Ed Stoddard
ReutersWed, 14 Dec 2005 12:00 UTC
Mexico's volcano rabbit and monkey-faced bats in Fiji are among hundreds of species facing imminent extinction but protecting the remaining scraps of their habitat could save them, according to a new study.
Conducted by scientists working with the 52-member Alliance for Zero Extinction (AZE), the study identifies 794 species on the brink of oblivion.
"Safeguarding 595 sites around the world would help stave off an imminent global extinction crisis," AZE said in a statement.
"The study found that just one-third of the sites are known to have legal protection, and most are surrounded by human population densities that are approximately three times the global average," it said.
The report focuses on highly threatened species which are for the most part now confined to a single piece of habitat.
It said large concentrations of such sites were to be found in the Andes of South America, in Brazil's Atlantic Forests, throughout the Caribbean, and in Madagascar. The United States is also home to many of the pinpointed sites.
Mexico's rare volcano rabbit -- restricted to the slopes of four volcanoes in the country's remote interior -- is one of the species at greatest risk.
The "imminent extinction" list includes the Bloody Bay poison frog of Trinidad and Tobago, the monkey-faced bat of Fiji, the ivory-billed woodpecker in the United States, the cloud rat of the Philippines, and the marvelous spatuletail, a hummingbird limited to one Peruvian valley.
"This is a one-shot deal for the human race. We have a moral obligation to act. The science is in, and we are almost out of time," said Mike Parr, Secretary of AZE.
The study, published in the U.S.-based Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (www.pnas.org), is the latest to suggest that human activities are causing a new wave of extinctions which the authors say is 100 to 1,000 times greater than natural rates.
"In recent history, most species extinctions have occurred on isolated islands following the introduction of invasive predators such as cats and rats," AZE said.
"This study shows that the extinction crisis has now expanded to become a full-blown assault on Earth's major land masses, with the majority of at-risk sites and species now found on continental mountains and in lowland areas," it said.
According to the World Conservation Union, almost 800 species have become extinct since 1500, when accurate historical and scientific records began.
Scientists say that extinctions are creeping onshore because continental habitats are being diced up by human activities-- a process that is creating what some biologists term "virtual islands", isolated fragments that are cut off from each other by fences, asphalt, farms and cities.
Habitat destruction, overhunting, climate change and pollution are other major factors behind extinctions.
Comment: When you hear that hundreds of species are facing extinction, how do you react? Does it give rise to an emotional reaction of any kind?
Do you care?
There are those who see such extinctions as "part of nature", "the way things have always been", and who don't give it another thought. They're probably the ones in control in many countries and of many corporations.
If you care, try and understand what about it affects you. Why would you care about species you may never have heard about, may never have seen in a zoo or in a picture book?
Are you afraid because of what it means for the planet? Is your reaction essentially fear-based?
Or do you react because you love nature? Because you hate the way mankind is destroying his habitat and innocent creatures?
But is this reaction really evidence of caring? Can true caring be based upon hatred or anger? Anger can be a powerful fuel, but the fuel must be transformed and rid of its negative colouring. Anger offers the possibility of better understanding yourself by locating the origin of the anger, however, as long as one is acting "in anger", one remains prisoner of one's chemicals.
And shouldn't true caring be more than a chemical reaction?
Isn't true caring related to
conscience?
We raise the issue of conscience because it is intimately tied up with the question of psychopathy. We are spending a lot of time referring to psychopathy and ponerology because we think these questions are important. Some readers have written us to suggest that we are becoming fixated on the topic. We think that these readers might benefit from a reading of
The Mask of Sanity, available at
qfgpublishing as a pdf download, Lobaczewski's
Political Ponerology, excerpts of which can be found at
this article by Laura, and
The Sociopath Next Door, the book we discussed in last weekend's
podcast.
Discussion of psychopathy is important for many reasons. One reason, closely tied to the above article as we said, is that of
conscience.
A psychopath has no conscience.
Gurdjieff says that the rest of us don't have a conscience either, but that through work, we can connect with it.
Here is a long quote from
In Search of the Miraculous on the question of conscience.
