The somber truth is that the vast bulk of nature’s staggering abundance has already disappeared. We live in a world characterized primarily by the relative silence and emptiness of its natural spaces. Underlying this devastation is the ideology of human supremacy—claiming innate superiority over nonhuman forms of life. But is human supremacy innate to humanity, or rather something specific pertaining to our dominant culture?
This excerpt originally appeared in Resilience.
Excerpted from The Web of Meaning: Integrating Science and Traditional Wisdom to Find Our Place in the Universe (published in June in the UK, and available July 13 in the US)
Shifting baseline syndrome
The nonhuman creatures with whom we share the Earth are being systematically annihilated by the Great Acceleration, as they lose their habitat, get hunted down, or poisoned by our pollution. There has been a 68 percent decline in vertebrate populations worldwide since 1970, with freshwater species such as amphibians registering a jaw-dropping 84 percent loss. Insects have been faring just as badly, with reports of “insectageddon” from some areas that have seen populations crashing toward extinction levels—such as the Monarch butterflies that migrate annually from Mexico to the United States, and have declined by 98 percent over the past thirty years.
There have been five mass extinctions of life in Earth’s history, caused by cataclysms such as volcanic eruptions or meteorite impact. Scientists warn that human activity is now causing species to go extinct at a thousand times the normal background rate, and that if we continue at this rate for a few more decades, we will have triggered the Sixth Extinction. Leading experts in the field, such as biologist E. O. Wilson, predict that half of the world’s estimated eight million species will be extinct or at the brink of extinction by the end of this century unless humanity changes its ways.
Why don’t we react in unbridled outrage to the devastation of the natural world taking place before our eyes? A major reason is that we don’t realize what we’ve lost. Back in 1968, in a song that became an icon of the environmental movement, Joni Mitchell sang about paving paradise and putting up a parking lot, making the point that you never know what you’ve got until it’s gone. She stirred millions of hearts—but she was wrong. The disturbing reality is that, once it’s gone, people forget they ever had it. Whatever conditions people grow up with are the ones they generally consider normal. This is a tribute to the amazing plasticity of the human mind, but it means that we tend to take for granted things that should never be accepted.
This phenomenon, known as “shifting baseline syndrome,” was first discovered by fisheries scientist Daniel Pauly, who was researching the drastic reduction in the size of catch off the eastern seaboard of North America, which had declined by 97 percent since written records began, although the fishermen remained strangely unconcerned. He realized that each generation viewed the baseline as whatever they caught at the beginning of their career, regardless of how much smaller it was than the previous generation, leading to what he called “the gradual accommodation of the creeping disappearance” of fish populations. Shifting baseline syndrome has since been shown to be pervasive everywhere in the world.
The somber truth is that the vast bulk of nature’s staggering abundance has already disappeared. We live in a world characterized primarily by the relative silence and emptiness of its natural spaces. It’s only when we read accounts of wildlife from centuries ago that we realize how much is gone. One eighteenth-century writer, standing on the shores of Wales, described schools of herrings five or six miles long, so dense that “the whole water seems alive; and it is seen so black with them to a great distance, that the number seems inexhaustible.” In the seventeenth-century Caribbean, sailors could navigate at night by the noise of massive shoals of sea turtles heading to nesting beaches on the Cayman Islands. In the Chesapeake Bay, plagued today by polluted dead zones, hunters harvested a hundred thousand terrapins a year for turtle soup. In the nineteenth century, passenger pigeons would blot out the sun when they appeared in massive flocks throughout the eastern United States. The last one died in a zoo in 1914.
The Great Dying
In normal times, extinction is a natural part of evolution: new species evolve from prior existing species, meaning that, rather than dying out, “extinct” species are really the progenitors of new ones. When extinctions occur, however, as part of a mass extinction, they represent a grave and permanent loss to the richness of life. Species exterminated by human development are wiped out from nature’s palette, terminating any possibility of further evolutionary branching. The average lifespan of a species is roughly a million years—the unfolding story of each one is, in E. O. Wilson’s words, a unique epic. We’ve seen how life’s prodigious diversity on Earth can be understood as nature’s own evolved intelligence, earned over billions of years. Through extinction, we are dumbing down nature, eliminating the plenitude it has so painstakingly accumulated.
