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| - | # The nature problem | ||
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| - | , for example. When a paper is submitted, it’s handed over to an editorial board member for its first review. [Here’s a list](http:// | ||
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| - | This is a three-tier review by scientists qualified in the field of study. We want to focus on this process to highlight the fact that this is the exact opposite of something garnered from Facebook or from a conversation in the pub. All opinions are not equally valid. This is as far from fake news as it’s humanly possible to get. If you think it’s wrong, you have to go to as much trouble as they have to show your reasoning. Otherwise you’re just wasting everyone’s time, in the same way that climate change denial wasted time (and still is, in some quarters). | ||
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| - | It’s the most effective way we have of ascertaining what’s true, to the best of our knowledge. You might hear some people say ' | ||
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| - | <WRAP center centeralign> | ||
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| - |  to the Bering Strait – an enormous area. There are now only around 400 left in the wild; so although not extinct, like many creatures, they no longer play a meaningful role in the ecosystem of their natural range. | ||
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| - | ## What are the consequences of the nature problem? | ||
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| - | Nature is an interconnected web of life. For example, some plants need certain insects to pollinate them, some seeds need to pass through other species to germinate; some species can only eat one kind of plant or animal, some are parasitic on others, or have symbiotic existences, etc. So take enough species out of the global ecosystem and, like a game of [Jenga](http:// | ||
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| - | Nature delivers the things that we need to survive – clean, oxygen-rich air, fertile soil, fisheries, pollination, | ||
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| - | Empires have fallen because of environmental damage, although the consequences were local. The Sumerians diverted water from the Tigris and Euphrates with irrigation channels that were shallow enough for a lot of the water to evaporate, but leave behind salts, that accumulated in the soil and reduced yields year on year. Deforestation added to the problem by causing soil erosion and siltation of irrigation channels. Their empire fell when they couldn’t feed their people from the depleted soil any more. | ||
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| - |  will tell you not to worry – that human ingenuity and new technologies will solve these problems (ignoring the fact that those were the very things that caused the problems in the first place). This is music to the ears of those who are benefitting from this system. Some of these people are genuine, and some have been paid to say those things. But their approach is extremely irresponsible. Our position on ecomodernism is more-or-less summarised [here](https:// | ||
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| - | ; and/or you make them hostile to others in their community, who they might see as competitors for dwindling resources. This is the opposite of what we should actually be doing, and so frightening people with the truth is self-defeating. It will dilute people’s will to do anything about it – they will become fatalistic. | ||
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| - | ![Dinosaurs were victims of an extinction triggered by an enormous asteroid impact](https:// | ||
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| - | Dinosaurs such as this fossilised T-Rex became extinct around 65 million years ago, due to the impact of an enormous asteroid. Human impact is less spectacular, | ||
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| - | But would people be more or less likely to man the lifeboats if shown clearly that a collision with an iceberg is imminent? [Research has shown](https:// | ||
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| - | We should talk about this because if we don’t, the response will be inadequate. And that’s exactly what’s happening. If you could see that someone’s house was on fire, you’d warn them, wouldn’t you? | ||
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| - | ## Further resources | ||
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| - | ## Specialist curators of this topic | ||