The Future of Life by Edward O. Wilson
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Book Reviews
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The eminent Harvard naturalist and Pulitzer
Prize winner Edward Wilson marshals all the prodigious
powers of his intellect and imagination in this impassioned
call to ensure the future of life. Opening with
an imagined conversation with Henry David Thoreau at
Walden Pond, he writes that he has come "to explain
to you, and in reality to others and not least to myself,
what has happened to the world we both have loved."
Based on a love affair with the natural world that spans
70 years, Wilson combines lyrical descriptions
with dire warnings and remarkable stories of flora and
fauna on the edge of extinction with hard economics.
How many species are we really losing? Is environmentalism
truly contrary to economic development? And how can
we save the planet? Wilson has penned an eloquent
plea for the need for a global land ethic and offers
the strategies necessary to ensure life on earth based
on foresight, moral courage, and the best tools that
science and technology can provide.
Publisher's Weekly
Legendary Harvard biologist Wilson
(On Human Nature; The Ants; etc.) founded sociobiology,
the controversial branch of evolutionary biology, and
won the Pulitzer Prize twice. This volume, his manifesto
to the public at large, is a meditation on the splendor
of our biosphere and the dangers we pose to it. In graceful,
expressive and vigorous prose, Wilson argues
that the challenge of the new century will be "to
raise the poor to a decent standard of living worldwide
while preserving as much of the rest of life as possible."
For as America consumes and the Third World tries to
keep up, we lose biological diversity at an alarming
rate. But the "trajectory" of species loss
depends on human choice. If current levels of consumption
continue, half the planet's remaining species will be
gone by mid-century. Wilson argues that the "great
dilemma of environmental reasoning" stems from
the conflict between environmentalism and economics,
between long-term and short-term values. Conservation,
he writes, is necessary for our long-term health and
prosperity. Loss of biodiversity translates into economic
losses to agriculture, medicine and the biotech industries.
But the "bottleneck" of overpopulation and
overconsumption can be safely navigated: adequate resources
exist, and in the end, success or failure depends upon
an ethical decision. Global conservation will succeed
or fail depending on the cooperation between government,
science and the private sector, and on the interplay
of biology, economics and diplomacy. "A civilization
able to envision God and to embark on the colonization
of space," Wilson concludes, "will
surely find the way to save the integrity of this planet
and the magnificent life it harbors."
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The
Future of Life by Edward O. Wilson
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