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Spiritual Ecology & the Lesson of Crete

By Nina Munteanu

If Gaia is our “Natural Mother” then Ecology is her language—Nina Munteanu

In a time when North American scientists and politicians are debating the pros and cons of a new carbon tax, theologian Sallie McFague contends that climate change currently poses a greater danger to the globe than Nazism prior to the Second World War (See my postscript at the bottom of this post). In a previous post, I described the debilitating psychological condition called solastalgia, a response to the loss felt in climate change-related impacts. McFague goes so far as to embrace a militant approach to the problem, urging citizens to dedicate themselves fully and be willing to sacrifice to save the planet’s eco-system. In her recent book, A New Climate for Theology, McFague espouses a spiritual attitude of gratitude and praise toward the natural world while adopting a radical war footing against global warming.

McFague widely defines “spiritual” to include the secular appreciation of nature. Rather than regarding God as a “being, McFague subscribes to the idea that God is the source of life, love and hope. A spiritual approach would provide the inner strength to tackle the worst effects of changing climate patterns, says Douglas Todd of the Vancouver Sun, who added, “I have been re-convinced of the necessity of a spiritual response to environmental problems.”

A spiritual connection with nature is nothing new. First Nations peoples have practiced it for millennia.

Riane Eisler, author of the Chalice & the Blade, writes of the ancient Bronze Age culture of Minoan (later Minoan-Mycenean) Crete (1,000 to 1,500 BCE), who still revered the Goddess. Citing Nicolas Platon, an archeologist who had excavated the island for over fifty years, Eisler writes of a society in which “the whole of life was pervaded by an ardent faith in the goddess Nature, the source of all creation and harmony”; this in a time when art extolled the symbols of nature—such as the serpent and butterfly, both symbols of transformation, rebirth and wisdom.

“In Crete,” writes Eisler, “for the last time in recorded history, a spirit of harmony between women and men as joyful and equal participants in life appears to pervade [in] a tradition that is unique in its ‘delight in beauty, grace, and movement’ and in its ‘enjoyment of life and closeness to nature.’ ” Despite the fact that they were surrounded by threats from an increasingly warlike and male-dominated world, Cretans remained an “exceptionally peace-loving people” and their art did not idealize warfare. Cretans maintained “an ardent faith in the goddess Nature,” writes Platon. “This led to a love of peace, a horror of tyranny, and a respect for the law. Even among the ruling classes, personal ambition seems to have been unknown; nowhere do we find the name of an author attached to a work of art or a record of the deeds of a ruler.”

“The differences between the spirit of Crete and that of its neighbors,” writes Eisler, “are of more than academic interest.” The lack of Cretan military fortifications and signs of aggressive war—in sharp contrast to the walled cities and chronic warfare that were elsewhere already the norm—provides a confirmation from the past that peaceful human co-existence is not just a utopian dream.”

Cretan art reflected a society in which power was not equated with dominance, destruction and oppression. I think it is no coincidence that gender equality and harmony is linked to the pantheistic value of nature. The appreciation of beauty, grace and harmony is a “feminine” characteristic, one that ambitious warlike and highly competitive exploitive societies have no time to cultivate.

Eisler notes that a “recognition of our oneness with all of nature” lay at the heart of both the Neolithic and Cretan worship of the Goddess. She adds, “Increasingly, the work of modern ecologists indicate that this earlier quality of mind, in our time often associated with some types of Eastern spirituality, was far advanced beyond today’s environmentally destructive ideology. In fact, it foreshadows new scientific theories that all the living matter of earth, together with the atmosphere, oceans, and soil [and I would add the universe] forms one complex and inter-connected “life” system.” Quite fittingly, scientists James Lovelock and Lynn Margulis called this the Gaia Hypothesis—Gaia being one of the ancient Greek names of the Goddess.

At the same time that Riane Eisler was writing The Chalice & the Blade, Lynn Margulis developed her theory of endosymbiosis and suggested that evolution advanced through cooperation more than the Darwinian paradigm of competition (surely a “masculine” outlook).

Eisler provides examples of sociobiologists who draw on nineteenth-century Darwinism by citing insect societies to support their androcratic (social and political rule by men) theories. If we are to truly rise victorious over the scourge of climate change—a function of our current lifestyle and paradigms—we will need to adopt a cultural evolution that embraces a partnership society heralded by new and renewed symbology, language and “myth”.

