{"id":3749,"date":"1969-02-01T01:00:00","date_gmt":"1969-02-01T01:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/february-1969-vol-50-no-2-man-in-the-balance-of-nature\/"},"modified":"2022-11-28T01:03:11","modified_gmt":"2022-11-28T01:03:11","slug":"february-1969-vol-50-no-2-man-in-the-balance-of-nature","status":"publish","type":"rbc_letter","link":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/february-1969-vol-50-no-2-man-in-the-balance-of-nature\/","title":{"rendered":"February 1969 &#8211; VOL. 50, No. 2 &#8211; Man in the Balance of Nature"},"content":{"rendered":"<div id=\"layout-column-main\">\n<p class=\"boldtext\">Why are people so disturbed about                     pollution of air and water? It is not simply because they                     have become more refined and aesthetic, but because they begin                     to realize that we have reached a critical point in human                     habitation of the earth.<\/p>\n<p> As far back as 1947 the question before a conference at                     Princeton University was &#8220;the fate of man&#8221;. Would he go the                     way of the dodo and the dinosaur? Or would he take his destiny                     in his own hands and make a better creature of himself? Opinion                     was divided.<\/p>\n<p>There was no split of opinion at the UNESCO headquarters                     in Paris last year when more than two hundred experts from                     fifty countries met in conference. Within twenty years, they                     decided, life on our planet will be showing the first signs                     of succumbing to pollution: the atmosphere will become unbreathable                     for men and animals; life will cease in rivers and lakes;                     plants will wither from poisoning.<\/p>\n<p>This opinion was made public following the Inter-Governmental                     Conference of Experts on the Scientific Bases for the Rational                     Utilisation and Conservation of Biospheric Resources.<\/p>\n<p>The biosphere is the part of the earth and its atmosphere                     which contains living things. In this layer, only a few miles                     thick, man is creating far-reaching imbalances. He threatens                     the stability of his own ecology by destroying resources and                     burdening his environment with the waste products of his own                     activities.<\/p>\n<p>The biosphere is so immensely complicated that its workings                     are imperfectly understood, but it is known that any interaction                     of factors, however insignificant, can produce repercussions                     whose chains often span continents or even girdle the earth.<\/p>\n<p>After commenting on the damage done by swift depletion of                     minerals and forests, the report of the UNESCO Conference                     in the <em>Manchester Guardian <\/em>goes on: &#8220;As cities spread                     in monstrous fashion the problem of refuse inherent in urban                     life attains the size of an insoluble problem. Carbon dioxide                     and all the host of air-borne industrial wastes are fouling                     the atmosphere and poisoning fresh water. In the last twenty                     years the whole process has been accelerating at a crazy speed.&#8221;<\/p>\n<h3>What shall we do&nbsp;?<\/h3>\n<p>We must be willing to ask such questions as &#8220;What is the                     meaning of life? What is our relationship with everything                     around us? What shall we do in the short stretch between birth                     and death to preserve and improve our inheritance?&#8221; We need                     the courage to ask such questions &#8211; as the UNESCO Conference                     did &#8211; with respect and seriousness, and the gumption                     to do what the answers tell us to do.<\/p>\n<p>There is no better way of giving our lives the dimension                     of depth than by identifying ourselves as important factors                     in the balance of nature and putting our weight on the side                     of conserving what is good, correcting what is wrong, and                     progressing to something higher in the scale. We were put                     upon Earth, according to the Book of Genesis, &#8220;to dress it                     and to keep it.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>But man has become a prober and a meddler. Fire, the axe,                     the plow, fire-arms and the bulldozer have been the fundamental                     tools of our modern culture. We have spurned the fact that                     Nature is a total of the conditions and principles which influence                     the existence of living things. Her laws were so contrived                     that land, water, plants and animals should, and under natural                     conditions do, exist in harmony and interdependence for perpetual                     productiveness.<\/p>\n<p>Nature has been at work for a great many millions of years                     to get things as they are. Cause and effect are tied together                     like stones in a well-built wall. Without careful investigation                     you never can tell which is a keystone, the removal of which                     will bring down a large section of the structure in ruin.