Nicholas
Reid reflects in essay form on general matters and ideas related to
literature, history, popular culture and the arts, or just life in general. You are free to agree
or disagree with him.
NATURE DOESN’T CARE FOR US
I
recently read a book in which an idealistic person claimed to have felt “at one with nature” when recovering from
a series of traumatic events, and to have been solaced by the seashore, the
waves, the birds and other delightful things of nature. Who but a very insensitive
person would be cynical about this? Surely we have all often been solaced by
some things in nature. Surely we have all felt those moments of exultation at a
beautiful sunrise or sunset; at the brillance of the stars on a fine or frosty
night; at the majesty of a calm sea or the delight of sharing the universe with
animals – in my case the delight of watching seals and primates who are so like
us in many ways; or stately birds like the kereru; or companions like my pet
cat.
But
are these wonderful moments really a matter of being “at one with nature”? If nature means everything that physically
exists, or even everything that we have encountered or are aware of, then
surely we can make statements about being “at
one with nature” only if we are very selective about those parts of nature
we choose to notice – those attractive, beautiful, positive things.
For
the hard fact is that nature also includes cancer, coronavirus, malaria,
leprosy, diptheria, cholera, bubonic plague, ringworm, hookworm, tapeworm;
natural disasters like destructive storms, volcanoes, earthquakes and tsunami, and
ferocious human-eating animals. Human beings’ own actions add to what is
negative, painful and destructuve in life, but none of the things I’ve listed
are human-made. They are nature. Often cited as one of the nastiest phenomena
in nature is that variety of ichneumon wasp that lays its eggs inside the
living grasshopper which is then paralysed and, in its helplessness, slowly
eaten alive by the wasp’s hatching offspring, its vital organs being eaten last
of all so that the wasp spawn are not eating dead meat.
If
you are really “at one with nature”
when you feel exulted, calmed and healed, then you must be “at one” with all these things too.
There
is nothing new in what I am saying here. Previously on this blog I have sounded
off about the Disneyficationof Nature
and the tendency of popular culture to varnish over the negative aspects of
nature, especially when popular culture so often anthropomorphises animals.
More to the point, well-known is that oft-reprinted essay Aldous Huxley wrote
in 1929, “Wordsworth in the Tropics” in which he argued that William Wordsworth
would have had a less benign view of nature if he had not been contemplating
the dales, hills, mountains and lakes of the Lake District; but had rather confronted
the tropical jungle with its leech-infested rivers, predatory crocodiles and
other daunting life forms. Huxley wrote: “A
voyage through the tropics would have cured him of his too easy and comfortable
pantheism. A few months in the jungle would have convinced him that the
diversity and utter strangeness of Nature are at least as real and significant
as its intellectually discovered unity.” The “nature” that Wordsworth loved
was nature that had already, at least in part, been tamed and subdued by human
beings.
The harsh reality is that nature as
a whole is indifferent to us, concerned
neither to nurture or to destroy us. More than one commentator has noted that
this was understood by ancient poets, like Homer [whoever he, she or they might
have been] when he frequently repeated the same epithets such as “the wine-dark sea”, again and again,
implying that nature rolls on in the same way without particularly regarding
us.
The comforting idea of a
benign Mother Nature – or a Gaia if you are into neo-paganism – can be accepted
only if you adopt an Olympian view of human beings, regarding them [us] as
being of little importance. Thus one sometimes hears cold, haughty statements
such as “Coronavirus is Nature’s way of cleaning
up the environment by forcing us to pollute less”, which always assumes
that we are of no more importance than an amoeba.
Against
the concept of benign Nature, and of being “at
one” with nature, I have basically used the same argument that atheists often
use against the concept of God. (I immediately think of Bertram Russell’s
assertion “A visit to a children’s
hospital will destroy any notions of a benign God.”) To be benign,
something has to have a conscious personality. Nature does not. The idea of
pantheism – that all things are God – works only if we assume that all things,
put together, have a conscious personality. They do not. Besides which, if all things are God, then nothing is God.
Given
all this, the concept of a transcendent God – a God above and over nature –
makes far more sense than the dead end of pantheism. We human beings are part
of nature, but our consciousness and awareness set us apart from nature. We are
in nature, but not “at one” with it.
Some
might protest “But I have experienced the
wonders and joy of Nature!” I would answer “So have I – but this proves only that nature can provide us with some
wonders and joys, along with much misery”.
The
choice is between theism or atheism. Pantheism is merely a diversion from this
choice.
No comments:
Post a Comment