We usually
imagine environmental concerns in terms of a human-caused
litany of losses. We have heard about the loss of biodiversity,
deforestation, degradation of land, climate change, toxins
in the air, and the disappearance of clean water and soil.
Amongst that welter of information, if we were admit the selfish
truth, we typically think about how such disasters might affect
us. We consider food security, human sperm counts, and endocrine
interrupters in the water. Too rapidly for the Pleistocene
mind to understand, the stability in the biosystems we have
come to take for granted seems to be deteriorating and the
notion is terrifying.
Many turn
away from the question at that point, for it's depressing
to think about an overwhelming array of pervasive and pernicious
issues, and solutions for such ubiquitous environmental concerns
seem to be thin on the ground. That's because we forget that
there is a concerted effort worldwide to deal with the environmental
crisis; although as a species we may be causing many of the
issues, we are not standing alone when it comes to trying
to solve them. We are working alongside bacteria, plants,
and animals who are actively struggling to ameliorate the
conditions under which we suffer, and great strides have already
been made biologically, politically, and technologically.
Like a
rock skipping across the top of the water, this study is meant
to outline the problems facing us, discuss the viability of
the possible solutions, debate the very human blind spots
which complicate our understanding of reality, and contemplate
what life might be like after we have gotten over the hump
of the Anthropocene.