Island Civilization creates a mental
picture of an idea that will intuitively provide a better atmosphere for
generations to come. Roderick Nash
emphasizes the importance of the wilderness from the beginning, and as human
nature, both physically and mentally has changed, so have our motives toward
progressing as a whole union. The
wilderness was not proven to be effective and important to the lives of humans
until change had been made. Once gone,
the realization kicked in and there were very few options available as to how it
could be fixed at the time. Roderick
Nash makes sure we all understand that the environment is not only significant
in general, but that it’s significant to us.
Without that understanding, change cannot be made large enough to have
an effect on the entire world population.
Nash explains that people are now starting to realize the environment is
a huge part of our daily lives, and that what we do is not always the most
important. Writers such as Henry David
Thoreau, John Muir, and Albert Schweitzer stressed the importance of
preservation. They wrote about ways to
conserve and respect the environment, and by doing so their findings and
personal views began to appear in modern culture and spread all through the
human race. Nature preservations,
national parks, and environmental acts giving species rights of their own
opened the eye of the public to a certain degree. Although the new research brought out was
encouraging in hopes of a brighter future, Nash indicated that there is still
damage done/being done to the environment and problems still reside amongst our
existence with nature. If this
negativity persists, in a century wilderness could disappear and the scattered
remnants left behind would be all that was left. From this point on, fixing this problem is up
to us. Nash explains that we have an
impact on only a small portion of the world, but in order to do even that, we
must become “self-willed.” We haven’t done the rest of the world any
favor by creating the world we live in today; our technological advances and
creations have put a damper on the environment, so it is now our time to use
these advances to create something worthwhile.
It is what we do with technology that will better our future.
Nash’s article inspired me in a way that
really caught my attention. Approaching
the environmental impact in the way he did sparked my curiosity as to how our far
future may be. I think the ideas posed
in the article regarding a future plan of improvement for the environment all
seem slightly distant from today’s society.
The thought of concentrating humans in various areas around the world is
so different than what we are all used to that it could not be implemented
anytime soon. I feel that as of now,
Island Civilization is far too advanced for the world we live in, but quite
possibly in the Fourth Millennium a change so drastic could be an option. I was inspired by Nash’s response to using
the technological advances in society to create a way to make our environment a
better place. We need these thoughts
captured by the public eye in order to make a change, and by publishing and
making a confident, valid statement there is hope that such an idea will be
promised. I do agree with quite a few of
Nash’s statements, although there is much time needed and a dramatic increase in
human motivation to complete such a task.
I completely agree with the idea that this strategy is way before its time. The whole article is drastic, but drastic in a good way. We need ideas like this to provide the change we really need. However, the world is not ready for this change yet, like you said. I thought you had some very valid points on trying to make Nash's theory work.
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