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A local metaphor for Global Ecocide? A local metaphor for Global Ecocide?

A local metaphor for Global Ecocide? - PowerPoint Presentation

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Uploaded On 2016-03-01

A local metaphor for Global Ecocide? - PPT Presentation

Easter Island Diamond writes I have often asked myself What did the Easter Islander who cut down the last palm tree say while he was doing it Like modern loggers did he shout Jobs not trees Or Technology will solve our problems never fear well find a substitute for woo ID: 238073

island easter earth metaphor easter island metaphor earth people diamond society population leads tree selfishness world destruction survive story

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Slide1

A local metaphor for Global Ecocide?

Easter IslandSlide2

Diamond writes:

I have often asked myself, “What did the Easter Islander who cut down the last palm tree say while he was doing it?” Like modern loggers, did he shout “Jobs, not trees!”? Or: “Technology will solve our problems, never fear, we’ll find a substitute for wood”? Slide3

Bahn and

Flenley

1992:

“…the person who felled the last tree could see that it was the last tree. But he (or she) still felled it. This is what is so worrying. Humankind’s covetousness is boundless. Its selfishness appears to be genetically inborn. Selfishness leads to survival. Altruism leads to death. The selfish gene wins. But in a limited ecosystem, selfishness leads to increasing population imbalance, population crash, and ultimately extinction.” - Slide4

Diamond:

“The parallels between Easter Island and the whole modern world are chillingly obvious. Thanks to globalization, international trade, jet planes, and the internet, all countries on Earth today share resources and affect each other, just as did Easter’s dozen clans… Those are the reasons why people see the collapse of Easter Island society as a metaphor, a worst-case scenario, for what may lie ahead of us in our own future.” -

Is it “chillingly obvious”?Slide5

From Benny P

eiser

The real mystery of Easter Island, however, is not its collapse. It is why distinguished scientists feel compelled to concoct a story of ecological suicide when the actual perpetrators of the civilization's destruction are more likely found in external circumstances

As a final point, I would argue that Easter Island is a poor example for a morality tale about environmental degradation. Easter Island’s tragic experience is not a metaphor for the entire Earth. The extreme isolation of Rapa Nui is an exception even among islands, and does not constitute the ordinary problems of the human environment interface. Yet in spite of exceptionally challenging conditions, the indigenous population chose to survive – and they did…

What they could not endure, however, and what most of them did not survive, was something altogether different: the systematic destruction of their society, their people and their culture via external influenceSlide6

More “myths”

EI is the story of a people who, starting from an

extremely limited resource

base, constructed one of the

most advanced societies in the world

for the technology they had available. However, the demands placed on the environment of the island by this development were

immense

. When it could no longer withstand the pressure, the society that had been painfully built up over the previous thousand years fell with it.Slide7

Diamond being sensible:

In 2007, after criticism of his book “Collapse”

“All parameters were stacked against Easter: It is relatively cold, dry, low, small, and isolated, with negligible nutrient inputs from atmospheric dust and volcanic ash, relatively old leached soils, and no uplifted-reef terrain. Thus, Easter became deforested not because its inhabitants were uniquely improvident, nor because its European visitors were uniquely evil, but because Easter Islanders had the misfortune to inhabit one of the Pacific’s most fragile environments.“ -

And a fragile ecosystem is subject to threshold failure

Induced by a natural disaster (Tsunami)Slide8

Discussion Question

Does this ecocide metaphor to the current environmental issues on the global Earth seem appropriate? Why or why not?