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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This paper examines the theme and theories of environmentalist Paul Shepard in his book Nature and Madness. The paper discusses the book, and examines how Shepard ties the idea of humanity's departure from hunting and gathering into the environmental problems we are now experiencing. Bibliography lists 4 sources.
Page Count:
8 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_MTnature.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
decry the plight of the Barn Owl in Seattle, Washington, or point to the thinning ozone layer above as proof that global warming will have dire effects on our ecosystem.
But professor Paul Shepard, in his book, Nature and Madness considered that our pollution of the environment just really a cause, not the reason for natures disintegration. Death, disease and
poor air quality werent of any concern thousands of years ago when cave people ruled the earth and existed on what they could hunt and forage for food. In attempting
to control our land and to wrest nature rituals out of our life, he contends, we have ended up with a rift between our habitat and ourselves.
The question about where and when humans took the wrong turn in terms alienation from nature is one that has been debated by many writers
over the years (Kirkpatrick, 1998). In Nature and Madness, Shepards contention is that the decline between nature versus man actually happened at the point during which human beings abandoned hunting
as their central activity in life (Kirkpatrick, 1998). Shepard, who was Avery Professor of Natural Philosophy and Human Ecology at Claremont College (Biography-Paul Shepard, 2001), wrote a series of books
that covered human ecology and the so-called "deep ecology" movement. Madness and exploitation Once upon a time, according to Shepard, the human
and animal species lived together in harmony and throughout the seasons, complemented one another, rather than attempting to master each other (Shepard, 2001). Overpopulation and illness were practically non-existent. But
when "modernization" emerged between 5,000 and 10,000 years ago, things changed (Shepard, 2001). The madness of exploitation ensued, eventually leading to power-hungry humanity and a lack of feeling for nature
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