How have we come to this predicament, and can the world's faiths help us get
out of it? Can they rethink and inspire values that
will transform current practices? Those are questions posed by a series of
conferences sponsored since 1996 by Harvard University's Center for the Study
of World Religions (see story below). Ten conferences exploring each of the
major faiths and its ecological views led to a recent
four-day interdisciplinary session in which religious scholars discussed the
nature of the crisis with scientists, economists, educators, and policymakers.
Our predicament, most agreed, is the result of both individual choices and
systemic problems, and the solution lies in re-envisioning and revitalizing
spiritual values. Who are we, and what should be our relationship to the
natural world?
How do choices we make flow from those values? Do we need a new definition of
progress, of development, and of
"the good life"?
From the standpoint of Taoism, says James Miller of Boston University,
"the shriveling, dying, and degradation of the physical world is a result of the
shriveling of our own religious imagination."
"Anything we do to nature reflects our inner
self," says Tu Weiming, professor of Chinese philosophy at Harvard.
"The Western Enlightenment mentality turned nature into raw data, raw materials."
There is a
"disconnect between knowledge of the need for change and our inability or
unwillingness to change," says Robert Massie of the Coalition for Environmentally Responsible
Economies.
"What will it take for people to act in a new way - individually and
collectively? We need to cope with our own hypocrisy."
Individual choices make a definite difference - from the purchase of a sport
utility vehicle in the US to slashing and burning a parcel of rain
forest in Brazil. And technology won't provide a quick fix. Technological
changes have reduced environmental impact, but that is being erased by
increased output and consumption, says Juliet Schor, a Harvard economist and
author of
"The Overspent American."
Larger houses, gas-guzzling vehicles, and
more frequent air travel are some of the highly damaging choices Americans now
prize. Income distribution is a key factor in fueling the consumer boom, she
says, with the increasingly wealthy buying more; other factors are easy credit
and exposure to TV's wealthy lifestyles.
Can religious
faiths more effectively articulate a
"good life" other than consumerism? Some biologists, citing the
"parochial nature" of religions, suggest that a new worldview based on evolutionary theory could
provide a more universal environmental ethic. But others see the
"selfish gene" model as
part of the problem, with Darwinian theory a factor in the free-market model
responsible for the environmental crisis.
"We need to get beyond an economic system based on the selfish gene," one group concluded.
A basic problem, some say, is Enlightenment thinking, which has separated
science (including economics) from ethics. Scientists and corporate leaders may
have good personal ethics, but they sometimes fail to take responsibility for
the consequences of their discoveries or decisions.
Even now, when there is broad consensus on
global-warming findings, industry is still hiring scientists to insist we don't have enough
evidence to stop what we are doing, says Eric Chivian, director of the Center
for Health and Global Environment at Harvard (and the teller of the bear tale).
"Expert" knowledge is too often driven by the idea that we can attain truth without
ethics, says Frederique Apffel-Marglin, professor of anthropology at
Smith College.
"There is a blind belief research will give us answers," she says, but we are dealing with ethical choices.
"We can no longer operate on the basis that we can't act until we have the
scientific evidence for certain."
Why have religions as a repository of ethics not been a more
powerful force? Some say consumerism and technology have become a religion.
Others say religions, apart from indigenous traditions, have been too
human-centered and not seen the environment as their moral turf.
"Concepts of God are ecological concepts," says Dr. Eldrege. We need to rethink our concepts.
"It's too late for
conservation. We need active stewardship."
GRAPHIC: PHOTOS: 1) BIOLOGIST EDWARD O. WILSON: 'If the rest of the world lived as we
do [in the US] we would need two more planet Earths.' 2) MARY EVELYN TUCKER:
She galvanized effort to look at world faiths' ecological views . 3) 'Concepts
of God are ecological concepts. [We need to rethink our
concepts.] It's too late for conservation. We need active stewardship.' - Niles
Eldrege, American Museum of Natural History PHOTOS BY ARI DENISON - STAFF
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