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What Does It Mean To Be
Human?
When I got to the top of
one of Colorado’s 14,000+ peaks, I encountered a few mountaineers who arrived
at the same time. Upon reaching the summit, one climber pulled out his cell
phone and placed the all important victory call. He started yapping so loudly,
that I couldn’t help but think of this
funny
60 second
MP3:
Why Backpack?
When you ask a thru-hiker,
“Why do you backpack for six months?”
Many will give you a vague
answer like, “To get reconnect with nature,” or “To see where I fit in
nature,” or “To understand our relationship with the universe.”
That's nice. But what the
hell does that all mean? And have you ever noticed that few will give you
solid answer to those tantalizing philosophical concepts?
With a few thousand miles
behind me, I have some ideas. My answers will shock you.
Are
Humans Part of Nature?
So where do humans fit in
nature anyway?
Listening to the way some
people talk about our species, you might get the impression we are not part of
nature. People say that humans transform the “natural” environment. We build
dams, hunt animals to extinction, and pollute the air with our factories and
farts.
The technology we create
is “artificial” and we wear “synthetic” fabrics. We eat “processed” foods and
drive Hummers, Priuses, and golf carts.
Conventional wisdom draws
a line between the “natural world” and the world of humans. The accepted
equation is:
Nature = World – Humans
In short, we’re an ugly
foreign species that has invaded planet Earth. Some argue that we have done
nothing but nasty things to rip apart the “natural ecosystem” that had been in
beautiful “balance” before we came along. The human species is nature’s worst
enemy.
Is this view correct?
I expect by year end I
will have backpacked over 11,200 miles in the last seven years. I’ve spent
many moons sleeping under the stars, climbing mountain ranges, and observing
the wilderness. I’ve been in the great outdoors more often than all the
producers of “National Geographic.” And I completely disagree with the
conventional view of our species.
On the contrary, humans
(and everything we create and do) are as natural as a daisy growing in a
meadow, as rain eroding a mountainside, and as an asteroid blasting our
planet.
Of course if an alien
landed on our planet, it would conclude that our species has some unique
characteristics. We’re bipedal, we’ve got big brains, and we love reality TV
shows.
However, the alien would
ultimately clump us in with the rest of the biota of this planet. We’re simply
another living thing that is doing our best, as a species, to reproduce to the
maximum extent we can get away with. And, like any other species, we’ll do
whatever it takes to achieve this end, including lying about our age and
income.
Is that evil? Is that
wrong? No, it’s just what life does.
Do We Have Free Will?
As individuals yes, but as
a species, not really.
As a species, we do what every species does: utilize every power we have to
maximize the propagation of our DNA. That programming runs deep. Some think
that since we’re sentient, we ought to rise above our base genetic
programming and behave in a more “enlightened” way. However, it’s a bit crazy
to believe that our brains, which are only 100,000 years old, would be capable
of overriding three billion years of programming. Of course individuals
can do this, but as a species, we can’t.
Every living thing,
whether it is e. coli, carrots, or a silver backed
gorilla, all want to spread their genes as far and as densely as the ecosystem
will allow.
-
Why are there not a
trillion gorillas? The ecosystem can’t sustain that population.
-
Why are there a
billion carrots worldwide? Because humans have modified the environment
to help them thrive.
-
Why are there over a
trillion strands of e. coli? Because there’s plenty of space and
nutrients for them, especially at McDonalds.
All three examples show
that a species keeps reproducing until it hits a population wall. Our job,
like any species, is to keep reproducing and spreading until we hit that wall.
Perhaps that wall is 20 billion humans on the planet (we’re 6.5 billion now).
Every year we’ll try to
move that wall back so we can squeeze a few more in the planet. In the last 50
years, for example, global farm production has tripled while land under
production increased by only 10%. We’ll keep getting more efficient to pack
more people around the globe. If that means using nanotechnology to fight
diseases, desalinizing the ocean, or planting more trees, then we’ll do it.
We’ll keep doing whatever it takes until we hit a new wall. Perhaps someday we
can squeeze 650 billion humans on this floating rock. Hard to believe, but I
certainly see a lot of empty real estate on the Continental Divide…
Think About Beavers
Some people think humans
have an “unfair advantage” over all other animals because of our brains and so
we should scale back our actions to fit more nicely in the “natural world.”
Let’s consider that argument …
When I’m hiking the CDT, I
have little interest in getting “beaver fever.” Beavers poop next to their
dams and I get the water downstream. Then I enjoy a waterborne disease and the
associated frequent trips to the toilet. Notice the beaver couldn’t care less
of the environmental impact its actions are having on humans (and other
species).