For a few years I co-taught an environmental education course for primary and secondary school teachers. The course was intended to help teachers introduce environmental precepts and general awareness in all aspects of the primary and secondary school curriculum, such as creative ways to infuse environmental stewardship in courses from math to art. As much as I liked the integrative approach to this program, it is my belief that the “soft” science of Ecology should be taught as a basic course throughout a student’s entire school career (from Grade 1 to 12), giving it the prominence it deserves as a life-lesson mandate not unlike the three Rs. I am so convinced of this that I will be participating and speaking with panelists (including the Dalai Lama) at the Mind and Life Institute’s conference on Altruism & Compassion in Economics in Zurich this spring.

Ecology is considered a “soft” science, because it integrates all other sciences and, as such, is more the study of relationships, links and consequence. As the study of ecosystems and the environment, Ecology lets us look at ourselves and how we relate to all other things, living and non-living, on this planet and ultimately the universe: the approach is only limited by our own perceptions. Ecologists study natural systems, which include all the systems in our society such as our economic systems, our social systems, business and financial models, cultural interactions and technological use. It behooves us to look to Nature’s Wisdom, to Gaia (our “mother”) for Her timeless lessons in our evolution. If Gaia is our “natural mother” then Ecology is her language.

~~~~

Post script:

Nazi Germany, contends Riane Eisler, demonstrated the most violent reaction to the gylanic (e.g., society in which there is balance and equality between the sexes) thrust, proving to be the modern regression to the earliest and most brutal form of proto-androcracy and a foreshadower of a neo-androcratic future.

Like the Kurgans before them, the Nazis killed, plundered and looted—particularly in their wholesale slaughter of Jews. Likewise, they saw a woman, idealized by the Nazis as the hausfrau, as an “often pleasant domestic animal” (Nietzsche) to be used by men for sexual enjoyment, personal service, entertainment, and procreation. It was, in fact, Hitler’s plan to reward decorated soldiers with the right to have more than one wife as a warrior’s booty. According to the Führer, not only women but “weak” and “effeminate” men like Jews were the natural inferiors to his new race of “supermen”.

References:

Eisler, Riane. 1989. The Chalice and the Blade: Our History, Our Future. Harper & Row. New York. 296pp.

Castell, Alburey. 1946. An Introduction to Modern Philosophy. Macmillan. New York. 357pp.

IPCC error rate: You were expecting something else?

Posted on: February 12, 2010 9:43 AM, by James Hrynyshyn

Via the ever-vigilant Stoat, I draw your attention to a letter to the Netherlands parliament from by 55 Netherlands scientists. Along with the usual “the science remains sound” defense of our understanding of anthropogenic global warming, it provides some useful perspective:
The writing of IPCC reports and its quality control remains the work of humans. A guarantee for an error free report is an unachievable ideal, however much an error free report is highly desired

Just as a thousand private emails are bound to include a few intemperate remarks and elucidation of wishful thinking, the thousands of pages of reports that draw on 18,000 sources were bound include a few dubious references. Anyone who finds the current error rate (3 or 4, depending on who’s counting) should read Stephen Schneider’s Science as a Contact Sport for insight into just how incredible it is that the IPCC quality control process is a rigorous as it is.

2010 IGES Earth Day Photo & Essay Contest for Grades 5-8


Win a Digital Camera or Other Prizes; Photos must be snapped April 19-30

Springtime is here again. And that means changes are taking place in the air, land, water and wildlife all around us. Celebrate Earth Day with middle school students across the country by taking a photograph of something that is changing in your local environment.

If you are in grades 5-8, you can be part of this unique national effort to capture our changing world by taking a photograph anytime from Monday April 19 through Friday April 30, 2010 (Earth Day itself is April 22). The picture could show a change taking place in your backyard or neighborhood, near your school or in a local park, or off in the distance toward the horizon.

Then, research and write an essay about the photograph (400 words or less) that answers the following questions:

· What is the change taking place in your photograph?             
· What may be causing the change?
· Was the change expected?
· How might the change impact surrounding areas, including people?
· How might this picture look different in the future?

Entries will be judged by Institute for Global Environmental Strategies (IGES) staff based on relevance to the contest theme (depiction of change in the environment), uniqueness and overall appearance of the photo, and quality of the essay.

