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The Future of Life
 
 

The Future of Life (Paperback)

by Edward O. Wilson (Author)
4.1 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (42 customer reviews)
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The eminent Harvard naturalist and Pulitzer Prize winner Edward Wilson marshals all the prodigious powers of his intellect and imagination in this impassioned call to ensure the future of life. Opening with an imagined conversation with Henry David Thoreau at Walden Pond, he writes that he has come "to explain to you, and in reality to others and not least to myself, what has happened to the world we both have loved." Based on a love affair with the natural world that spans 70 years, Wilson combines lyrical descriptions with dire warnings and remarkable stories of flora and fauna on the edge of extinction with hard economics. How many species are we really losing? Is environmentalism truly contrary to economic development? And how can we save the planet? Wilson has penned an eloquent plea for the need for a global land ethic and offers the strategies necessary to ensure life on earth based on foresight, moral courage, and the best tools that science and technology can provide. -- Lesley Reed --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.


Books in Canada

Around a hundred years ago, residents on a number of Pacific islands decided to decorate their gardens with giant land snails imported from Africa. Though pleasing to the eye, the introduced species quickly multiplied out of control and began to attack crops and even native snail species. By the mid-1950s, it had become so ubiquitous a pest that something had to be done. Then someone had a nifty idea: why not fight snails with snails? The rosy wolfsnail, known to be a voracious predator, was brought in from the United States with the expectation that it would gobble up its larger African cousins.
Envisioned as a "model case of biological control," the exercise actually triggered an extinction avalanche. The rosy wolfsnail liked the taste of snail meat well enough but understandably preferred easier prey. It left the big African snail alone and proceeded to eat its way through the smaller, more vulnerable native snails. On Hawaii, the rosy wolfsnail was renamed the "cannibal snail," and, along with shell collectors, rats and deforestation, it has helped to wipe out 50 to 75 percent of the 800 or so ground-dwelling Hawaiian snail species.
On the island of Moorea in French Polynesia, the rosy wolfsnail came close to extirpating all seven species of native tree snails. In a last-ditch effort to save them, a couple of biologists collected living specimens and sent them off to universities and zoological parks in the United States and England. Most of the species reproduced successfully in captivity, and three did so well that they were reintroduced to the island, albeit artificially protected behind toxic moats and electric fences.
But one species, Partulina tugida, failed completely. The last living specimen, nicknamed "Turgie" by its keepers at London Zoo, died in 1996, just ten years after the last of its relatives died out in the wild. The little snail's caretakers put up a memorial that outlined the dates of the species' existence: 1.5 Million Years B.C. to January 1996."
If the permanent extinction of an obscure snail like Turgie leaves you feeling cold and unmoved, perhaps you ought to see whether Edward O. Wilson can change your mind. In his new book, The Future of Life, Wilson shares his wonder and appreciation of the natural world at the same time that he warns of its rapidly accelerating demise. A renowned biologist and passionate conservationist, he pulls no punches as he predicts that an unprecedented ecological crisis is lurking just around the corner.
According to Wilson, mankind "is in a final struggle with the rest of life. If it presses on, it will win a Cadmean victory, in which first the biosphere loses, then humanity." As homo sapiens, we must, in order to avoid this catastrophe, not only take immediate remedial action, but we may also need to reappraise some of our most resilient and self-serving notions about what it means to be human.
Wilson obviously isn't just talking about the disappearance of the odd snake or snail. He means to sound the alarm about an extinction tsunami that may be doing its dirty work more than a hundred times faster than the normal background rate. By the end of the present century, up to half of all plant and animal species may have gone the way of New Zealand's eleven moa species, the American chestnut and poor old Turgie.
As human pressure on the environment increases, a multitude of known species are slipping down the list from threatened to endangered, to what is chillingly known as the "living dead," when a species has been whittled down to its last survivor. Some, like Australia's northern gastric breeding frog, are discovered just months before they go extinct. This unique amphibian, which incubates its eggs in its stomach and gives birth through its mouth, first came to light in January 1984. By the following spring it was gone. The manmade pattern of extinction has been so thoroughly documented that it has earned its own acronym, HIPPO (for habitat destruction, invasive species, pollution, population [human] and overharvesting).
Extinction caused by man is not news. In a chapter titled 'The Planetary Killer,' Wilson deconstructs the myth of the noble savage living in harmony with nature. He builds instead a persuasive circumstantial case to show that homo sapiens has been annihilating native fauna ever since the Aborigines found their way to Australia. The same thing happened in Madagascar, in Polynesia, and the New World.