Before the Europeans
arrived in America, there were about 125 million beavers running around. How
many beavers would there have been if the beavers didn’t use their full mental
and physical talents? Imagine if they held back and had to rely on “natural”
dams that occur in forests. There certainly wouldn’t be 125 million beavers.
Is fully utilizing all their talents “unnatural”? On the contrary, not fully
utilizing all our talents is unnatural! Just ask Dolly
Parton.
Once the Europeans started
trapping beavers, invading their environments, and disrupting their dams, the
beaver population dropped 90%. Today there are about 12 million beavers. Why
not more? Because that’s the maximum that the ecosystem
can sustain. Humans are part of that ecosystem and we’re limiting their
growth, just like cats limit the growth of mice.
Let’s imagine that humans
had never existed and that beavers expanded into the billions. Let’s say the
beavers dammed every stream on the planet, thereby altering the geography and
ecosystems throughout the world. Would observers call those changes
“unnatural” or “artificial”? Would the beavers have knocked the earth “out of
balance”? Wouldn’t the planet adjust accordingly, just like it did when the
Rocky Mountains rose toward the sky, disrupting aquatic ecosystems that buried
it?
Humans are like beavers on
steroids. We’re not all that different from one another. If one agrees that
beavers are part of nature and accept their natural behavior, then why not
agree that humans and our actions are also part of the natural environment?
Reproduce to the Max
I love to ask myself odd
questions when I’m walking in the CDT. Why are blades of grass so tightly
packed? Why aren’t they thinly spread out like
trees in alpine terrain? Why aren’t trees in alpine terrain packed like blades
of grass? The answer is always the same: that’s the maximum the environment
can sustain.
How many strawberries,
corn, and chickens would exist in the world if humans weren’t around? We’re
doing those species a favor by modifying the ecosystem so that they reproduce
more than if we weren't helping out. We’re farming them just like
leafcutter ants that I saw in Costa Rica that farm fungi. The fungus the
ants grow, like the mangos that humans grow, benefit from the natural behavior
of ants. The citrus trees whose leaves are harvested end up losing, just like
all the species we annihilate to make room for fields of corn. Leafcutter ants
deforest massive numbers of trees. Indeed, humans aren’t that different from
leafcutter ants; we just cut down more trees. In fact, there are species of
ants that herd aphids, in much the same way humans herd cattle, and those ants
live off the sugary excretions of the aphids.
Other species farm too. All these farmers are as natural as Willie
Nelson’s hair.
OK, so we help some
species, but doesn’t the quality of life for these species that we help suck?
We grow plants and animals in confined environments, packed like sardines.
It's cruel, but all species that farm do this. If you don’t like it, become a
vegan like me. You’ll only be abusing plants.
Moreover, all species
continue to reproduce if there are enough resources to sustain them. If they
could, deer would reproduce to the point that they would be living on top of
each other. That’s what bacteria do. They live on top of each other, because
they can. So do New Yorkers.
But aren’t we
“artificially” helping some species with our tractors and pesticides? A
tractor and pesticides are as natural as the stick a chimp uses to access a
hole full of ants; they’re tools that we fashion to help make life better.
The purpose of humans
isn’t to make broccoli thrive, but we do. Nor was the purpose of humans to
make the Neanderthals go extinct, but we did. Our purpose is simply to do
every other living thing does: use all our powers to reproduce to the maximum
capacity the environment can sustain.
But What
About “Invasive” Species?
Biologists like to talk
about “invasive” species that take over an ecosystem. They’ll refer to some
plants on the CDT as “not native.” They love to blame humans for introducing
“non-native” species into ecosystems and destroying the “natural” environment.
Folks who believe such
things have a narrow perspective. What about the flea that hitches a ride
across the continent on a horse and gets introduced into a new environment?
What about the birds that carry microscopic fish eggs on their feet? What
about the fact that life on this planet may have come from another planet?
Does that then make all live on this earth an “invasive species”?
Life invades new
ecosystems anyway it can. Get over it.
There’s nothing
“unnatural” about humans introducing (or genetically modifying) a species to
make our lives better. We introduced horses in the Americas and the Native
Americans introduced corn and potatoes to Europe. Bees introduce pollen to new
pastures and
hippos introduce birds to new environments in Africa. Nor is it unnatural
for humans to accidentally (or purposely) introduce species that do us harm;
other animals do this all the time too. Life, like a thru-hiker without food,
likes to hitch a free ride.