The top three winners will receive a digital camera, digital photo frame and digital photo keychain, respectively. The top 10 winners will receive their photograph in a special frame commemorating Earth Day 2010, and their photographs and accompanying descriptions will be featured on the IGES Web site.

Entries must be received by email or postmarked by May 12, 2010. Winners will be announced on the IGES Web site around June 1, 2010.

For submission instructions, entry form, and suggestions for using this activity in the classroom, please visit:

www.strategies.org/EarthDayPhoto

About IGES: Located in Arlington, Va., IGES was established in 1994 and is a 501(c)3 nonprofit organization supported by public and private entities. IGES is a trusted leader in Earth and space science education, communication and outreach, and in fostering national and international cooperation in observing the Earth.

Sponsor a Student Contest: Is your company or organization looking for a way to support science education? Contact IGES at info@strategies.org for sponsorship opportunities. In addition to the photo contest for grades 5-8, IGES offers a science-themed art contest for students in grades 2-4, and cash awards for grades 9-12 students demonstrating the best use of geospatial tools or data to study Earth.

CONTACT
Dan Stillman
Institute for Global Environmental Strategies
(703) 312-7138 (Phone)
(703) 312-8657 (FAX)
Email: dan_stillman@strategies.org

The End of the Line official T-shirts and a second TV broadcast in the UK

We are very excited to announce that our 100% organic official ‘The End of the Line’ T-shirts are now available via our online shop.

The T-shirts come in three different designs. Two are focused towards our campaign with slogans ‘Save the Bluefin Tuna’ and ‘There aren’t plenty more fish in the sea’ and one official ‘The End of the Line’ design with a fishtail on the back. For woman we offer white, purple & bright blue T-shirts. And for the men we have white, black and bright blue.

We have chosen EarthPositive T-shirts who are certified under the Global Organic Textile Standards and well as the Fairwear Foundation for Ethical Labour Practices. EarthPositive have a low carbon policy and have a ‘No Airfreight’ policy. They use containerized ocean shipping, thus the carbon footprint generated by transporting to Europe is negligible, and more like a fingerprint, less than 1% of the total and are made in manufacturing facilities powered by wind turbines.

We listened to your feedback about our T-shirts and put a lot of thought into not only the design but how they were made and transported. We hope you approve.

Also available via our online shop are limited edition cinema posters, our UK DVD and available very soon will be signed copies of the book ‘The End of the Line’ by the author Charles Clover. If there are other TEOTL products you think we should be offering why not drop us an email. If there is enough of an interest we will have them made and put in the shop.

The release of the North America TEOTL DVD is set for 23rd February. But you can pre-order your copy via this link http://www.docurama.com/productdetail.html?productid=NV-NNVG169491

We are hoping to release subtitled DVDs in other languages in the coming year but please be patient as we are a small team with a big task on our hands. In the mean time why not organise your own screening of the film via our ‘organise a screening’ section on our homepage just below our trailer.

For are UK fans we can announce that ‘The End of the Line’ will be broadcast on Channel 4 at 7.15pm on Saturday 6th March so please let all your family and friends know.

And we are excited to announce that ‘TEOTL’ was screened at Australia’s parliament on February 23rd (look out for a further update on how the film was received) and we will be screening the film at Ireland’s Parliament in Dublin on 25th March.

The End of The Line Team

Who are the people in your denial neighborhood?

Category: climate
Posted on: March 2, 2010 9:51 AM, by James Hrynyshyn

As regular readers will know, I prefer the term “pseudoskeptic” over “denier” when it comes to those who insist we needn’t be worried about climate change. This is because the common denominator among any set of such characters tends to be a misapplication of the scientific method, a failure to apply rigorous skeptical analysis to the subject. Not all of these pseudoskeptics are deniers, as this list from Foreign Policy makes clear.

Indeed, the distinctions among the selected “Guide to Climate Skeptics” make it even more important to choose our descriptors carefully. I would argue that calling them “skeptics” is the authors’ first mistake. But let’s look at each one in turn as FP tries to “sort out the noise from the serious concerns.”

First up is Ross McKitrick, an “economist at the University of Guelph in Ontario; fellow at the Fraser Institute, a free-market think tank.” This is the economist half of the “hockey stick is flawed” duo, along with Steve McIntyre, who doesn’t rate his own entry for some reason. McKitrick may have once been a genuine skeptic, but long after the hockey stick was revised, confirmed and validated a dozen times over, he’s still at it, suggesting no real devotion to science as such. Associating himself with the Fraser Institute, which has never shown any commitment to evidence-based analysis, further undermines his credibility.

