Rachel Carson’s “A Silent Spring” is a critical novel about the ubiquitous environmental practices around the 1960’s. She begins the novel by using a hypothetical setting that calls forth nostalgia for a reader who can identify with the loss of life in nature. She suggests that many settings in America have lost critical natural elements that create the atmosphere of each season. Carson is able to identify when this switch from picturesque, vivid seasons to the “shadow of death” happens. I am not able to pin point when this switch happened. Carson has been able to see the slow change and progression that humanity’s conventions have imposed upon nature. However, this means that it is only a matter of a few years until my generation can see the change taking place within nature.
Daily Archives: November 6, 2012
A Disappointing Debacle
At what point did America forget about our environmental crisis? In the recent political campaigns for the presidential office, it is almost as though it is not an issue anymore. I thought that we had woken up, that something, since 2008 might had changed, but even in the wake of our highest heat wave in recent history, one that will go down as the longest and hottest heat waves in U.S. history, neither of the front running candidates have mentioned their strategy for our future. Not once was the environment or more specifically global warming, mentioned in any of the presidential debates this year. This is the first time that climate change has not made it into a presidential debate in roughly ten years.
Biosemiotics Lecture
To be quite honest, there were many portions of the biosemiotics lecture that I did not understand, however, from what I could take away, it seemed to be an interesting, yet controversial field. Biosemiotics in general is the study of signs and communicating factors that interplay between life forms. Interactions between both animals and plants have been described as the result of some form of this communication. The evolution and development of the cell is thought to have occurred in a biosemiotic fashion. Personally, the formation of a single cell can and will be forever debated as it is a topic in which variability and uncertainty reign as dominating factors. Another point that was made was the signs and communication between plants and trees of a forest and how that influences growth of the forest as a whole. Biosemiotics claims that similar amounts of carbon is stored in trees of the same forest. This is due to the fact that some form of communication, via signs or other intangible signals, between the trees allows the to remain is similar biotic stages. This is an interesting idea, however, one might argue that trees of the same area have similar life stages because they have been growing under the same environmental conditions and similar time frames. Here is a link on biosemiotics if you’re interested.
http://home.comcast.net/~sharov/biosem/geninfo.html
Darwin’s Mankind
I find creation myths or stories relating to the creation of mankind to be interesting. The origin of man and even more so, man’s purpose on earth, is the single most desired question to be answered. Due to my interest in creation, as well as having a background in evolution, I tend to read books such as Darwin’s Origin of Species, and other biologically based stories with a certain attention to creation themes.
Darwin’s encounters on the HMS Beagle helped lay the foundation for biology, particularly ideas about evolution and the diversification of species. Through reading Darwin’s work, I find two themes that contradict the stories of Genesis as well as most religions in general. Darwin’s ideas on evolution via natural selection gives a strong case for the plethora of species present in our world today. Darwin’s logic is that humans are the descent of a long evolutionary line that is continuous and infinite. Keeping along with this idea, humans are just another evolved animal, just as a whale is thought to be an evolved form of a wolf. This claims that humans are equal to animals, as they share similar ancestors and lineage. Genesis claims that humans were made in the image and likeness of God and as a result, gained dominion over the animals. These two views on mankind, both Genesis and Darwin, seem to contradict each other in there description of the hierarchy of man.
Competition or Struggle for Existence?
Chapter 3 of the Origin of Species was extremely interesting, especially the part in which Darwin talks in depth about the Struggle for Existence. He stated, “…We do not always bear in mind, that though food may now be superabundant, it is not so at all seasons of each recurring year.” I found that to be very thought provoking because I truly figured out how this lends itself to Natural Selection and variation among species. Because there is always a different atmosphere among organisms each year, whether it is because of overpopulation or just a lack of resources and food, the need to adapt is also different each year. As Darwin was saying, when more individuals are produced than can possibly survive, there is going to be greater competition and, therefore a “struggle for existence.” Only the most fit, the ones most able to adapt, of animals will then survive, and they will pass their genes to their offspring, in the hopes that one day there will be a superior and near perfect variation of that species in existence. Of course, the animals don’t actually think this way, but it is part of their genetic goal to survive to reproduce.
Darwin’s Creation Story
I have always assumed On the Origin of Species to be a purely scientific book. I had never considered what literary tools might be at work in complex manners within the text. However, after our discussion in class, I now realize that metaphor is a major literary device used within the text to simplify and intensify the ideas presented.
The metaphors Darwin uses help to put his complex ideas into more relatable terms and ideas. This was clever and useful of him as he published On the Origin of Species because it was published for the general public, not specifically for other scientists. Perhaps these metaphorical aids were part of the reason that it was and is still so popular? Some of the major metaphors that Darwin uses are the metaphors of the tree, of war/struggle, and of an entangled bank or web. Most of these metaphors seem to have persisted through the years and are familiar to us today. Many people have seen pictures of the branching tree of species that Darwin describes and many of us have heard the term “struggle for existence”. The problem is that many people have not read On the Origin of Species. This is a problem because while they hear the general ideas from other people, they interpret the broad ideas in ways that Darwin did not intend. This is most likely because of the lack of information they receive from others compared to if they would read Darwin’s ideas straight from the text (which is much more in detail then what they are exposed to). If people read On the Origin of Species, they would have much more of a firm comprehension of Darwin’s ideas of evolution and the ecosystem, than if they simply saw a diagram of a tree in the manner he described. This is not only because of the great detail Darwin uses in describing the metaphors, but also the text sparks ideas and feelings through the use of intense language.