<\/p>\n<p>Man is only a comparatively small element in this massive                     system. As Anthony Tucker put it in his report of the UNESCO                     Conference: &#8220;The system developed without him, determined                     his evolution, and shaped his dependence on life cycles which                     in turn were already dependent upon complex living and chemical                     relationships in a relatively stable environment.&#8221; It is imperative                     to his survival that man should recognize his animal nature                     and live within the boundaries set by his organic world.<\/p>\n<p>Throughout history one species after another of animal and                     plant has disappeared from the earth, and one culture after                     another has passed to oblivion, because of inability to adjust                     to environmental change.<\/p>\n<h3>Nature&#8217;s laws<\/h3>\n<p>We are, then, an integral part of our environment. &#8220;Nature&#8221;                     embraces all existing things &#8211; fields, oceans, mountains,                     forests, deserts, the wild creatures&nbsp;&#8230; and human beings.                     We are part of it, and we must live in concert with it.<\/p>\n<p>Our discovery of nature&#8217;s laws does not mean entering a                     state of slavery. On the contrary, once we know what they                     are we can learn to co-operate with them, and by so co-operating                     increase our own freedom within them. Take fire as an example:                     we learned far back in our aboriginal state that fire burns                     you if you touch it, not to punish you, but because that is                     the natural law of fire. From there we went on to use fire                     for our useful purposes within the bounds of its law.<\/p>\n<p>Ecology is the science concerned with the relation of living                     things to their environment, and with the factors which influence                     that environment. It is an expression of the realization that                     man must give over trying to mould the rest of the natural                     world to his wishes without adequate understanding of the                     laws that govern it.<\/p>\n<p>What are some of the things needful to know? The subject                     is so vast that no human mind has ever fathomed all its secrets,                     but the basic principles are becoming known. First and foremost                     is the lesson so hard to learn: that Nature is the expression                     of a definite order with which nothing interferes successfully,                     and that the chief business of men is to learn that order                     and govern themselves accordingly.<\/p>\n<p>Consider our disregard for plant life. The green leaf pigment,                     called chlorophyll, is the sole link between the sun and life:                     it is the conduit of energy to our frail organisms. Every                     plant, even the most humble, even algae, the simplest form                     in the vegetable kingdom, is a specialist, adapted by its                     habit of growth and its special requirement for light and                     moisture, to grow best in its preferred environment, and there                     to fulfil its destiny in serving Nature&#8217;s purpose.<\/p>\n<p>Let disaster strike the microscopic plants upon which the                     tier of life is built, and whole organizations will come tumbling                     down. The forces we set in motion to carry out our great projects                     move out to affect the lives of other creatures, and come                     back to act upon us.<\/p>\n<p>Our worst conservation problems owe their existence largely                     to our short-sighted preoccupation with our immediate affairs,                     our personal lives, our ignorance of our place in the balancce                     of nature. A person who has once perceived the greatness of                     nature&#8217;s smallest creature or flower, can no longer be happy                     if he allows himself to be petty, self-seeking, and greedy                     in his dealings with Nature.<\/p>\n<p>Because there are men and women who have not received this                     vision, it is necessary to have man-made laws to enforce the                     laws of nature.<\/p>\n<p>Why should anti-pollution regulations raise objections?                     Do they restrict our freedom, that word so cherished in democracies?                     So do traffic laws and signals, which limit the freedom of                     action of the driver of the automobile. None the less, intelligent                     drivers gladly obey the regulations, even when there is no                     policeman at the corner to enforce them, because they know                     that in the absence of such organization of traffic their                     freedom to move in a chosen direction would be enormously                     more impeded by traffic jams and accidents.<\/p>\n<p>On a higher scale than enforcement by law is the self-regulation                     taught to Boy Scouts: always leave the camping ground better                     than you find it. There are unwritten laws observed by woodsmen                     and mountain climbers: not to kill a porcupine or a fool hen                     unless there is no other food to be had, always replenish                     the wood-pile at a shelter hut to at least the size it was                     when you took shelter there.<\/p>\n<h3>Something about meddling<\/h3>\n<p>Meddling with small parts of a related whole produces evil                     consequences. Whatever we do in altering nature must be done                     in full awareness of Nature&#8217;s reactions to and on ourselves.