"'Buffers' are created slowly and gradually. Very many 'buffers' are created artificially through 'education.' Others are created under the hypnotic influence of all surrounding life. A man is surrounded by people who live, speak, think, and feel by means of 'buffers.' Imitating them in their opinions, actions, and words, a man involuntarily creates similar 'buffers' in himself. 'Buffers' make a man's life more easy. It is very hard to live without 'buffers.' But they keep man from the possibility of inner development because 'buffers' are made to lessen shocks and it is only shocks that can lead a man out of the state in which he lives, that is, waken him. 'Buffers' lull a man to sleep, give him the agreeable and peaceful sensation that all will be well, that no contradictions exist and that he can sleep in peace. 'Buffers' are appliances by means of -which a man can always be in the right. 'Buffers' help a man not to feel his conscience.
" 'Conscience' is again a term that needs explanation.
"In ordinary life the concept 'conscience' is taken too simply. As if we had a conscience. Actually the concept 'conscience' in the sphere of the emotions is equivalent to the concept 'consciousness' in the sphere of the intellect. And as we have no consciousness we have no conscience.
"Consciousness is a state in which a man knows all at once everything that he in general knows and in which he can see how little he does know and how many contradictions there are in what he knows.
"Conscience is a state in which a man feels all at once everything that he in general feels, or can feel. And as everyone has within him thousands of contradictory feelings which vary from a deeply hidden realization of his own nothingness and fears of all kinds to the most stupid kind of self-conceit, self-confidence, self-satisfaction, and self-praise, to feel all this together would not only be painful but literally unbearable.
"If a man whose entire inner world is composed of contradictions were suddenly to feel all these contradictions simultaneously within himself, if he were to feel all at once that he loves everything he hates and hates everything he loves; that he lies when he tells the truth and that he tells the truth when he lies; and if he could feel the shame and horror of it all, this would be the state which is called 'conscience. A man cannot live in this state; he must either destroy contradictions or destroy conscience. He cannot destroy conscience, but if he cannot destroy it he can put it to sleep, that is, he can separate by impenetrable barriers one feeling of self from another, never see them together, never feel their incompatibility, the absurdity of one existing alongside another.
"But fortunately for man, that is, for his peace and for his sleep, this state of conscience is very rare. From early childhood 'buffers' begin to grow and strengthen in him, taking from him the possibility of seeing his inner contradictions and therefore, for him, there is no danger whatever of a sudden awakening. Awakening is possible only for those who seek it and want it, for those who are ready to struggle with themselves and work on themselves for a very long time and very persistently in order to attain it. For this it is necessary to destroy 'buffers,' that is, to go out to meet all those inner sufferings which are connected with the sensations of contradictions. Moreover the destruction of 'buffers' in itself requires very long work and a man must agree to this work realizing that the result of his work will be every possible discomfort and suffering from the awakening of his conscience.
"But conscience is the fire which alone can fuse all the powders in the glass retort which was mentioned before and create the unity which a man lacks in that state in which he begins to study himself.
"The concept 'conscience' has nothing in common with the concept 'morality.'
"Conscience is a general and a permanent phenomenon. Conscience is the same for all men and conscience is possible only in the absence of 'buffers.' From the point of view of understanding the different categories of man we may say that there exists the conscience of a man in whom there are no contradictions. This conscience is not suffering; on the contrary it is joy of a totally new character which we are unable to understand. But even a momentary awakening of conscience in a man who has thousands of different I's is bound to involve suffering. And if these moments of conscience become longer and if a man does not fear them but on the contrary coยญ operates with them and tries to keep and prolong them, an element of very subtle joy, a foretaste of the future 'clear consciousness' will gradually enter into these moments.
"There is nothing general in the concept of 'morality.' Morality consists of buffers. There is no general morality. What is moral in China is immoral in Europe and what is moral in Europe is immoral in China. What is moral in Petersburg is immoral in the Caucasus. And what is moral in the Caucasus is immoral in Petersburg. What is moral in one class of society is immoral in another and vice versa. Morality is always and everywhere an artificial phenomenon. It consists of various 'taboos,' that is, restrictions, and various demands, sometimes sensible in their basis and sometimes having lost all meaning or never even having had any meaning, and having been created on a false basis, on a soil of superstition and false fears.
"Morality consists of 'buffers.' And since 'buffers' are of various kinds, and as the conditions of life in different countries and in different ages or among different classes of society vary considerably, so the morality created by them is also very dissimilar and contradictory. A morality common to all does not exist. It is even impossible to say that there exists any general idea of morality, for instance, in Europe. It is said sometimes that the general morality for Europe is 'Christian morality.' But first of all the idea of 'Christian morality' itself admits of very many different interpretations and many different crimes have been justified by 'Christian morality.' And in the second place modern Europe has very little in common with 'Christian morality,' no matter how we understand this morality.
