Showing posts with label tim flannery. Show all posts
Showing posts with label tim flannery. Show all posts

Thursday, January 17, 2013

A Short History of Progress :: Ronald Wright

This was a short punchy book. It reminded me of the thriftiness of word of Geoffrey Blainey and his 'Short history of ....." series. Whilst also having the warnings of global catastrophy of Tim Flannery. Yet with Flannery I sensed hope, while with Wright and 'A Short History of Progress' I was left with an impending feeling of doom and hopelessness.

Wright's book though is about civilisations and there downfalls. The basic premiss is that most fall due to environmental factors. Incredible growth in which the natural resources cannot keep up. His concern and I admit it mine as well is that we are facing the same problem as civilisations from the past but on a global scale. I like how he wrote that we are using the earth capital resources instead of living of the interest from the earth.

So, basically unless we start to change consumption patterns and move globally to a more sustainable way of doing things, it looks as if disaster awaits. Maybe not in my life time but certainly at some stage.

On a side note, it was interesting his delving into history and using the stories of Gilgamesh and that of Noah's ark. The floods came to the Tigris and Euphrates due to the deforestation of land around these rivers. The trees, forests acted as huge sponges that once gone changed the flow of the rivers. I suppose I knew about other stories of floods but not in as much detail. That the stories of Gilgamesh were older and the comparison to Noah are strikingly similar.

I spent a lot of time after finishing the book pondering about what will happen to humanity globally. I don't think it will be pretty. But what my hope is that each generation will consider how fragile life is on earth is and how lucky we are. A new reverence and care will be part of the human DNA for our habitat.

 

Wednesday, May 18, 2011

Here on earth:: Tim Flannery

Here on Earth: A Natural History of the Planet

Just a quick note really to say that I've finnished reading Tim Flannery's 'Here on earth'. It was a real up and down book to read emotionally. I feel at time rather hopeless more so when I think of what we are leaving for future generations. The book really started to head and pick up steam in this direction. The effects of pollution, be it the amount of Carbon pumped into the air, deforestation, the declining of biodivercity due to modern farm practices....
One thing that fascinated me was the Gaia theory, I had never really heard of this before. From wikipedia
a broadly inclusive term for related concepts that living organisms on a planet will affect the nature of their environment in order to make the environment more suitable for life. This set of theories holds that all organisms on an extraterrestrial life-giving planet regulate the biosphere to the benefit of the whole. Gaia concept draws a connection between the survivability of a species (hence its evolutionary course) and its usefulness to the survival of other species.
I do think that we are all connected in some way especially with the Earth but this is the first soild thinking that I've heard relates to this. It sounds as if Flannery is a believer in this.

Yet the last couple of chapter there was beams of hope.  That population and planning is starting to take effect, that each generation is becoming more aware of humans impact on the environment. I probably wouldn't have kept reading if there wasn't. This stuff just gets me down after a while.

Good book and well worth reading.