THE BIG THREE a • A x“ á *i P fo F ts r.i IIN D S E Y ili F/ w N O T IO N S OF NATURE "The e n viro n m e n t." said Billy Holts, "This issue w ill focus on environm ental co n c e rn s ." EAT "T h a t’ s w here I’ ve spent my whole MORE life ," I th o u g h t. "I hope I can dredge up so m e th in g ." COOKIES A fte r considering possibilities. I've decided to render a broad historical sketch Cinnamon Ro«i. of those forces and vie w p o in ts that have led Pizza by the Suce, Muffins Espresso, us to our notions of "th e environm ent" as and Cookies we perceive it today For roughly 1 0 ,00 0 years. Paleolithic 239 N H E M L O C K man lived inseparable from his environm ent. Ph. 436 2832 The hunter gatherers of the green world made no d istin ctio n s betw een themselves and the natural w orld. They thought of nature as alive and sacred. They dw elt in the eternal present. Time was cyclical and recurrent, not m eted out in linear fashion w ith a past, present and brighter future. Man o f prehistory existed quite satisfactorily and harm oniously w ith the external world. His rich spiritual and m yth ic life invested all nature w ith d iv in ity . Home, for a band or tribe, w as w hore one found himself He kn o w no w ilderness. Closo relations existed aetw oen anim als, natural forces and man. I V » - • "* . r* w » e «•••* » m »• Human and animal form s easily interchanged r», • ••» » • • •• ee e in m yth and ritual. N eolithic man altered this w orld of Eden for all tim e. W ith the advent of agriculture, hunters and gatherers gradually 'orsook w andering and m igration and settled. S ettlem ent and site clearing for agriculture made possible the rudim ents of the "civilize d " w orld we kn o w today Tribes became sedentary, possessions and w ealth were accum ulated, biological products became available for trade and barter, and Internecine wars occurred to acquire desirable agricultural territory or sites of habitation. A psychological line, a fence, had been draw n betw een Civilized m an’ s places of cultiva tion and habitation and the CAMMOM DEACH natural environs the wildernoss. book C O M P A N Y W hat had existed as source the p O toe 634 132 m other earth, unified and sacred became Connor B»u> 4J6 I JO I resource, that w hich could be tamed, humanized and civilized. A schism developed betw een man and the rest of nature. The Levantine H ebrew 's notions of God and Man widened the rift between man and nature. Man was made in God’ s image, li soti h.ncn'l d istin ct from the rest of G od's handiwork He held dom inion over all creation. The lu e n ahí«* In liivi ram ifications and im plications of these Iin- phnuv beliefs should be obvious. The w orld and all i i i i i i i I h - i ui l i v in it w as his garden to tinker w ith as ho w ou ld . During the M iddle Ages, the Catholic C hurch view ed w ild areas as inherently evil Dark forcos d w e lt in glades, w oodland and marsh. W itches and sorcery forces of the A nti C hrist lurked in tarns and deep woods Gawam, the Green Knight, Lancelot and Others fo u g h t dark forces in the nether. M onks cut do w n groves of oak in Europe as ll\ a reaction against earlier cult w orship Man »■»Il li Ji.*»-"»42JI •is G od's agent tamed and bent nature to Il * pruli.ilih Iin* furthe r G od's w o rk. u n h li u l r l im The Renaissance introduced hi»uk lm i * i s ui sig n ifica n t changes in the manner man Iin - hui Id , view ed the w orld . Galileo, N ew ton and others found the natural w orld to be a place governed by scientific principles. The spirit, the em otions, and the m ythic qualities were bleached aw ay by scientific principles. Trees, earth, w ater, sky and man were w eighable, quantifiable m atter and little else W ith the advent of the Industrial Revolution, civilized man e ffectively had com pleted the separation betw een him self and the natural environs. Nature existed to be harvested, reform ed and ultim ately sold. Our modern w orld facilitated harvest and exploitation w ith additional technology and an insatiable appetite for consum ption. Perhaps a new consciousness w ill forestall the path w e ’ ve travelled One must hope. The ancient rhythm s and cycles still speak to modern man. He's a notoriously PjrrtOMHf ooor listener. John M uir has said: "Going to the ¿ 1 4 Tenth Street m ountains is going hom e... wilderness is a necessity... m ountain parks and reservations ». Ajfpru, O izjjm are useful not only as fountains of timber a » 7 io j u and irrigating rivers, but as fountains of 1__ _ J-if-UJJL 3 1 ife ." J L Sylvia Beach Hotel. som ew hat d iffe ren t direction. It is easy for anyone to point out a problem such as this Geojge Bush referred to the United and be critica l of it but to chart a course for States as "th e last great hope for m ankind". its correctio n is quite another thing. H ow ever w ell accepted it seemed to be at Education is again the key and a beginning. the time, some of us had great d iffic u lty in U ntil w e are serious about stabilizing or believing his c o n te n tio n w hole heartedly The popularity of Mr. B ush’ s statem ent w as reducing w orld population, there is little point m dealing w ith any other long term due to the fact that our political and considerations econom ic environm ent, and the methods In the historical w in d o w of used for judging them , are largely, if not hum ankind, w e have, in the blink of an eye, entirely, based on short term considerations w aged serious and profound e ffe c ts on our If hum ankind has only a couple of hundred p la net's natural environm ent. It has years left (and it m ay), then it w ould be suffered since the agricultural and industrial hard to com plete ly disagree w ith Mr Bush. ages As soon as people become If we are to leave a continuin g and heathy "de velop ed", they center all of life on legacy, how ever, it appears clear that them selves having a good tim e, a good George was just plain w rong. life, short term benefits, short term pleasure The past 1 50 years in our country - to such an exte nt that w e com e to the have been marked by very short sighted and idiotic conclusion that the only yardstick we am bitious policies and governing Only have to evaluate anything is m oney. Its recently have we begun to focus our nonsense W hy do we w an t to q u antify attention on the