Human Natures, Nature Conservation, and Environmental Ethics
TL;DR: Although scientists understand the general directions in which humanity should be moving to solve its environmental problems, the policy response of society remains pathetic and the cutting edge of the environmental sciences is now moving from the ecological and physical sciences toward the behavioral sciences, which seem to have the potential to develop ways to improve that response.
read more
Abstract: Articles T here is little dispute within the knowledgeable scientific community today about the global ecological situation and the resultant need for nature conservation (e.g., NAS 1993, UCS 1993). Now is a time of unprecedented, escalating , and well-documented environmental danger. There is general agreement among environmental scientists that the accelerating loss of biodiversity—populations (Hughes et al. 1997), species, and communities—should be a matter of great concern. They have concluded that nature must be conserved not just for its own sake but also for the sake of Homo sapiens, to which it supplies an indispensable array of ecosystem services (Daily 1997, Chapin et al. 2000) and products (Beattie and Ehrlich 2001). And for most of those scientists , and large numbers of environmentalists, conservation is a major ethical issue (Rolston 1988, Nash 1989). In addition , the scientific consensus is that the major driving forces of the destruction of humanity's natural capital are population growth, overconsumption, and the use of faulty technologies combined with inappropriate socio-political-economic arrangements to service that consumption (Holdren But the seriousness of the environmental dimensions of the human predicament is still unknown to the vast majority of the general public and decisionmakers worldwide. Although scientists understand the general directions in which humanity should be moving to solve its environmental problems, the policy response of society remains pathetic. As a result the cutting edge of the environmental sciences is now moving from the ecological and physical sciences toward the behav-ioral sciences, which seem to have the potential to develop ways to improve that response. The key is finding ways to alter the course of cultural evo-lution—change in the vast body of nongenetic information that humanity possesses and passes around between and within generations (Ehrlich and Holm 1963, Keesing 1974). Cultural evolution in this sense means more than what is usually called " history. " For example, the divergence of languages or the refinement of an aircraft's design is not ordinarily studied by historians, but these are part of cultural evolution. The critical importance of cultural evolution in understanding behavior has been reinforced by the discovery that there may be only some 26,000–38,000 genes in the human genome (Venter et al. 2001). It is now even more obvious that this " gene shortage " (Ehrlich 2000) is the final nail in the coffin of " evo biology of a wide variety of organisms, most notably butterflies, birds, and …
read more
Chat with Paper
AI Agents for this Paper
Find similar papers on Google Scholar, PubMed and Arxiv
Write a critical review of this paper
Analyze citations of this paper to find unaddressed research gaps
Citations
Outsiders Studies in the Sociology of Deviance.
TL;DR: In the 1966 paperback edition of a publication which first appeared in 1963 has by now been widely reviewed as a worthy contribution to the sociological study of deviant behavior as discussed by the authors, and the authors developed a sequential model of deviance relying on the concept of career, a concept originally developed in studies of occupations.
3.2K
Promoting ecosystem and human health in urban areas using Green Infrastructure: A literature review
Konstantinos Tzoulas,Kalevi Korpela,Stephen Venn,Vesa Yli-Pelkonen,Aleksandra Kazmierczak,Jari Niemelä,Philip James +6 more
TL;DR: In this paper, a conceptual framework of associations between urban green space and ecosystem and human health is proposed, which highlights many dynamic factors, and their complex interactions, affecting ecosystem health and human Health in urban areas.
2.6K
Conservation and Displacement: An Overview
Arun Agrawal,Kent H. Redford +1 more
TL;DR: A lack of synergy between conservation and other social goals such as poverty alleviation, disease eradication, economic growth, and social equity have been advanced by many different scholars.
From Publications to Public Actions: When Conservation Biologists Bridge the Gap between Research and Implementation
Raphaël Arlettaz,Michael Schaub,Jérôme Fournier,Thomas S. Reichlin,Antoine Sierro,James E. M. Watson,Veronika Braunisch +6 more
TL;DR: It is argued that a conceptual paradigm shift should take place in the academic conservation discipline toward more commitment on the part of researchers to turn conservation science into conservation action, and practical implementation should be regarded as an integrated part of scientific conservation activity.
342
References
•Book
Human Natures: Genes, Cultures, and the Human Prospect
Paul R. Ehrlich
- 01 Jan 2000
TL;DR: Leading evolutionary biologist Paul Ehrlich guides us through the thicket of controversies over what science can and cannot say about the influence of the authors' evolutionary past on everything from race to religion, from sexual orientation to economic development.
380
Viable populations for conservation
TL;DR: This excellent little book concentrates on theory, especially aspects of viability analysis, although there is a case study, and also examples of interagency activities.
371
Potential Biohazards of Recombinant DNA Molecules
Paul Berg,David Baltimore,Herbert W. Boyer,Stanley N. Cohen,Ronald W. Davis,David S. Hogness,Daniel Nathans,Richard O. Roblin,James D. Watson,Sherman Weissman,Norton D. Zinder +10 more
TL;DR: This paper presents a meta-analyses of the determinants of infectious disease in eight operation rooms of the immune system and shows clear patterns in response to antibiotics and in particular the presence of E.coli.
•Book
One Long Argument: Charles Darwin and the Genesis of Modern Evolutionary Thought
Ernst Mayr
- 01 Jan 1992
TL;DR: In this paper, Ernst Mayr traces the history of Darwin's evolutionary theories, emphasizing the extraordinary originality of Darwin genius and his skills as a naturalist, biologist and philosopher.
359
Cultural niche construction and human evolution.
TL;DR: This analysis suggests that where cultural traits are transmitted in an unbiased fashion from parent to offspring, cultural niche construction will have a similar effect to gene‐based niche construction, however, cultural transmission biases favouring particular cultural traits may either increase or reduce the range of parameter space over which niche construction has an impact.
352