Terminal as extinctions are, the virtual disappearance of most populations of existing species, known as extirpations, are perhaps even more devastating. It’s been calculated that, since the rise of human civilization, Earth has lost 83 percent of its wild mammals, 80 percent of marine mammals, and about half the biomass of trees and plants—a worldwide elimination of life’s abundance that has been aptly named by biologist Norman Myers “the Great Dying.” The species we view as iconic of nature’s magnificence, such as lions, tigers, elephants, and whales—now barely eking out an existence—were once prolific around the world. It’s estimated that, as late as 1800, twenty-six million elephants roved Africa. There are now barely four hundred thousand. The spectacular vista of wildebeest migrating in their millions across the plains of Africa is itself facing extinction, with the few remaining wildebeest finding migration routes blocked by fences, settlements, and roads. And the Great Dying continues at an ever-increasing pace: 2,000-year-old baobab trees that were around when Jesus lived suddenly dying off; three billion animals lost in Australia’s wildfires of 2019–20. In the words of environmental writer J. B. Mackinnon, “extirpation is the great, sucking retreat of the tide of life.”
The next time you go for a hike in nature, and marvel at its beauty, take a moment to realize that you are looking at a pale, shrunken wraith of what it once was. An accumulation of studies around the world measuring the declines of species and ecosystems indicates that overall we’ve lost around ninety percent of nature’s profusion. We live, Mackinnon observes, in a “ten percent world.” Those of us who gain sustenance from the sacred beauty of nature sometimes like to think of it as a temple. But, as Mackinnon notes, “a greater truth should be foremost in mind: Nature is not a temple, but a ruin. A beautiful ruin, but a ruin all the same.”
The ideology of human supremacy
It’s rather stunning to consider that all this destruction has been carried out by a species that has been around for less than 0.01 per cent of life’s history; a species that makes up just 0.01 percent of all life on Earth as measured by biomass. While some, such as Ecomodernist Stewart Brand, may glorify humanity’s ascendance declaring “We are as gods,” there are other ways to see it. Humanity has undoubtedly developed unprecedented power, but much of it has been used for destruction. What would other animals say about humans, if they had the opportunity? The animals that still remain on Earth are suffering an apocalypse unlike anything that has occurred in the history of this planet. Other mass extinctions happened through geophysical events that no-one was responsible for, such as volcano eruptions or meteorites. This one is a deliberate and systematic annihilation of life executed by one species with full knowledge of what it’s doing. It may be the Sixth Extinction, but as some have pointed out, a more apt name would be the First Extermination Event.
With the exception of a few hardy survivors such as cockroaches, rats, and pigeons, the animals that have been spared extirpation or extinction are mostly those which have been domesticated, such as cows, chickens, and pigs. But the word domestication doesn’t hint at the reality of their existence. For the most part, these animals are enslaved, brutally tortured, and mercilessly slaughtered merely for human convenience. The ongoing atrocity of the systematic torment administered in the name of humanity to 74 billion animals a year—each one a sentient creature with a nervous system as capable of registering excruciating pain as you or I—must represent the single greatest cataclysm of suffering that life on Earth has ever experienced. It’s most likely, as ecophilosopher Derrick Jensen points out, that if animals could speak, they would tell us that when they see the face of a human, they don’t see a god—they see the devil.
But, of course, they can’t speak, and that is why this ongoing holocaust continues with barely a mention in public discourse. Ever since the rise of agrarian civilizations, cultures have justified their domination over those they conquered by claiming innate superiority. In recent centuries, as Europeans subjugated other regions, a discourse of white supremacy—one that retains its pernicious power even today—asserted superiority over other races. Among those who recognize its toxic qualities, white supremacy is understood as a form of violence that inflicts suffering on others while simultaneously damaging the perpetrator by binding them to a system of brutality. What is less recognized is that the ideology of human supremacy—claiming innate superiority over nonhuman animals—has a similarly malignant effect.