Next is Roger Pielke Jr., but not his father. Another curious selection. Pielke gets lot of attention from former NY Times reporter Andy Revkin, but also warrants his own entry in Tim “Deltoid” Lambert’s list of those who consistently get the science wrong. The thing to note is Pielke is not a climatologist, but a social scientist who describes his interests as “understanding the relations of science and politics, technology policy in the atmospheric and related sciences, use and value of prediction in decision making, and policy education for scientists.” He is also not a climate skeptic, accepts the basics of anthropogenic global warming and objected to FP’s decision to include him on the list.

Number 3 is John Christy, who made a name for himself, along with creationist Roy Spencer, pointing out that satellite data showed the world wasn’t warming anywhere near as much as the ground-based data suggested. A few years ago, though, it turned out the satellites had been miscalibrated and when their data were corrected to take that into account, the discrepancy disappeared. His data for this past month show the Earth is about 0.72 °C above pre-industrial levels. Yet he continues to make contrarian statements. Curious really. Hard to figure him out.

Fourth is Richard Lindzen, the once-respected scientist who is now largely considered a crank. Although he’s obviously a right-wing ideologue, and doesn’t publish much anymore, he’s the most scientifically accomplished on the list and it would be foolish to dismiss him. I would argue that he and Christy are perhaps the only two genuine scientific skeptics on the list and as such his arguments merit consideration. Until now, however, his arguments have failed to withstand criticism from his peers.

Then we have Bjorn Lomborg, who isn’t a publishing scientist or even a denier. He accepts the science, just takes issue with the threat climate changes poses. He is, however, a pseudoskeptic, as he has shown a consistent inability to understand the sources he cites. He argument boils down to a blind faith in our ability to find cheap solutions to energy and climate challenges at some point in the future — before things get really bad. So another non-scientific, non-skeptic.

Next is Freeman Dyson, an aging giant of the sciences who no longer keeps up to date. He seems like to play the contrarian card, but has no serious adherents in the field. Hardly deserving of inclusion.

Freelance mathematician Douglas Keenan wants to be take seriously, but as Gavin Schmidt at Real Climate lays out, is finding that hard to do.

The inevitable Anthony Watts makes an appearance. He has a popular blog, but doesn’t quite get the whole science-as-process thing. As the FP entry points out, his efforts to find flaws in the U.S. temperature-recording network have failed, but he isn’t letting a little thing called peer review get in his way,

Finally we get Christopher Booker, Richard North and Christopher Monckton, none of whom have ever made anything approaching a serious contribution to the debate.

So has FP managed to sort out the signal from the noise? More or less. But the fact that there is only one publishing climatologist (Christy) on the 11-member list tells us much more than do the particulars of the entry.

I’d also like to float the idea that it’s the journalists who quote them, rather the pseudoskeptics themselves, that are the real problem these days. Jonathan Leake comes to mind…

Study: Arctic seabed methane stores destabilizing, venting

March 4, 2010

Fairbanks, Alaska—A section of the Arctic Ocean seafloor that holds vast stores of frozen methane is showing signs of instability and widespread venting of the powerful greenhouse gas, according to the findings of an international research team led by University of Alaska Fairbanks scientists Natalia Shakhova and Igor Semiletov.

The research results, published in the March 5 edition of the journal Science, show that the permafrost under the East Siberian Arctic Shelf, long thought to be an impermeable barrier sealing in methane, is perforated and is leaking large amounts of methane into the atmosphere. Release of even a fraction of the methane stored in the shelf could trigger abrupt climate warming.

“The amount of methane currently coming out of the East Siberian Arctic Shelf is comparable to the amount coming out of the entire world’s oceans,” said Shakhova, a researcher at UAF’s International Arctic Research Center. “Subsea permafrost is losing its ability to be an impermeable cap.”

Methane is a greenhouse gas more than 30 times more potent than carbon dioxide. It is released from previously frozen soils in two ways. When the organic material—which contains carbon—stored in permafrost thaws, it begins to decompose and, under oxygen-free conditions, gradually release methane. Methane can also be stored in the seabed as methane gas or methane hydrates and then released as subsea permafrost thaws. These releases can be larger and more abrupt than those that result from decomposition.

