You are depressed get help.
And there's something else I missed in your post: the idea that life in the wild is a life of "true freedom". That's a false dream. It's one that we can and often do realise with the help of modern civilization, but it didn't exist in a wild state.
The very idea of freedom is probably a new idea that came about after people had the freedom to spend their lives contemplating such issues.
But what sort of freedom do you think can be found in a hunter-gatherer lifestyle?
Freedom to starve if the rains don't come? Freedom to die of infection after a simple wound? Freedom to be infected by multiple parasites?
Certainly not the freedom to travel.
Not the freedom to learn about the great web of life on this planet, beyond a practical understanding of the species in a very specific locality, with no understanding of how they came to exist, the intricacies of their interactions, their relationship to each other and ourselves, or any understanding whatever of the great mass of life (microscopic and thus invisible) that goes unnoticed.
Freedom to listen to great music or be influenced by great works of art?
Alas, a life in the wild is perhaps the most powerful censor, you'll have access to the music produced by a few friends and family, the art of a few generations of your ancestors at best.
To improve the lot of yourself and others, and their understanding of the world in which they live? No, this paradise is unchanging, and thus by definition cannot be subject to such improvement. Your ideas will be forgotten, with time, particularly since the only method of maintaining them, storage in the minds of those who outlive you, is notoriously fickle.
What freedom, exactly, do you think can be found in the wild?
Of a world not filled with competitor groups who would literally kill you just for being alive.
I mean, yes, if we could make the earth into Pandora, I'd be into it. And not just because those alien chicks were hot. But we live on this planet, and there is no wild utopia to be found here.
I think the proper place for humanity is the wilderness. One of infinite sustainability, without the drawbacks of domestication, and to be truly free.
Yes, very much so. I don't deny this.
Obsessed with what? I very much care about nature.
Your ignorance is amazing.Band societies. Which were quite egalitarian I should add.
Without medication? From whom? I don't trust psychologists. They are rapists and only want to get you addicted to their substances. They have zero intention of helping you.
Your ignorance is amazing.
They were egaltarian and tribal, duh.
Bands are distinguished from tribes in that tribes are generally larger, consisting of many families. Tribes have more social institutions, such as a chief, big man, or elders. Tribes are also more permanent than bands; a band can cease to exist if only a small group walks out. Many tribes are sub-divided into bands. Historically, some tribes were formed from bands that came together from time to time for religious ceremonies, hunting, or warfare.
Bye baby, have fun in your wonderland, I will read your ignorant ravings in about a month.
Humans are what, part of nature, do you run around killing carpenter ants when they kill a tree?
You haven't really thought about this much,
you seem depressed,
so you focus on humans.
Well guess what, there are plenty of species that change/destroy the enviroment.
Go tell them to kill themselves.
Go kill cotote and red wolf, go kill all the blue green algae. Whatever.
Go out in nature, live off the land for a couple of weeks, see what it is like. See what it is like to not be sitting in your comfy room, with electricity, and running water. Try it, live it, you can, they even will allow you to homestead someplaces.
You want to pretend there was some 'pre-tribal' wonderland, go ahead fool yourself.
the real issue is that you seem depressed.
A much better, simpler time![]()
But that isn't what I asked you. I asked why you care about nature as a whole, while you don't care about the parts that make it up.Mother Earth would survive just fine without a few of her parts, especially the more rebellious and destructive parts, like humans.
Now you're worried about the enslavement of rice?I couldn't disagree more. Domestication is the polar opposite of freedom. It's slavery.
Which idea of freedom? Even your idea of freedom had to wait for civilization to be thought of.And that idea of freedom is slavery.
That's circular. Why do you only find the effects of civilization impeding freedom to be meaningful, but not, for instance, the actions of people of a neighboring band?By free, I mean the freedom to roam, hunt, and gather without the effects of civilization stopping you.
On a per capita basis? Much less.It'd come with a price yes. But what, you don't think people don't starve now?
No, you'd be killed by your neighbors if you tried to cross their land.Travel would exist, it'd just take a lot longer.
Actually, we would. Look at what native australians did to their environment with the use of nothing more high tech than fire.We'd also not be able to destroy it at the whim of our desires.
Because art is of value?Why is that important?
If you don't have a problem with censorship, that's fine. I do. And I find that it is something that impinges upon freedom.Why is this a problem?
That's fine: you don't want to improve the human condition. I do. I doubt I'll be able to do much in my life, but I am still happy that it's possible, and that many many people do enjoy the freedom to do just that.I don't see the problem there.
Again, why do only the effects of civilization matter when it comes to things that impede your freedom?freedom to roam, hunt, and gather without the effects of civilization stopping you.
Not to anywhere near the extent to which it happened in hunter-gatherer societies.And this doesn't happen now?
But that isn't what I asked you. I asked why you care about nature as a whole, while you don't care about the parts that make it up.
It's not necessarily true that the value in a thing is also there in it's constituent parts: the value in me doesn't exist in my atoms, it exists in the way that they are put together. So, it's certainly possible that your position is a sensible one.
That said, in this case, I don't see what particular property of "mother earth" you find to be of value.
But if you don't value those things, then what is it about "mother earth" that's valuable or meaningful?
The sending, sorting and filtering of spam email alone accounts for 33bn units of electricity each year
The carbon footprint of spam:
0.3g CO2e: A spam email
4g CO2e: A proper email
50g CO2e: An email with long and tiresome attachment
Yes, you've said so several times, I'm asking you why you care about the whole.I don't think you understand where I'm coming from. I am not concerned about any singular component of nature, yes, but I am concerned about the components as a whole, tallied up.
Yes, you've said so several times, I'm asking you why you care about the whole.
Sure, I'll tackle this a bit before I head to bed.
So, why do I care about the whole, rather than the constituent parts? I think the Earth is a super organism, not just a life support system, but the inner workers of a being, as outlined by James Lovelock's Gaia hypothesis. So, I care about the being that is Mother Earth, rather than individual constituent parts, which it can do without.
Two issues: one, I still don't feel you've answered my question. Basically you're saying that you care about "gaia" because it's a being, but you don't care about other beings. You haven't explained any particular properties of gaia that give it value.
But let's pass over that for now. Here's the other problem: Lovelock was wrong.
The very idea of gaia is in conflict with basic evolutionary biology: there's simply no mechanism for the earth's ecosystems to merge and become a "being" in the sense that anyone means. Yes, it's true that some species take advantage of the byproducts of others, and it's even true that the more species there are in an ecosystem the more efficient it becomes (at turning sunlight, water, and CO2 into living tissue), but that is simply an interconnected system, not a living organism.
Sure, I just figured it might start getting too philosophical. My question is "aspect of nature do you find valuable?". To make myself clear, I can look at a human and see value in its ability to experience and interact with the world: more specifically, I find my own experiences to be of value, and so when I look at others having similar experiences I consider that to have value as well. I can see that there is a similarity in the experiences of many forms of animal life as well, and so I attribute similar value to them.First, how do you feel I haven't answered your question? I know you said "pass", but I want to know. Explain and I will to the best of my abilities try to answer.
I read his book, but it was a long time ago.Second, are you familiar with Lovelock's work? Just curious.