Don't Be Like Britannicus
The ecological and interlocked civilizational crisis is not primarily technological but historical and cultural, rooted in the long development of Western attitudes toward nature and human relations. His causal structure falls into three connected domains. First is our historical attitudes toward nature, especially the dualistic view separating humanity from nature. This led to the belief that nature exists to be mastered, dominated, or exploited. This in turn led to the rise of instrumental rationality—valuing efficiency and control over ecological balance. The crisis must be understood through the history of how our present attitudes toward nature and our fellows came into existence. The way that technology is applied outpaces ecological knowledge, creating effects we cannot predict. Our science encourages linear thinking in a nonlinear ecological world. DDT is a good example. On the institutional scale there are several factors. Economic systems that reward short‑term gains over lon...