Keep Reading

What’s Up With the Rainforest: Will Turning Vegetarian Save the Planet?

With the catastrophic earthquakes in Haiti and now Chile occurring within two months of each other, we can’t help but be reminded just how powerful mother nature can be, possessing the ability to change our entire way of life in an instant. In the wake of such tragedies, the simple fact remains, there are many things in this world that we don’t have the ability to change, predict or stop from happening. We must also realize the countless opportunities we are given each day to make what we can do count for something. This week the Rainforest Newsladder has reflected this notion by highlighting the ways in which some individuals, groups, and countries are seizing the moment and taking advantage of the power they do have. Along with our partner Rainforest Alliance, we encourage you become an active part of the movement.

More of us are becoming conscious of how the decisions we make in our daily lives have a much broader impact on the global community, as evident through our first group of stories that ask, “Will turning vegetarian save the planet?” Of course this wouldn’t solve all our problems, but studies show that livestock agriculture produces more greenhouse gas emissions than every train, truck, car and aeroplane put together. Our food habits do have an immense impact on the earth and simply shifting towards a more vegetarian diet will unfold many benefits for the environment. Taking notice, are university campuses across the nation who are participating in the campaign “Meatless Monday” to pledge their support for an increased ecological sustainability. UCSB has recently joined the movement, agreeing to one day a week, removing all meat from one of the dining commons, and beef from the remaining three. So even if you’re a dire hard meat lover, cutting out the red stuff for one day, viewing meat as more of a luxury, rather than a staple, and choosing local, sustainably produced meat will make a difference.

Even decisions as small as selecting that perfect bottle of wine to go with your dinner provides an opportunity to make an eco-friendly choice. Patrick Spencer, director of Cork ReHarvest, explains how cork is ‘green’ - helping to sustain forests, preserve biodiversity, and is recyclable. So the next time you reach for a bottle, make sure you pay attention to the top as much as you do to the name on the label and chose one with cork, not aluminum or plastic screwcaps.

As we have discussed before, deforestation has been detrimental to rainforests and our environment. But this week we have seen cooperation between various countries working towards creating sustainable land practices, as a group of eleven tropical rainforest countries, dubbed as F-11, have pledged to make a commitment to sustainable forest management. Indonesia and Australia have also come together, launching a $27 million project to help fight deforestation in Sumatra, hoping to help curb greenhouse gas emissions and boost a UN-backed forest-carbon trading scheme.

It is important that we each make an effort towards a healthier planet, and that starts by becoming informed on what kind of choices you can make that will help solve this crisis. So begin by checking out the Rainforest Newsladder to discover what is going on all over the world, and then post your own stories to make sure the important issues of today are being talked about. You can also continue the conversation and connect with other concerned citizens on our Facebook page.

The neverending hurricane-climate story

Category: climate
Posted on: March 4, 2010 9:01 AM, by James Hrynyshyn

It’s a sore spot for some climate change pseudoskeptics. Any time anyone makes any kind of claim about the effects of a warming planet on tropical storm activity, you can count on a deluge of rejoinders about how shaky the science on the subject really is.

Much is made of Al Gore’s use of an image of hurricane spewing forth from a smokestack on a promotional poster for “An Inconvenient Truth.” And Chris Mooney devoted an entire book to exploring the science, and the battles over and about the science, Storm World. I was commissioned by the Weather Channel a couple of years back to write a feature on the latest scientific developments as several hurricanes tore threw Haiti. The question everyone wants to know is, was Gore right? Will climate change make hurricanes more destructive and/or more frequent?

If you were hoping for a definitive answer, look elsewhere. But if you’re willing to be patient and consider how slowly science moves on such things, then a new paper in Nature Geoscience is worth a read.

“Tropical cyclones and climate change

” is remarkable in part because of the authors list. Almost all the big names are there, including Thomas Knutson, Greg Holland, Kerry Emmanuel, Chris Landsea, and six others who haven’t received the same kind of name recognition for one reason or another. The fact that there is now a single document that represents a sort of consensus on the subject isn’t particularly new — a group composed of many of the same scientists issued a World Meteorological Organization statement on the state of the science in late 2006. Back then there was much debate about what warming sea surface temperatures were doing to hurricane trends and the most definitive statement the group could come up with was