real problem s that face us e v e ry th in g ’ There are things that cannot be as a nation, as a people, and as a planet and w ill never be quantified Prim itive There is no p ro fit in dealing w ith these cultures are m balance w ith their natural problems, they rub against our deeply environm ent partly because they have not entrenched grams. They make us uneasy. generally reached this conclusion. Their They fester over tim e and become rites and religions are based on beliefs, not overw helm ing They are sim ply just easier on reasoning. And beliefs and feelings and to ignore in a short term , co st/b e n e fit, get enthusiasm and joy and so rro w and terror re elected at all cost system such as ours are all human em otions that cannot be Even though w e n o w hear of a heightened quantified In a w orld w here our prim ary awareness in societal concerns, an goal is to make more money, w e are not awareness that was not generally present preparing com ing generations for the 10 years ago, these concerns still tend to peaceful m anagem ent of our planet or the focus on our generation. They are still once vast natural legacy that we inherited. ladened w ith self servedness, W here our natural environm ent is shortsightedness and com prom ise We no concerned, we m ust instill a great sense of longer have the luxury of com prom ise. We continuance and m aintain our options have spent most of our options If we think indefinitely. beyond ourselves and beyond our life time, To begin to instill a lasting it is clear that there are certain things we consciousness o f these concerns in the should be paying very close attentio n to minds and c re a tiv ity of our children, we are today. There are at least three m ounting charged w ith the task of educating The problem s that we can neglect no longer current system of prim ary education does Education, the environm ent and w orld not w o rk. Anyone w ho can broadly claim population are long term time bombs. that it does has not taken a good hard look Education, obviously, is the key issue, as its at the human co n dition and our social fabric. existence, in the proper phases, w ill negate They are unw oven. And education at home, the other problems. or the lack there of, is as m uch to blame. Please do not confuse education, in The average Am erican child spends 4 to 5 this sense, w ith instruction. Education has hours per day w a tch in g television, and does nothing to do w ith learning ho w to so at the expense of w hatever type to good com press acetylene w ith o u t an explosion or m ig h t o th e r w is e e v o lv e fro m th is tim e at ho w to make an atom bomb. T h a t’ s home Toys and television establish in the instruction . A person is well educated w hen minds of children that w ar and violence are he know s ho w to act or to behave in inevitable. They are produced to flatter the d iffic u lt situations. W hen we discuss w hat prim itive side of us, they make no e ffo rt to long range consequences could be and w hat educate or im prove human nature. w ould serve hum ankind in the long run, we Education has failed because it has are truly participa ting in education. Today, taught us that "n o rm a l" behavior is fe w people think about future generations, acceptable. It is norm al to drain and dry a and this is a consequence of a lack of coastal marsh to build a C ostco. We like education. Even "p rim itiv e " cultures have C ostco. Very fe w people are educated to no need for the technology that instruction understand that w e are also suppressing life brings to develop collective ly their ow n in this area -- nurseries for all sorts of culture and their o w n cre a tivity creatures that may not exist again. It is also Instructional teaching tends to make people apparently norm al to maim, steal, rape, kill, reason more like machines than as human vandalize, or go to jail. We see this on beings. W hen a child is stuffed w ith things television or in m otion pictures. It is to remember, or things to be interrogated presented in a form tha t is meant to about on an exam, there is no tim e and no entertain, not educate. M any of us do not incentive to think about anything but have the fra m ew o rk to interpret such things proving w hat he has learned. And any other w ay than to be impressed by unfortuna tely, w hat he learns has nothing to them and convinced that they are normal do w ith real life and real problems We are and acceptable. social beings, and to live ir. society w ith the There is a future shining in a ba by's high degree of mind that we have requires eyes We can ensure it by agreeing that education. there are m ounting problem s that must be In spite of the fact that nearly any dealt w ith . And by agreeing that they m ust ailm ent you m ight w ish to consider can be be dealt w ith n o w , not w hen they are directly related to our sheer numbers, there critical, as is our nature. And by are very fe w governm ents or organization recognizing that there are certain sacrifices that are seriously doing anything about that m ust be made in order to properly deal w orld population. On the flip side, there are w ith them . The con dition s for establishing many groups, particularly religions, w hich new w ays of th in k in g w JI not likely be any are doing som ething about w orld population. better than they are now . The vast m ajority U nfortunately, they are w orking in a of us w ill m arch along blindly, w orkin g tow a rds some typ ica l end. Others, hopefully s u ffic ie n t in num bers to be effe ctive , w ill look beyond, w ay beyond, and teach the rest of us h o w it's done. By Ron Logan U R SU LA U LR IC H RELIEF T1LES IN T E R J O R /E X T E R J O R D E C O R A T IO N O P H O M E A N D B U S IN E S S By Peter Lindsey V C A N N O N BEA CH I .I B K \B \ 1)1 Swtl. r o b . i C*MMi B»«h OR »7110 (N neZ a id operat'd M lAe Library a id 8 ..»lan i l7yA o' ' C a ll« * fim .b urrtK urr to« may to custom designing qua lity handm ade /ew elry SANDPIPER SQUARE UPSTAIRS You are Cordially Iniuted to help relebrate my SiMtb Rnmoertary. Saturday, Moy 1st 1993 6 30 6 30 pm We w ill fe a tu r e new pieces by S h aro n A a b e r . Sasha S a a u e ls . and M a rty H a rt Coteroc Dy Heo'f Br s Music by Donlwl Holloman P O . Box 6 9 9 C a n n o n B each. O R 971 10 (503) 436 0737