A Catechism of Nature
eBook - ePub

A Catechism of Nature

Meditations on Creation's Primary Realities

  1. 100 pages
  2. English
  3. ePUB (mobile friendly)
  4. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub

A Catechism of Nature

Meditations on Creation's Primary Realities

About this book

This book considers the problem of ecological degradation from the perspective of a Christian clergyman and hunter. Drawing on the tradition of Christian mysticism, the author offers a series of meditations on various aspects of the natural world, including oceans and prairies, weather patterns, the changing of seasons, animal and plant communities, and the ways humans engage with them. He sees the intellectual and spiritual roots of the modern ecological crisis in a turn of thought coming from the Enlightenment that makes the value of the natural world a function of its utility, and he offers a way out that is centered in prayer and humility.

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Yes, you can access A Catechism of Nature by George Willcox Brown III in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Biological Sciences & Ecology. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.
1

Introduction

This volume is meant to address a fundamental problem vexing humanity in our time, the problem of ecological degradation. It also gestures toward the outlines of a solution, drawing on resources from the tradition of Christian ascetical theology.
Following a format suggested by Ephraim Radner in his two volumes introducing natural theology,1 the present volume pursues its task in two parts: first in a more straightforward, discursive register in this Introduction, and second by means of a series of poetic meditations on various aspects of the natural world. The two parts may be read independently of one another, as may each of the meditations in the second part.
1. The Problem
Life apart from the Creator and out of harmony with creation are phenomena by nature connected to one another. In much the same way that you couldn’t know much that’s worth knowing about Picasso if you had never seen any of his paintings, so our knowledge of God is to a significant extent a function of our knowledge of what he has made. We will not love what we do not know.
Population growth and urbanization have much to do with this want of knowledge, this disconnection from the primary realities of creation. The population of the world is far larger now than it has ever been. It took almost all of human history, until the year 1804, for the population of the world to reach one billion people. In just over a century, from 1804 to 1927, the population of the world doubled to two billion. The population reached three billion in 1960, four billion in 1974, five billion in 1987, six billion in 1999, and seven billion in 2012. The human population of the planet has not only grown significantly in recent history, but the rate of growth has increased as well.
And as the population of the world has grown, the proportion of the population living in cities has increased. Urbanization began in earnest in Europe during the high Middle Ages. In the United States overall, more people lived in the countryside than lived in cities until the 1920s, at which point the balance tipped. It was not until the 1990s that the balance tipped in the American South. According to median estimates, more people now live in the Dallas—Fort Worth metropolitan area (about six and a half million) than lived in all of North America (the United States and Canada) in 1492, when ā€œColumbus sailed the ocean blue.ā€
Nor is this by any means merely an American phenomenon. The population of Lagos, Nigeria, is now about forty-seven times what it was in 1950. There are twenty-one million people living in the greater Lagos metropolitan area. China now has over one hundred cities with populations over one million. Sixteen Chinese cities have populations over ten million (the United States has two: New York and Los Angeles).
Some deny that population growth is a problem. Michael Shellenberger, for example, notes that ā€œtechnology is a far bigger factor in determining humankind’s environmental impacts than fertility rates. Modern agriculture reduces by half the amount of land we need to produce the same amount of food.ā€2 This however ignores the fact that technologically-driven increases in agricultural efficiency are not evenly distributed, that the places in the world with the largest and fastest increases in population (e.g., Africa and Asia) also tend to be the least agriculturally advanced. Even supposing that agricultural land use efficiency has doubled the world over, the population has increased by a factor of more than seven since 1804, meaning the amount of land converted from wilderness to agriculture would have almost quadrupled in the same period.
Like population growth, the aggregation of people in cities is speeding up, intensifying, and becoming universal, a core feature of a pastiche of phenomena known collectively as globalization. Research indicates that there is a correlation between urbanization and the decline of religious faith, at least in America. Correlation does not entail causation, yet religious faith wanes in our nation as our population has grown and aggregated in cities.
Economic liberalism and its handmaiden, rapid technological advancement, have been important drivers of this demographic shift. The sorts of developments Michael Shellenberger had in mind—genetically modified seeds; the automation of farm equipment, agricultural processes, and animal husbandry; coupled with the radical aggregation of capital and economies of scale—have all made it possible, to grow and harvest food much more efficiently than before (on much less land, with much less human input). There is simply a lot less work for people to do outside of cities, and it takes fewer people to do it.
This has had radical implications not just for the environment, but for the patterns of life that formerly sustained a culture more closely tied to the primary realities of nature. None of it could have come about without the collusion of governments with capital. Roger Scruton maps the contours of that kind of collusion with respect to the rise of ā€œbig-boxā€ stores and the concurrent hollowing out of family-owned businesses in small towns:
Health and safety regulations imposed by the state . . . are responsible for the vast amount of non-biodegradable wrapping that festoons our food; state subsidies and inscrutable bureaucracies are responsible for our system of motorways; and it is the unequal impact of state subsidies and regulatory burdens that has enabled supermarkets to destroy the local food economy across Europe and America. State-subsidized roads permit supermarkets to operate on the edge of towns and to achieve enormous economies of scale. State imposed planning regulations compel local shopkeepers to build in confined spaces, to maintain costly facades and to serve customers who cannot park outside. State-imposed regulations governing packaging and inspection can be economically obeyed only through centralized processing and distribution, of the kind that supermarkets can manage for themselves. And the economies of scale that supermarkets achieve enable them to preside, from the edge of every town, over the decay of its centre and its destruction as a self-sustaining human habitat. This easy victory for the forces of environmental destruction would be impossible without the unequal burden of state regulations and the unequal benefit of state subsidies, both of which favor the edge-of-town retailer over the local store.3
Thanks to free markets and cheap energy, it is now poss...

Table of contents

  1. Title Page
  2. Acknowledgments
  3. Chapter 1: Introduction
  4. Chapter 2: On Language and Transcendence
  5. Chapter 3: Reason and the Destiny of Animal Life
  6. Chapter 4: Edge Effect
  7. Chapter 5: The Vernal Transgression of Boundaries
  8. Chapter 6: Politics and Nature
  9. Chapter 7: The Fall
  10. Chapter 8: Circles of Disturbance
  11. Chapter 9: Rod and Gun
  12. Chapter 10: The Sea
  13. Chapter 11: Grass
  14. Chapter 12: The Trinity River
  15. Chapter 14: Blood on My Hands
  16. Chapter 14: Epilogue: Impala
  17. Bibliography