I’ve camped next to frozen
alpine lakes in Colorado and seen wildflowers fighting to peek through the
snow that has buried them all winter. This delicate wildflower “invaded” this
alpine region at some point. Indeed, as my last email mentioned, the
continental divide was hardly a mountain range millions of years ago; instead,
it was a massive canal teeming with fish.
Genetic Modification is
Natural Too
If bears could genetically
modify or breed berries that are 10 times bigger than the current ones, they
would do it.
If a coyote had a brain
like ours, don’t you think it would develop wire clippers, traps, and machine
guns to take out sheep and other prey?
All the animals push their
abilities to their maximum potential; we’re no different. The pressures of the
environment constantly help select for even more successful attributes. What's
success? The more you spread your DNA, the more successful you are.
In conclusion, humans are
not outside of nature.
We’re part of nature and our actions are as natural as a fly landing on a
cow pie. We’re doing what living things do. Sure, we have big brains, nice
cars, and Blackberries, but we’re just doing what any species wants to do:
spread far and wide. We’ll alter the environment to make it better for our
genes. We’ll help other species that help us achieve that end (plants and some
animals). We’ll kill species that get in our way. At times we’ll unwisely
alter an ecosystem, but after paying the price, we adjust. That’s what all
life does.
We expect that because
we’re sentient that we should behave differently than an amoeba. However, how
can we deny three billion years of evolution? The urge to reproduce to the
maximum extent is so embedded in our minds that we don't have a choice but to
follow it. Individuals can resist, but the human race can’t.
But Isn’t the
Environmental Havoc We’re Causing Unnaturally Fast?
Not compared to the
“natural” asteroid that pummeled our planet 65 million years ago. The day it
hit, more changes happened than all the changes humans have caused in the last
3 million years. Earth has sustained far more devastating disasters than what
we’re doing lately.
Nevertheless, we are
having a dramatic impact on the planet. We’re certainly causing more change
than all the beavers of the world. However, the impact is not “artificial.”
It’s just a byproduct of what our species is doing to spread its DNA.
It’s also not happening
“unusually fast.” It’s going at nature’s speed. We’re part of nature and we’re
using all our powers to reproduce and spread our DNA as fast as possible.
Volcanoes, tsunamis, earthquakes, and meteors produce changes far faster than
whatever we can do (unless we use nuclear bombs). Also, we’re not “cheating”
just because we have a three pound brain with billions of neurons, just as a
cheetah isn’t “cheating” by using its gift of speed to catch an impala. The
rules of life are simple: use what you have as best as you can or die.
But
We’re Losing So Much Species Diversity!
Yup.
But our species is still growing exponentially, and that’s all that matters to
our DNA. It’s hard to take over the world without breaking a few eggs.
If the polar bear had the
technology to cause massive global freezing, do you think it would care about
the thousands of species that would go extinct when the Amazon freezes over?
The polar bear species would be glad to pay that environmental price if that
meant that it could expand its reach a thousand fold.
Again, Why Backpack?
Like other backpackers, I
too like to “reconnect with nature,” and “to see where I fit in nature,” and
“to understand my relationship with the universe.”
Whereas some outdoorsy
types don’t explain what all those statements mean, I’ve tried to do so in
this email. Obviously, my answers are unconventional and even controversial
compared to the typical tree-hugging backpacker who sees humans as an evil
virus that is destroying the planet. I don’t celebrate our actions, nor do I
lament it. I just accept that what’s happening is natural and that life and
change will continue relentlessly. It’s an unorthodox viewpoint that probably
comes from my unorthodox way of life.
While I try to leave no
trace when I backpack, I accept that life usually doesn’t do that. Life always
tries to leave a trace. It tries, desperately, to leave its DNA everywhere it
goes. I see it in every valley and mountain top I hike to.
As my previous email
showed, the timeline of our planet is longer than we can imagine. Our species
is just a blip in the timeline and we’re doing what every species before us
did, including think that we’re really special.
So what does this mean?
Let’s say you’re crazy
enough to understand what I’m saying and that you (gasp!) even agree with me.
What do you do?
I live a low impact way of
life and I encourage others to do the same. I value the ecosystem the way it
is, although I recognize that it will change just like it always has. I don’t
despair. I accept and do my part to minimize my impact on the planet. I don’t
expect others to do it. If they have financial incentives, then they might
change. Enjoy the planet the way it is now and realize that it will continue
to change.
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