<\/p>\n<p>For lack of adequate knowledge, much of our manipulation                     is based on technological criteria without thought of its                     over-all biological results. Some of this tampering starts                     a chain of events that upsets the balance of nature with destructive                     effects.<\/p>\n<p>Consider the undisputed facts of life in the soil. These                     facts were studied by the UNESCO Conference and reported by                     Mr. Tucker. Something like forty billion tons of vegetable                     material are made and destroyed on the earth every year. The                     mass of land animals and smaller organisms amounts to less                     than one per cent of the vegetation. Of this tiny &#8220;zoomass&#8221;                     (which includes man) some 95 per cent consists of invertebrate                     organisms with crucial roles in the decomposition processes                     of the life cycle. Since they form an essential part of the                     natural capital it is utterly profligate to bring about their                     mass destruction through indiscriminate use of such things                     as non-selective pesticides.<\/p>\n<p>Irresponsible chemical eradication of weed and insect pests                     presents not only a serious threat to wildlife conservation                     but holds out the danger of contamination to human beings.                     A pesticide, possibly used to kill rats in a wheat field,                     was blamed for the death of seventeen children in Mexico.                     Alfalfa that had been sprayed with DDT was fed to cows by                     scientists. The cream was churned to butter, the butter was                     fed to rats, and the still toxic DDT was found in their body                     fat in substantial amounts.<\/p>\n<h3>Our poisoned water<\/h3>\n<p>What use is it to make a fetish of cleanliness of the body,                     of hair, of teeth, if we continue to pour sewage into rivers,                     thence to be carried inside our bodies?<\/p>\n<p>In one midwestern city in the United States, as John H.                     Storer tells us in <em>The Web of Life<\/em>, tests of the city&#8217;s                     water showed that during the period of low water in the winter                     it was one-half straight sewage.<\/p>\n<p>Water, the most important natural resource, can be the medium                     for the transmission of germs and toxic substances. The World                     Health Organization reports that about five million children                     die every year from intestinal diseases caused by water.<\/p>\n<p>There is a point at which the rivers themselves rebel. The                     load of poisons from city sewers, factories, slaughter-houses                     and farm lands becomes unsupportable. These kill the cleansing                     plants, use up the purifying oxygen in the water, and clog                     up the filtering gravel.<\/p>\n<p>Once the mass of pollution exceeds a certain amount, animal                     and vegetable life disappears; the river dies.<\/p>\n<p>To clean up our lakes and rivers we must deal with many                     types of man-made pollutants: detergents, fertilizers, insecticides,                     weed-killers, sewage, industrial waste, and hundreds of other                     products. This clean-up does not involve primarily treatment,                     but prevention, and some movement is being made in that direction                     by municipalities and industries.<\/p>\n<p>Our lakes are dying. The United States public health service                     has warned shippers in Lake Erie that water within five miles                     of the shoreline should not be used for drinking or cooking.                     This stretch of near-shore water is so polluted that even                     boiling or chlorination will not remove the contamination.                     Farther out, pollution has stimulated the growth of vegetation,                     using up oxygen, so that a large expanse of dead water has                     developed.<\/p>\n<p>In 1965, Dr. G. B. Langford, F.R.S.C., Director of the Great                     Lakes Institute, University of Toronto, concluded a report                     <em>The Great Lakes and Their Problems <\/em>in this way: &#8220;Governments                     in the United States are facing up to the situation much more                     realistically than are those in Canada. The insignificant                     support of research in the Great Lakes by the governments                     of Canada stands in sharp contrast to what our neighbours                     are doing. An unbiased observer would wonder if we actually                     share these lakes, for we do not share the responsibility                     of saving them from the pending disaster.&#8221;<\/p>\n<h3>Our polluted air<\/h3>\n<p>Hamlet put it this way: &#8220;This most excellent canopy, the                     air, this brave o&#8217;erhanging firmament&nbsp;&#8230; appeareth nothing                     to me but a foul and pestilent congregation of vapours.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Today we seem to look upon smog and air pollution as incidents                     of urban life, until a public health disaster such as the                     death of 4,000 people in London&#8217;s smog in 1952 calls our attention                     to the fact that this can be a killing negligence.