Human supremacy is so embedded within our cultural norms that it is barely even discussed. As ecological philosopher Eileen Crist describes, “it is indoctrinated into humans from a tender age, without time-out, hammered into the human mind by innumerable conditioning feats of the dominant anthropocentric culture.” It is, however, a specific ideology with origins in the Western worldview that desacralized nature, turning it into a resource to exploit. Ultimately, it is the ideology of human supremacy that allows us to maltreat animals in factory farms, blow up mountaintops for coal, turn vibrant rainforest into monocropped wastelands, trawl millions of miles of ocean floor with nets that scoop up everything that moves—while glorying in the Anthropocene, claiming that nature only exists to serve human needs. Because it’s all around us and almost never mentioned, human supremacy is easy to ignore—but once you recognize it, you see it everywhere you look.
Anthropocene. . . or Capitalocene?
Once one becomes aware of the enormity perpetrated by the human race, it can sometimes lead to a revulsion against our own species. “We are serial killers beyond reason,” writes one author. Others occasionally liken the human race to a cancer, which spreads uncontrollably until it kills its host. Is it, however, human nature that has caused this unfolding catastrophe, or something specific pertaining to the dominant culture?
When malignant cancer cells spread, they generally do so on account of abnormalities in their DNA that cause them to ignore regulatory feedback from neighboring cells, leading to uncontrolled proliferation. Some see this kind of dynamic in global capitalism, which requires perpetual growth in production and consumption of resources just to remain stable. Rather than viewing humanity as a species overwhelming nature, they see the system of norms, laws, and power relations instituted by global capitalism as the source of this massive disruption. As such, they suggest that the “Anthropocene” is a misnomer: it unfairly lays the blame for climate breakdown and ecological collapse on all humans throughout history, whereas it’s really only a small minority of humans in the past few centuries. The numbers back them up: the advanced OECD countries, representing only 18 percent of the global population, account for 74 percent of global GDP, and are responsible for 73 percent of the carbon emitted since 1850. On average, a single U.S. citizen emits five hundred times as much carbon as a citizen of Ethiopia or Cambodia. The true name of our era, they argue, should be the Capitalocene.
Explore The Web of Meaning further on Jeremy Lent’s website. The book is now available for purchase in the UK and in the USA/Canada.
All of the above can be traced to the self-justifying filth of our dominant religions — particularly the 3 monotheistic, self-justifying Western mythologies of Judaism, Christianity, and Islam. The Bible gets to it in its 26th verse, where it spews the mind poison about God giving man “dominion over the Earth.”
I was a fervent Christian until my 20th year, when a philosophy grad from the University of Maryland challenged me to a debate on the existence of “God.” We began the discussion around 11:00 one Saturday night, at a military club in Okinawa. By 3:00 AM, we had migrated to a mountaintop, from there to a tea house, and finally to the roof of his barracks, where I found my “faith” lying around me in ruins.
I no longer recall the thrust of my opponent’s argument, given that I have spent much of the last 50 years coming up with my own. But it occured to me, a few decades ago, that the whole “God” idea was the creation of ancient astronomers, who looked at the sky, and observed that the other heavenly bodies appeared to be revolving around us. Therefore, they reasoned, Earth must be the center of the Universe. And, as its dominant species, some pre-existent being who looked like a man must have created it all for our benefit.
As modern astronomer Edwin Hubble discovered in 1924, that anthropocentric gibberish was the greatest error in the history of human thought. As Hubble observed, Earth is but a tiny speck in one of the outer arms of one of several billion galaxies. We are so small and insignificant that a universal creator would likely be as unaware of our existence as we are of any individual bacterium, living among the trillions that inhabit our intestines.