…it is likely that some increase in tropical cyclone intensity will occur if the climate continues to warm.

Since then they’ve learned a fair bit. There are still loads of unanswered questions and predictions for specific ocean basins come with much larger degrees of uncertainty than global trends. But here’s the take home message of the new paper, which serves as an update for the 2006 statement, conveniently summarized in a box:
Detection and attribution It remains uncertain whether past changes in any tropical cyclone activity (frequency, intensity, rainfall, and so on) exceed the variability expected through natural causes, after accounting for changes over time in observing capabilities.

Tropical cyclone projections
Frequency. It is likely that the global frequency of tropical cyclones will either decrease or remain essentially unchanged owing to greenhouse warming. We have very low confidence in projected changes in individual basins. Current models project changes ranging from ?6 to ?34% globally, and up to ±50% or more in individual basins by the late twenty-first century.

Intensity
Some increase in the mean maximum wind speed of tropical cyclones is likely (+2 to +11% globally) with projected twenty-first-century warming, although increases may not occur in all tropical regions. The frequency of the most intense (rare/high-impact) storms will more likely than not increase by a substantially larger percentage in some basins.

Rainfall
Rainfall rates are likely to increase. The projected magnitude is on the order of +20% within 100 km of the tropical cyclone centre.

Genesis, tracks, duration and surge flooding
We have low confidence in projected changes in tropical cyclone genesis-location, tracks, duration and areas of impact. Existing model projections do not show dramatic large-scale changes in these features. The vulnerability of coastal regions to storm-surge flooding is expected to increase with future sea-level rise and coastal development, although this vulnerability will also depend on future storm characteristics.

To summarize the summary: There’s a good chance that we might see fewer hurricanes or maybe no change in frequency overall, but there’s also a good chance that we’ll see storm intensity grow and more of the most intense storms.

So it would appear there is justification for the linking of global warming and hurricane threats after all. Was Al Gore justified five years ago? At the time, the science was less conclusive, but that’s the way things were tilting at the time. Between then and now, things were in flux, and they still are and likely will be for a while yet. But arguing that there is no science to support the link is simply not congruent with the published literature.

–Knutson, T., McBride, J., Chan, J., Emanuel, K., Holland, G., Landsea, C., Held, I., Kossin, J., Srivastava, A., & Sugi, M. (2010). Tropical cyclones and climate change Nature Geoscience, 3 (3), 157-163 DOI: 10.1038/ngeo779

Bloggers Against Hunger

International Women’s Day March 8th, 2010

“People often ask: What can be done to defeat hunger? My answer is simple: empower women, because women are the secret weapon to fight hunger.” — WFP Executive Director Josette Sheeran

Some 60 percent of the world’s chronically hungry people are women and girls. This is because women often have unequal access to resources, education and income, and because they participate less in decision-making.

And when hunger and undernutrition affect women, they also affects their children. More than 19 million children are born annually with low birth weight, often the result of their mothers receiving inadequate nutrition before and during pregnancy.
Nutrition for mothers
When a woman is pregnant, her body has special nutritional needs. After she has given birth, she has a greater need for energy and also for the nutrients that make her breast milk nourishing to her baby. Learn more

School meals for girls
Through its school meals programmes all around the world, WFP is helping reduce the gender gap in education. Learn how

Inherited hunger

These babies are 20 times more likely to die in infancy, and those who survive are more likely to remain malnourished throughout childhood. It is also likely they will face health and learning difficulties all their lives.

This means that hunger and its effects are passed from generation to generation.

But women are not merely victims of hunger. They are also the most effective solution to combating and preventing hunger.

Women as solution

In many countries, women form the backbone of the agricultural sector and food systems, making up the bulk of agricultural labourers.They also play a key role in guaranteeing food security for the entire household.

Experience shows that in the hands of women, food is far more likely to reach the mouths of needy children.

WFP is committed to using its policies, programmes and actions to promote women’s empowerment as a key to improving food security for all.