<\/p>\n<p>At least a hundred air pollutants have been identified,                     and their interaction produces others.<\/p>\n<p>The cost of air pollution in Canada has been estimated at                     from $20 to $65 per person, depending on where he lives. This                     is for laundering, painting, cleaning of buildings, filtering                     of air, and doctors&#8217; bills.<\/p>\n<p>But cost and loss in dollars and cents do not tell the whole                     story. Air pollution constitutes a serious hazard to health.                     Atmosphere pollution has been found to lower resistance to                     disease, to reduce vitality, and to increase sickness. Relatively                     low levels of air pollution may be involved in the development                     of chronic degenerative diseases, including skin and lung                     cancer, heart and vascular disorders, and chronic bronchitis.                     Paul Kotin, of the University of California, has established                     that several of the organic compounds produced by the combustion                     of gasoline and diesel oil are carcinogenic.<\/p>\n<p>The best means of preventing combustion-caused pollution                     is simple: use better combustion equipment. This improvement                     should be insisted upon by those who have the responsibility                     for community welfare and hold the legal power to enforce                     it.<\/p>\n<h3>Restoring the balance<\/h3>\n<p>Some people who have not thought seriously about the matter                     shy away from the word &#8220;conservation&#8221; under the misapprehension                     that it means &#8220;stop using&#8221;. Resource conservation is fundamentally                     nothing more than wise use of our resources in accordance                     with the laws of nature.<\/p>\n<p>Personal conscience is the beginning of any effective conservation                     effort. A Washington State Supreme Court decision reads: &#8220;An                     unwritten compact between the dead, the living, and the unborn                     requires that we leave the unborn something more than debts                     and depleted natural resources.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Nature maintained her balance for millions of years, but                     she is now up against something new. All other participants                     in nature live by habit and instinct but men try to manage                     things, to force things into new ways. Their conceited and                     arrogant interference has brought about the deterioration                     in living conditions which alarms us, the extinction of many                     animals and plants, and the defilement of air and water.<\/p>\n<p>Now that their continued existence is shown to be at stake                     men are called upon to rethink many things, to relearn lessons                     long forgotten, and to get back on the right road.<\/p>\n<p>Our research and its findings and the lessons it teaches                     give hope to a world as yet largely unconscious of the gravity                     of its situation. Scientists and research people do not make                     laws, but discover them. The laws of nature are there, and                     scientists find them so that we may obey them.<\/p>\n<p>This involves a new duty: communication. The facts of the                     balance of nature and man&#8217;s part in it must be presented to                     the people of all countries in understandable terms. By this                     means scientists can place the decision about these grave                     issues in the proper hands.<\/p>\n<p>No municipal, provincial or national effort to preserve                     the balance of nature can be effective unless it is pressed                     for and adequately supported by informed public opinion. Every                     citizen need not be an expert in this or that branch of science,                     but he should know what the scientists are talking about,                     what the technicians are doing, and what his elected governments                     should be doing.<\/p>\n<p>What could be a higher ideal than that of an intelligent                     informed citizenry with an attitude toward nature that is                     based upon an understanding and knowledge of man&#8217;s dependence                     on his total environment? An effective programme with this                     end in view is being carried out by the 4-H Clubs in Canada.                     By intelligent and sympathetic guidance, these young people                     are learning conservation as a way of life.<\/p>\n<h3>Redemption<\/h3>\n<p>We have disregarded our place in the balance of nature for                     long enough, and we are face to face with our man-made conflict                     between the principle of freedom to use up and the principle                     of husbandry to use wisely and replenish. We can imagine the                     trees and the wild creatures and the earth itself watching                     and listening, alive and aware, holding their breaths in anticipation                     of what their human neighbours will do with their common heritage.<\/p>\n<p>We face the hard task of putting natural forces to work                     in restoration and redemption. We need to deal with the necessary                     steps one at a time and with reasonable judgment.