I did the math one summer, and the reality is that our little solar system is nonetheless so big (compared to us) that a spacecraft traveling at the speed of sound would need 16 years just to reach the sun, and 1100 years to transect the orbit of Neptune. And yet our world is to the known Universe as a speck of dust is to the solar system.
While discussing this with my atheist biologist stepbrother, several years ago, I also learned that around 98% of all wild animals either die of starvation, or are eaten by predators. Learning this, it occurred to me that an omnipotent god could have surely devised a better way of regulating animal populations. In a Universe governed by natural selection and evolution, however, it makes perfect sense.
As for humans and our legacy as perpetrators of death, the whole problem arose with commercial agriculture, the appearance of cities, and our cancerous, biblical obsession to “be fruitful and multiply.” At the time of Jesus, human population already stood at the horrific number (biologically speaking) of 175 million. It doubled another five times between the first century and 1995, and has grown by another 2.2 billion since then.
Just since the Industrial Revolution, human numbers have increased by 1100%, fed by the mechanization and plunder made possible by burning fossil fuels, the harnessing of electricity, and the invention of motors.
As a result, David Attenborough recently reported that 75% of all wildlife has disappeared in just the last 50 years. And it is estimated that by 2100, 90% of all insects will be gone. That alone could trigger a mass extinction, considering the role insects play in pollination and the food chain.
My guess is that if other species had a vote on humanity, all but the pets we feed would wish us dead. Indeed, there is no biological argument against the thought that the best thing that could happen to life on Earth would be for the human race to instantly, painlessly, and permanently disappear.
There is very little excuse for our existence. We applaud the relative innocence of the tiny fraction of us who continue to live in harmony with nature. But even they wouldn’t be missed.
By most estimates, humanity has between 5 and 20 years to radically alter our ways — to abandon industrialism, do our best to neutralize the chemical and nuclear poisons we have created, and to stop breeding like rats. And there is little or no evidence that we are likely to do any of it.
The only concept of god that makes any sense is something like The Force in Star Wars. It’s way beyond anything humans could possibly understand or communicate with, but we should try to be in tune with it and “go with the flow,” which is the basic concept of Taoism.
Wow, this essay says just about everything that I think and feel about this issue, with the exceptions of the portions about capitalism, and whether acting like a cancer on the Earth is human nature. The problems caused by humans began well before capitalism and even before money existed, as this essay notes earlier (“agrarian civilizations”). A much better question than whether it is human nature to act as a cancer on the planet is what the human choices are and what humans as a whole have chosen. If humans had chosen to focus on wisdom, empathy, and expanding our consciousness, we could be a shining light on this planet. Instead, humans chose to focus on ego, intellect, and very harmfully & unnaturally manipulating the physical/natural world, thus becoming a cancer. There are some small groups that have chosen the former, so you can’t say that it’s “human nature” to act either way; it’s choice, not nature.
The Elf queen Galadriel said it best regarding feeling the losses. This opening monologue brought it home for me in an extreme way that I had never felt it before, and considering that I had been an Earth First! campaigner, that’s saying quite a bit:
The world is changed.
I feel it in the water.
I feel it in the Earth.
I smell it in the air.
Much that once was is lost, for none now live who remember it.
As to thinking that this mostly dead world is normal because that’s the way it was when you were born: It works the other way too, unfortunately. People today are born with cars and electricity, as their parents and grandparents were also. They think that these very harmful unnatural things are normal because of that, when in fact they are abominations that never existed until the very recent past, only a tiny fraction of human existence, and an even tinier fraction of the Earth’s existence. But people feel entitled to these things and their benefits, because they’ve been around their entire lifetimes.
“Shifting Baseline Syndrome”
https://livinglearninganalytics.blog/2021/05/30/shifting-baseline-syndrome/
George Monbiot is usually pretty good, except that he supports nuclear power as a remedy for global warming/climate change, which is just advocating for industrial lifestyle instead of for life. Here, he’s correct that land needs to be restored to its condition before human destruction with agriculture and everything that came afterward.