The Destruction of Our Environment
By: Victor • Essay • 1,847 Words • February 7, 2010 • 918 Views
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One of the greatest arguments of philosophy and the scholastic disciplines of the sort has been the debate on the degree of influence that nature has on the growth and development of human beings and the civilizations that define them. By examining the interactions of the environment and the living creations that reside within, one is able to examine and define the type of relationship in place between nature and the creatures of the world.
Upon first glance, one will notice that the fundamental roles of the environment and the creatures within respectively are that of a cyclical reciprocity wherein the environment serves as a primary provider in a great cycle of life and death, a cycle that all of the living creatures, especially humans, are a part of on a daily basis. The first premise is that the environment’s role in the cycle of life is that of a provider, wherein all possible forms of energy and sustenance derive. All of the environment’s facets, the air, the water, the verdancy, serve as the primary commodity with which the basic order of life on this planet employ for their means of sustenance. Most animals in nature directly receive their means of sustenance directly from consuming articles of the earth, namely plankton, field grass, and the lowest forms of animals and receive their obligatory elements from the water and the air. All animals are entangled in the reciprocation of water and air, for all animals consume water and then replete the water supply via digestive process wherein water is returned to the Earth, and all mammalian animals transfer air amongst their environment wherein the plants are able to internalize this discharge and return back into the environment viable source of breathable air. These basic roles help to foster the more complex roles that are found in the environment between the different forms of life, the different types of animals and plants. The more complex roles that one will see in play in nature include the hierarchy of the predacious wherein animals comport their existence to the animals and plants that they rely on for food, energy, and maintenance. It is by this process of comporting to the environment that becomes the predication on which a species’ evolutionary track progresses, towards prosperity and towards stagnancy.
It has been refuted by many, but accepted by most that it is due to a harmonious and contemporaneous existence between the environment and those who depend on the environment that results in the prolonged existence and evolution of a species. This is made evident in such familiar examples as the relationship between the evolution of giraffes and the disposition of the environment in which they resided. Earlier giraffes that lived in areas where the source of food required height and elevated mobility, that were ill equipped physically, would eventually die out, resulting in a proliferation of giraffes that were well equipped physically to adapt to the environment around them. This group of physically fit giraffes then became the paradigm for which a successful lineage of giraffes followed to ensure further existence. This symbiotic relationship yields the ultimate trade-off, for both parties are satisfied with neither party being prayed upon, for even in being devoured by the giraffe the plant is able to spread its seed and minerals allowing for the propagation and further cultivation of its species. It is this cyclical reciprocity where the harmonious coexistence of animal and environment is founded on and sustained by. Animals in general act according to this principle when interacting with other species of animal. Predators, the prey, and the scavengers all fit into a role in which their participation is the direct cause of fluidity of the cycle. An animal such as a lion preys on a zebra, whose carcass is subsequently devoured and then left to decay. The act of devouring the zebra’s body is the means with which the lion is able to sustain their existence while the decaying of the zebra’s body allows for the perpetual existence of decomposition bacteria, the wild grass which uses the minerals rendered from the decaying matter, and the zebras themselves for having nourished grass to eat which in turn makes them more strong and vigilant creatures. This all-encompassing cycle of life, death, and coexistence is the means for all of the animals to exist in harmony during their tenure on Earth. It is in the disruption of this process that catalyzes environmental entropy. When one of the stages of the life and death cycle are removed, depleted, or tampered with, this tainting agent can consequently imbue the entire cycle causing mass hysteria amongst the environment and creatures involved. Only the animals that have found a state of adaptability, which for all intents and purposes can be made analogous to the act of compromising, are the animals that in turn are consequently successful and longer