For The Love Of Earth
by David Korten
On July 9, New York magazine published “The Uninhabitable
Earth,” a worst-case climate change scenario suggesting that our current human
course may produce an unlivable future for Earth. A burst of media commentary
and controversy followed, and it quickly became the most-read article in the
magazine’s history.
I’m often struck in conversations with friends and
colleagues by the number who feel that humans may not have a future. They are
comforted, however, by the thought that Earth will ultimately recover. This
response suggests that in some deep sense, our love for Earth may exceed our
love and concern for our own species. Perhaps we consider our fate a fitting
punishment for the sins that we, in our anthropocentric arrogance, have
committed against one another and the Earth that birthed and nurtures us.
No one knows for certain the outcome of human-caused climate
disruption and accelerating depletion of Earth’s fertile soils, freshwater
supplies, forests, and fisheries. Nor can we be certain of the causes and
consequences of deadly new infectious diseases,declining human sperm counts,
and Earth’s release of methane from the melting permafrost.
We are coming to understand that Earth is a living
superorganism that self-organizes to create and maintain the conditions
essential to its own vitality—and our human existence. Human activity, however,
is disrupting living Earth’s regenerative system. We are destabilizing the climate
through the release of sequestered carbons; disrupting natural habitats through
ocean acidification and temperature change; destroying natural forest
andgrassland habitats; and depleting, degrading, and contaminating soils and
sources of fresh water on which all species depend. This in turn drives species
extinction and renders growing areas of Earth uninhabitable.
I recently read Clive Hamilton’s book Defiant Earth: The
Fate of Humans in the Anthropocene. Hamilton notes that as humans have become
like an invasive species, Earth has begun to respond as living organisms do:
rejecting the invader. He goes on to suggest that humans may be disrupting
Earth’s living systems beyond her capacity for self-healing. More startling—but
equally plausible—is Hamilton’s suggestion that Earth’s survival as a living
organism may depend on humans transitioning from our role as Earth exploiters
to a role as facilitators of Earth healing.
Herein lies a potentially game-changing insight. Earth has
recovered before from extreme shocks and mass extinctions, but there is no
guarantee. Earth may now need us as much as we need her.
Begin with a recognition that Earth is breathtakingly
special. Among the now estimated 2 trillion galaxies in the universe,
scientists have yet to identify another planet with the water, soils,
atmosphere, and climate required to sustain complex life. Earth may be a unique
miracle in the vastness of creation.
I find it impossible to acknowledge Earth’s distinctive
beauty and wonder without being overwhelmed by unbearable grief and despair at
what humans—in our anthropocentric arrogance—have done to her. Our actions
represent a breach of cosmic proportion in our human responsibility to creation
and Earth.
As individuals, most humans regularly demonstrate an
extraordinary capacity for love and caring—sometimes to the extent of
sacrificing our own lives for others. This for me demonstrates the positive
potential of our nature.
As societies, however, we have demonstrated an extraordinary
capacity for violence and mutual oppression at the expense of both ourselves
and Earth. It appears our nature is defined by neither love nor violence, but
rather by our ability to choose between sharply contrasting and deeply
conflicting paths. We exercise that choice both as individuals and, through our
culture and institutions, as a global species.
Disgusted by our long history of violence and abuse against
one another and Earth, we humans seem ready to abandon hope for ourselves. But
what of our Earth mother? Might our love for her hold the key both to her
salvation and to ours? Might we, by willful choice, transition from Earth
exploiters to Earth healers? If we recognize Earth’s uniqueness, her need for
our help, and our responsibility to respond, might we unite in common cause?
Might we muster sufficient commitment to serve as loving healers to two of
creation’s most extraordinary miracles—a living planet of spectacular beauty
and a species with a unique capacity for conscious choice?
Dr. David Korten is the author of Agenda for a New Economy,
The Great Turning: From Empire to Earth Community, and the international best
seller When Corporations Rule the World. He is board chair of YES! Magazine,
co-chair of the New Economy Working Group, a founding board member of the
Business Alliance for Local Living Economies, president of the Living Economies
Forum, and a member of the Club of Rome. He holds MBA and PhD degrees from the
Stanford University Graduate School of Business and served on the faculty of
the Harvard Business School.
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