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The Paradox of Biophilia

 

     Edward O. Wilson wasn't the first to use the term "biophilia," but he brought it into popular discussion. His interest, as reflected in Biophilia (Harvard University Press, 1984) and with Stephen R. Kellett in The Biophilia Hypothesis (Island Press, 1993), appears not to be simply a pursuit of dispas­sionate science. There's also a moral pursuit involved. Wilson sees biophilia our often obscured but nonetheless hard-wired love of nature as an important clue to how biodiverisity can be saved. If we can get back in touch with just how deep an emotional attachment to nature we really have, we might be more con­sciously motivated to refrain from destroying it.

     Love of nature, like love of people, is fraught with treachery. Just as people who care about each other often hurt each other, those whose culture has been built on developing a relationship with the land often hurt the land. It's irrational, but plainly visible. Whether the Sumerian, Indus, Mayan, and other ancient cultures that destroyed their own land knew that they were doing so is not clear. Subsequent civilizations, which presumably knew what had happened to those earlier ones, continued to inflict the same abuses allowing defor­estation, erosion, soil depletion salinization, and contamina­tion to gradually degrade and destroy the land that meant so much to them. And that kind of destruction continues. We love the land most when we have conquered it. Why that is so remains one of the key mysteries of sustainability.

     Oscar Wilde once wrote, "Each man kills the thing he loves." It was part of a poem he composed while in prison, the "Ballad of Reading Gaol" about his reflections on a fel­low prisoner who had murdered his wife. The poem isn't widely remembered, but that line has been often quoted. It resonates widely, and many literary critics, philosophers, and psychologists have speculated about why it does. A common theme is that love too easily transmutes into a desire to pos­sess and to control. That in turn, precipitates backlash from the object of the love who may chafe under such a constricting bond. When the suitor is rebuffed, the desire for possession may be angrily transmuted into a desire for conquest, which may quickly escalate into violence.

     Whatever the explanation, Wilde's comment seems all too good a description of our relationship with nature, we love it, and in our zeal for possessing and controlling it we are increasingly suffocat­ing it. I recall a time when I went for a run in an arid area near the Mojave Desert, and came across a large, delicate, white lily-like flower. It was in a place where no rain had fallen in months. Thinking no one would believe I'd found such a flower in such a place, I picked it, put the stem in my water bottle, and ran home. It took me about an hour. When I took the flower out to put it in a vase for my wife, it had already wilted and turned brown.

Our attempts to possess and control are not confined to our love of the wild, however. The marked rise of civilization was the beginning of along process by which we have reshaped the wild to suit our own economic and emotional needs, domesticating wolves into dogs, turning small, sour fruits into big, sweet ones.  The cultivation of rice was transformed over centuries into raising koi.   

    Koi as we know them are essentially created by humans. Thereby hangs a tale, because what humans want from this invention is not the same in one person as it is to another. There is an intimate relation­ship between the Breeders, dealers, and owners, care of these creations exist with them.  A new kind of killing has begun, from the one that have been their primary caretakers. Our love of koi threatens to destroy them. Learn how to care for them properly.

  "Battling with Nature is Boundless Joy."
See Mao's War Against Nature, page 37.