<\/p>\n<p>Government programmes are being established, but at a snail&#8217;s                     pace. They cannot succeed until they are enlarged to match                     the size of the problems, and until citizens are ready to                     pay the huge bill which we have already incurred by our assaults                     on the quality of our environment.<\/p>\n<p>Political and geographical boundaries must not be allowed                     to impede the national effort. The first conservation duty                     of a city is to clean itself, and fastidious citizens will                     see that it does so. Then it must work hand-in-hand with adjoining                     municipalities, for how can people close their minds to the                     fact that much of the water flowing from their kitchen taps                     has already passed through other people&#8217;s drains? Counties                     and townships and provinces are interlinked in any honest                     attempt to restore the balance of nature.<\/p>\n<p>All of these divisions need to give attention to another                     aspect of nature. Our country-side is becoming wearied with                     the constant encroachment of factories and housing developments.                     Men pleading specious needs violate parks, forests and wildernesses.                     They ruin for all time what the time of man on earth cannot                     replace.<\/p>\n<p>We need people rich enough in understanding and imagination,                     and strong enough in fibre, to insist that adequate forests                     and outdoor space be left to be admired, not destroyed. Unless                     natural outdoor spaces remain, young people are denied their                     instinctive wanderings. Trapped in city corridors, enmeshed                     in sprawling suburbs, empty of heart, mind and hand, cheated                     of experiences that are by nature necessary to them, they                     will turn their energies to protest and to evil.<\/p>\n<p>When a young person goes for a stroll or paddles his canoe                     in a nature park he realizes that he is not merely an observer                     of nature, but a part of nature. His troubles grow petty,                     not because they are unreal, but because they dissolve within                     the larger plan.<\/p>\n<h3>A value judgment<\/h3>\n<p>Man, part of nature, has become enticed into a nearly fatal                     illusion: that his skills in science and technology make him                     independent of the laws of nature.<\/p>\n<p>He spread insecticides without examining into whether they                     would be fatal to birds and beneficial insects and might kill                     people. He poured millions of pounds of detergents into rivers                     before learning that they polluted the water. He allowed lakes                     to die of oxygen starvation. He contributed to the deadliness                     of smog by floating noxious substances into the air.<\/p>\n<p>What is required is a value judgment which compares the                     known risks with the anticipated benefits. This is where conscience                     and intelligence enter the scene. Said Barry Commoner in his                     powerful article entitled &#8220;Pollution: Time to Face the Consequences&#8221;                     in the mid-summer 1968 <em>Think<\/em>: &#8220;No scientific procedure                     can tell us how many defective births from fallout radiation                     we ought to tolerate for the sake of a new nuclear weapon&#8230;.                     No scientific principle can tell us how to make the choice                     &#8211; which may be forced upon us by the insecticide problem                     &#8211; between the shade of the elm tree and the song of the                     robin.&nbsp;&#8230; The necessary judgments are therefore the                     responsibility, not of scientists and technologists alone,                     but of all citizens.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Man emerged on this space ship Earth and is biologically                     bound to it for ever. The message from the UNESCO Conference                     to world governments and people is that either they keep the                     space ship healthy or we die with it.<\/p>\n<p>What is the paramount thing? To come to nature with clean                     hands, unsoiled by spoilage, destruction and waste. This involves                     a great deal of governmental wisdom, a lot of scientific research,                     and a lot of engineering ingenuity. Behind all these must                     be the pressure of public demand.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"author":79,"featured_media":0,"template":"","categories":[1],"rbc_letter_theme":[],"rbc_letter_year":[49],"class_list":["post-3749","rbc_letter","type-rbc_letter","status-publish","hentry","category-uncategorized","rbc_letter_year-49"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO Premium plugin v27.2 (Yoast SEO v27.2) - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-premium-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>February 1969 - VOL. 50, No. 2 - Man in the Balance of Nature - RBC<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/february-1969-vol-50-no-2-man-in-the-balance-of-nature\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"February 1969 - VOL. 50, No. 2 - Man in the Balance of Nature - RBC\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"Why are people so disturbed about pollution of air and water? 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