What is different now is that currently the human population exceeds six billion and we are still counting. The pace at which we are extinguishing other species has picked up so much momentum that it rivals the destruction caused by more cosmic cataclysms, like that of an asteroid slamming into the Earth. At first, Wilson explains, "it was mostly large land-dwelling animals that were afflicted, now fishes, amphibians, insects, and plants, are, for the first time, vanishing in large numbers. The dawnless night of extinction is also descending upon rivers, lakes, estuaries, coral reefs, and even the open sea."
As Wilson sees it, human pressure on the biosphere comes from two sides at once. On the one hand, we have the fortunate few in the industrialized countries, who indulge in lavishly wasteful consumption. Then there are the overwhelming majority, who are struggling to achieve more than mere survival. Of these, more than a billion are desperately poor and lack even the most rudimentary requirements, like clean water, adequate nutrition or basic sanitation. As the world population approaches its peak (somewhere around 9 or 10 billion) later this century, all of us, rich and poor, North and South, will be struggling to pass through this "bottleneck."
More people, all needing and wanting more stuff! This sounds like a job for an economist. Or would that be an environmentalist? Many of the world's richest biodiversity "hotspots" are located in precisely those areas where human needs are most acute. Is this really Man against Nature in a fight to the death?
Wilson doesn't think it has to be so grim. Surprisingly optimistic in outlook, he believes that it ought to be possible to provide Earth's growing human population with a decent existence at the same time that we conserve the majority of its nonhuman genetic and ecological heritage. We just have to change the way we do business. Most "people first" economists tend to neglect the $33 trillion in free ecological services that nature so generously provides. The author claims that by replacing traditional economic measures like GNP with measures like the Genuine Progress Indicator (GPI), which includes the environmental costs of economic activity, the environmental viewpoint ought soon to be recognized as the "real world point of view." The main thing is to take a long-term perspective and make sure that all the facts are included as we devise a new 'global ecological economics.'
There are many sound economic reasons to preserve any number of individual species, but Wilson isn't satisfied with shining some light on our own long-term self-interest. He wants to accomplish much more than this and categorically refuses to allow the Earth's ancient, varied genetic heritage to be assessed by teams of gimlet-eyed bookkeepers. Instead he issues this stern warning: "To evaluate individual species solely by their known practical value at the present time is business accounting in the service of barbarism."
The Future of Life then, is as much a moral tract as it is a scientific treatise. Building on some of his previous work, Wilson attempts to construct a new sort of ethical theory from the facts of evolutionary biology. This can be humbling: it is hard to preen when we learn that the recent pattern of human population growth "was more bacterial than primate," or that human short sightedness may be a "hardwired part of our Paleolithic heritage."
As Wilson sees it, the evolutionary story is "a fact-based history" which confirms our kinship with the rest of life. Much of what he says about our innate "biophilia," (love of other forms of life) makes sense. Does anyone really want to argue when he asserts that it isn't "so difficult to love nonhuman life, if gifted with knowledge about it?"
There are times when Wilson's prose drifts toward poetry or wanders surprisingly close to mysticism. The claim that "the biosphere as a whole began to think when humanity was born" surely ought to cock an eyebrow or two. When he encroaches on territory normally defended by philosophers, politicians and theologians, Wilson likely ruffles more than a few feathers.
Yet by calling for a new "global land ethic" based on the idea of stewardship, Wilson does not mean to stir up controversy. He merely asks us to see ourselves as integral parts of the biosphere rather than its divinely appointed owners and consumers. The practical solutions that he outlines in his final chapter wouldn't cost all that much and might even allow a large majority of our Earthly fellow-travelers to pass through the bottleneck with us. Although Wilson's ideas deserve our most urgent attention and rigorously informed debate, the current zeitgeist is vigilantly preoccupied with more trivial pursuits.
David Colterjohn (Books in Canada) --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

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Customer Reviews

42 Reviews
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4.1 out of 5 stars (42 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Future of Life, May 25 2004
By Stanley Ha (Berkeley, CA) - See all my reviews
I really enjoy reading the book ˇ§The Future of Lifeˇ by the Biologist Edward O. Wilson. It is a rich and vivid book where the writer uses lots of brilliant and detailed description about the animals and other habitats. The sufficient amount information provides me a great and accurate picture of how the wild lives out there truly live.

