I was thinking last night about predators. My son has an unnatural fascination with cougars. We were watching the Legend of Cougar Canyon and it was a very realistic portrayal of a cougar lifestyle. Do any of you find yourself abhorrent of predators, even though it is obviously nature's way and they can do no different? I found myself from there pondering exactly where humans fit into this scheme. It seems that nature has provided a perfect system based on the premise that everyone takes what they need from this earth and humans are obsessed with taking what they can get. I read the book Ishmael a long time ago and I remember being offended at the apparent veiw that humans are somehow outside the ecosystem. I understand now that we are uniquely in this position of being able to manipulate the ecosystem at will. We kill off all the natural predators in the area and then we install hunting season to thin the population of deer.
Are we, by our very natures, destined to be monsters, ravaging the earth and replacing nature with an artificial version of our own making? What can be done, assuming we can communicate this situation to all the people of the world, to give us a proper place in the ecosystem? I mean starting from where we are right now. My husband's family actually had a discussion with me about somethings like this recently and I was sounding off about factory farms. Thier responses were things like "Farm turkeys aren't anything like wild turkeys. They would die in the wild. If you leave them out in the rain they will drown from looking up at it." and "Where would all those cows go if we let them loose?" It struck me that they were in another dimension. I was thinking of how awful we are to have mutated a species for use as a food resource and they were thinking of how stupid farm turkeys are. Anyway, I didn't happen to marry a companion who shares my views, nor even my bent for philosophising.
I am reading a book right now called The Genious Within. It is about how humans believe the brain has a monopoly on intelligence and goes into great detail about the remarkable intelligence of bacterial colonies, slime molds, immune systems, etc. I tried discussing it with my husband and he said "Can we not talk about this? I feel like I'm in class."Since getting married and having a child there is an intellectual component to my life missing. I mean, I find teaching, raising and watching my child fascinating but all of my conversations are one sided these days. Ah, well. If anybody has the time and inclination to dig through this tangle of ramblings I might get a decent conversation out of it. So just throwing it out there.
Meg
Bookmarks