"In any case, if 'Christian morality' brought Europe to the war which is now going on, then it would be as well to be as far as possible from such morality,"
"Many people say that they do not understand the moral side of your teaching," said one of us. "And others say that your teaching has no morality at all."
"Of course not," said G. "People are very fond of talking about morality. But morality is merely self-suggestion. What is necessary is conscience. We do not teach morality. We teach how to find conscience. People are not pleased when we say this. They say that we have no love. Simply because we do not encourage weakness and hypocrisy but, on the contrary, take off all masks. He who desires the truth will not speak of love or of Christianity because he knows how far he is from these. Christian teaching is for Christians. And Christians are those who live, that is, who do everything, according to Christ's precepts. Can they who talk of love and morality live according to Christ's precepts? Of course they cannot; but there will always be talk of this kind, there will always be people to whom words are more precious than anything else. But this is a true sign! He who speaks like this is an empty man; it is not worth while wasting time on him.
"Morality and conscience are quite different things. One conscience can never contradict another conscience. One morality can always very easily contradict and completely deny another. A man with 'buffers' may be very moral. And 'buffers' can be very different, that is, two very moral men may consider each other very immoral. As a rule it is almost inevitably so. The more 'moral' a man is, the more 'immoral' does he think other moral people.
"The idea of morality is connected with the idea of good and evil conduct. But the idea of good and evil is always different for different people, always subjective in man number one, number two, and number three, and is connected only with a given moment or a given situation. A subjective man can have no general concept of good and evil. For a subjective man evil is everything that is opposed to his desires or interests or to his conception of good.
"One may say that evil does not exist for subjective man at all, that there exist only different conceptions of good. Nobody ever does anything deliberately in the interests of evil, for the sake of evil. Everybody acts in the interests of good, as he understands it. But everybody understands it in a different way. Consequently men drown, slay, and kill one another in the interests of good. The reason is again just the same, men's ignorance and the deep sleep in which they live.
"This is so obvious that it even seems strange that people have never thought of it before. However, the fact remains that they fail to understand this and everyone considers his good as the only good and all the rest as evil. It is naive and useless to hope that men will ever understand this and that they will evolve a general and identical idea of good."
We ask, can we better understand conscience by studying those beings who have none? And if we need to do the work of which Gurdjieff speaks in order to have a real conscience, then what distinguishes us right here, right now, from the psychopath?
These are not idle questions; they are perhaps the most important questions that we can ask ourselves.
Comment: When you hear that hundreds of species are facing extinction, how do you react? Does it give rise to an emotional reaction of any kind?
Do you care?
There are those who see such extinctions as "part of nature", "the way things have always been", and who don't give it another thought. They're probably the ones in control in many countries and of many corporations.
If you care, try and understand what about it affects you. Why would you care about species you may never have heard about, may never have seen in a zoo or in a picture book?
Are you afraid because of what it means for the planet? Is your reaction essentially fear-based?
Or do you react because you love nature? Because you hate the way mankind is destroying his habitat and innocent creatures?
But is this reaction really evidence of caring? Can true caring be based upon hatred or anger? Anger can be a powerful fuel, but the fuel must be transformed and rid of its negative colouring. Anger offers the possibility of better understanding yourself by locating the origin of the anger, however, as long as one is acting "in anger", one remains prisoner of one's chemicals.
And shouldn't true caring be more than a chemical reaction?
Isn't true caring related to conscience?
We raise the issue of conscience because it is intimately tied up with the question of psychopathy. We are spending a lot of time referring to psychopathy and ponerology because we think these questions are important. Some readers have written us to suggest that we are becoming fixated on the topic. We think that these readers might benefit from a reading of The Mask of Sanity, available at qfgpublishing as a pdf download, Lobaczewski's Political Ponerology, excerpts of which can be found at this article by Laura, and The Sociopath Next Door, the book we discussed in last weekend's podcast.
Discussion of psychopathy is important for many reasons. One reason, closely tied to the above article as we said, is that of conscience.
A psychopath has no conscience.
Gurdjieff says that the rest of us don't have a conscience either, but that through work, we can connect with it.
Here is a long quote from In Search of the Miraculous on the question of conscience. We ask, can we better understand conscience by studying those beings who have none? And if we need to do the work of which Gurdjieff speaks in order to have a real conscience, then what distinguishes us right here, right now, from the psychopath?
These are not idle questions; they are perhaps the most important questions that we can ask ourselves.