This book depicts how Agriculture, one of the vital industries, endangers the remaining wild species and the nature environment. The world's food supply is hung by a slender thread of biodiversity. Ninety percent of the food supply is actually provided by slightly more than a hundred plant species out of a quarter-million known to exist. Of these hundred species, twenty species carry most of the load, of which only the main three--Wheat, maize, and rice---stand between humanity and starvation. Furthermore, most of the premier twenty are those that happened to be present in the agricultural region.

In a more general sense, these important species are the major potential donors of genes that genetic engineering utilize to improve the crop performance. With the insertion of the right snippets of DNA, new strains can be created that are variously cold-hardy, pest-proofed, perennial, fast growing, highly nutritious, multipurpose, water-conservative, and more easily sowed and harvested. And compared with traditional breeding techniques, genetic engineering is all but instantaneous.

In sum, Genetic Engineering have drastically changed our old ways of growing crops and thus, it threatens the future existence of the other species since it have significantly decreased the diversity of the nature wild lives.

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5.0 out of 5 stars Situation desperate but not completely hopeless, May 23 2004
By L. Feld "lowkell" (Arlington, VA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
The Future Of Life is a great book and a perfect antidote to: a) unwarranted optimism about the state of the environment, which by almost any measure appears desperate; b) unwarranted pessimism or fatalism regarding man's ability to DO something about this situation; and c) the reams of misinformation, uninformed opinion, and ridiculously wild-eyed optimism on environmental matters that exists out there (i.e., "The Skeptical Environmentalist").

Unlike The Skeptical Environmentalist, which is written by a statistician, The Future Of Life is written by one of the world's greatest living scientists, Edward O. Wilson, author of 20 books (including Sociobiology, and Consilience), winner of two Pulitzer prizes plus dozens of science prizes, and discoverer of hundreds of new species. Dr. Wilson is often called, for good reason, "the father of biodiversity." Wilson is also one of the rare breed of scientists, like Stephen J. Gould, Carl Sagan, and Stephen Hawking, who can actually communicate their thoughts and findings to the general public. This is particularly important when it comes to Wilson's area of expertise, given that the environment is something which affects all of us and which all of us can play a part in protecting (or destroying).

Wilson's main theme can be summed up as "situation desperate, but not hopeless." Why desperate? Because humans--all 6 billion of them--are the most destructive force ever unleashed on Earth. According to Wilson, humanity's "bacterial" rate of growth during the 20th century, its short-sightedness, wasteful consumption patterns, general greed and rapaciousness, ignorance, and technological power have resulted in a mass extinction: "species of plants and animals...disappearing a hundred or more times faster than before the coming of humanity," and with "as many as half...gone by the end of the century." Americans in particular are an environmental disaster, consuming so many resources (oil, meat, timber, etc.) per person that, according to Wilson's calculations, "for every person in the world to reach present U.S. levels of consumption with existing technology would require four more planet Earths." Well, we don't have four more planet Earths, and at the present time, we are well on our way to trashing the one we've got. In short, Wilson concludes after chronicling the sorry, depressing, nauseating history of man's mass slaughter and destruction of the environment, our species richly deserves the label: "Homo sapiens, serial killer of the biosphere.''

Given all this, how can I say that Wilson's book is not hopeless? First, because human population growth is slowing (finally!), as women gain education, careers, and power over their reproductive choices. Luckily, when given this choice, women increasingly have opted for "quality over quantity," and average family size has plummeted. In most advanced industrialized nations, in fact, fertility rates have now fallen below replacement level (2.1 children per woman), meaning that populations in those countries will actually start to decline (barring immigration) in coming years. Wilson points that the worldwide average number of children per woman fell from 4.3 in 1960 to 2.6 in 2000. This is still far too high, and still means years more of absolute human population growth, but it's at least a bit of hope amidst the environmental carnage and constant drumbeat of bad news.

Second, there is some hope because many humans do love the environment and want to preserve and protect it. Here, Wilson uses the fancy, scientific-sounding term "biophilia" to describe man's "innate tendency to focus upon life and lifelike forms, and in some instances to affiliate with them emotionally.'' In this instance, I believe Wilson may be overly optimistic. When confronted with the choice of a Big Mac or an acre of rainforest, let's say, most people appear to choose the Big Mac. Or when given a choice of driving their gas-guzzling SUVs and living in sprawling suburbia vs. driving smaller cars, living in cities, taking mass transit, and helping to prevent disastrous global warming, most people choose the SUVs and suburbia. Still, much of this is undoubtedly a result of ignorance and skewed economics (i.e., billions of dollars per year in government subsidies doled out to agriculture, fossil fuel production, wasteful water usage, among other things), and these can be corrected--at least in theory. Also, there are undoubtedly millions of humans who strongly care about the environment--whether for aesthetic, religious, ethical, "biophiliac," or other reasons--and are volunteering, donating money, or altering consumption patterns in order to help save it.

