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From Naked Ape to Super Species: A Personal Perspective on Humanity and the Global Ecocrisis

From Naked Ape to Super Species: A Personal Perspective on Humanity and the Global Ecocrisis
By David Suzuki, Holly Dressel

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Product Description

Human beings have acquired enormous technological muscle power, and - coupled with our numbers and our soaring consumption - we are now having an impact on the planet that no other species has ever had. We are trying to dominate nature, but we are still part of it.

Foresight has always been a key to our survival and we have never needed it more than we do now. As we look ahead to an uncertain future, we have to examine some of our most cherished notions, like the ability of science to give us the power to manage nature, the benefits and hazards of genetic engineering, the real impact of information explosion, and the need to keep the global economy growing forever.

As you will hear in the programs, despite the sophistication of our technology, we remain biological beings, animals, inextricably embedded in the natural world. We must redefine progress and find ways to live in balance with each other and nature.

Produced at the state of the art recording studios of the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation.

Approximate Duration 4 Hours


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #1827944 in Books
  • Published on: 1999-11
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Hardcover
  • 323 pages

Editorial Reviews

Review
Suzuki challenges the way we think about the Internet, genetic engineering, the media, and the global economy.... -- AudioFile Magazine OCT/NOV 00

From AudioFile
Award-winning Canadian geneticist and environmentalist David Suzuki hosts eight 50-minute programs from the CBC Radio-One series called "Ideas." Interwoven with interviews and punctuated by tasteful music and sound effects, these programs explore and probe the balance of nature and technology. Suzuki challenges the way we think about the Internet, genetic engineering, the media, and the global economy. While at times Suzuki's finger-pointing and doomsday scenarios are preachy, his ideas are provocative and mind-expanding. S.E.S. © AudioFile 2000, Portland, Maine-- Copyright © AudioFile, Portland, Maine


Customer Reviews

David Susuki and Holly Dressel's message must be heard!5
This book will make you open your eyes to what mankind has done and continues to do, to our fragile planet. But what I really enjoyed about this book is the fact that David Susuki believes it's not to late to change our destructive path, and that we can still make changes to save our planet from our global eco-crisis.

A Timely Perspective On Humanity in the Biosphere5
SUZUKI:

Although David Suzuki was trained to genetically engineer fruit flies to grow arms from their heads, his perspective on science and life is remarkably human. I would go so far as to say that his understanding of humanity and its place in nature is perhaps unequaled among environmental philosophers today. Aside from working as a scientist, Suzuki also spent some 30-some years producing nature documentaries. This gave him the opportunity travel the globe, visit many different cultures and geographic regions, from indigenous tribes to povrety-striken Third World nations. It was through profound cultural education that Suzuki unlearned the mad science he studied as a youth and gained new understand about culture, economics and biodiversity. Nowadays, Suzuki mainly spends his time writing books and articles. He also runs an environmental organization in Canada, where he and his family live, called the David Suzuki Foundation. The website address is: http://www.davidsuzuki.org/

DESCRIPTION OF THE BOOK:

In this book Suzuki teams up with writer and researcher Holly Dressel to produce a sort of global guide to the biosphere-a work of scope and detail that will amaze you. They will walk you through ancient arboreal forests and the global economy with the ease of an experienced mountain tracker. They will be introduced you to people and movements that are sure to move. And perhaps most importantly the book will provide you with an important ecological perspective. Filled with stories, anecdotes, interesting facts, and tons of suggestions and references, from books to organizations - "From Naked Ape to Super-Species" is nothing less than a manual for humanity. Simply put, this is one of the most important books I have read.

EXERPT:

"Time is the one ingredient that is absolutely for vital for nature. It is the vast sweep of evolutionary time that has allowed life to flourish and huge changes to occur. In the 4 billion years that life has existed, the sun has increased in intensity by 25 percent, magnetic poles have switched and reversed back, continents have smashed into each other and then pulled apart, ice ages and warm periods have come and gone, and the atmosphere has been transformed from a non-oxygen to a oxygen-rich one. Yet life has persisted, simply because of the immense periods of time it has to make adjustments.

Today, the rate at which we are extracting trees, fish, topsoil and clean water, as well as creating pollutants and greenhouse gases, may match the speed of information technology and the economy, but it is not in synch with the reproductive rates of natural systems. More and more, our sources of information are no longer connected to the natural world and its limits. Politics, civic action and participatory democracy need time too. Democratic groups like PTAs and other voluntary human institutions take time to do their work.

Until we slow down the rate of growth in information and technology and learn to pay attention to the true pace of the non-technological planet, we'll keep making unrealistic demands that can't be fulfilled. At the very least, we need to understand that our accelerated rates of production and use of human-made technical information function at a completely different pace from that of the natural rates of information exchange, like those I experienced in the Brazilian rain forest."

MAIN ISSUES:

General Environment Issuses: from the toxification of our environment to Environmental Justice.

Consumer Issues: How do our shopping habits effect the world aroud us?

The Question of Progress: What does it mean?

Food Issues and Biotechnology: In Canada, America, the world abroad.

Globalization Issues: Impacts at home and abroad

Global Warming and Forest Issues

Non-Violent Direct Actions: some groups and individuals fighting against large international corporations for local sovereignty

Human Rights, Environmental Rights

Want to know why people vote Green?5
Suzuki's previous books are a hard act to follow, but he and Dressel provide an informative and interesting view of the environmental problems we are facing.

It factually points out the hypocrisy and short-sightedness of uncontrolled capitalism and globalisation and is full of interesting anecdotes, well-referenced, and makes you think pretty deeply about the developed world's current paragigm of "progress".

If you want to read one book about the health of our society and environment this is a very good choice. This book should be mandatory reading worldwide for senior highschool students and all of us who are already past that.