This brings us to the third reason for not losing all hope: humans have the ability to save the environment, and Wilson lays out a clear, realistic, step-by-step plan for doing so. Ironically, one of the very characteristics of environment which causes it to be so vulnerable --its concentration of biological diversity in a small areas ("hotspots") --means that it is possible to target that land and save it. Wilson estimates that biological "hotspots" cover "less than 2 percent of the Earth's land surface and [serve] as the exclusive home of nearly half its plant and animal species." In Wilson's calculations, those "hotspots" can be saved "by a single investment of roughly $30 billion." Just to put this in perspective, the U.S. gross domestic product is over $10 trillion, or more than thirty times the $30 billion needed to save the "hotspots."

The Future Of Life ends on a note of cautious optimism: although right now we find ourselves in a "bottleneck of overpopulation and wasteful consumption," Wilson believes that the race between "technoscientific forces that are destroying the living environment" and "those that can be harnessed to save it" can be won. In order for this to come to pass, however, humanity needs to take action immediately along the lines that Wilson lays out. Ultimately, The Future Of Life is a passionate, brilliant, clarion call to arms by a great scientist, and a great man as well. If we don't hear Wilson's call, we will have only ourselves to blame. And whichever way things turn out, we can't say we weren't warned.

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3.0 out of 5 stars Well read, not so well produced, April 12 2004
By A Customer
This review is from: The Future of Life (Audio CD)
The reader, Ed Begley, Jr., reads this book clearly and with good phrasing. The abridging is not heavy.

Only one complaint: 6 CDs with NO TRACK INDEX! This means that the CDs are useful for listening to straight through only. The user can only guess which chapter will be on which CD, and there is no way (that I know of) to jump to a specific part of the book on the CD, because there is only one track per CD.

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Most recent customer reviews

3.0 out of 5 stars The Don Quixote of biodiversity
Although its quite clearly a thoughtful analysis, I could not see Wilson's recommendations as realistic. Read more
Published on Feb 11 2004 by Cuvtixo

3.0 out of 5 stars The Future of Life Book Review
The title The Future of Life is a good book because it makes predictions of the future based on what is happening now. Read more
Published on Feb 10 2004

5.0 out of 5 stars A whirlwind tour of biodiversity preservation
Great work ! In this book, E.O.Wilson takes us through a whirlwind tour of what/why/how of biodiversity preservation -- "what is biodiversity and how we humans are... Read more
Published on Feb 1 2004 by chaitanya pullela

3.0 out of 5 stars For biologist
Unfortunately this book was a little over my head. The book started off with a good point on extinction but then started to get into biological terms that made me lose my... Read more
Published on Jan 15 2004 by M. Karakus

4.0 out of 5 stars What's happening to our world?
There are many species in the world. There are all different types of species, living in all different types of habitats. But how long will they be around? Read more
Published on Jan 4 2004

3.0 out of 5 stars Very interesting even for a independent w/ Republican ideals
I found this book fascinating and scary. I also got bogged down in some of the minutia(sp?) of the biology. Read more
Published on Jan 4 2004 by Tim Cannata

4.0 out of 5 stars necessary
Whether we like informational books or not, sometimes we need to read them so we're aware of what's going on in the world. Read more
Published on Dec 12 2003 by Kent

5.0 out of 5 stars A top biologist's prognosis of the future of humanity
I have more often than not been disappointed by books which deal with the topic(s) of an economically, biologically, and socially sustainable future. Read more
Published on Sep 6 2003 by Govindan Nair

4.0 out of 5 stars A Good Sermon for the Choir
No question, you won't read this book unless you already are half or three-quarters into Wilson's camp. Read more
Published on Aug 12 2003 by James R. Mccall

5.0 out of 5 stars most comprehensive analysis of environment
In my opinion, Wilson's book makes the most compelling and clearly-stated argument for biological conservation ever written. His writing is both eloquent and biting. Read more
Published on Jun 22 2003 by Emily

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