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Raising consciousness in ecosystem health
Diane F. Malley
Freshwater Institute, Central and Arctic Region, Department
of Fisheries and Oceans, 501 University Crescent, Winnipeg
MB, Canada RST 2N6
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Abstract
New knowledge and theory developed by physicists in
the first half of the 20th century radically changed our concepts
of the nature of reality and the place of the human species in it.
This information has not yet penetrated the other natural sciences
nor day-to-day life. This paper argues that it is essential that
we leave behind the 'World as Machine' world view, or paradigm,
which has led us to global crisis. Instead we must more rapidly
incorporate the information from the 20th century 'new physics',
and shift the dominant social paradigm 10 a 'Systems' view of the
world, in our efforts towards defining and implementing ecosystem
health and the closely-related sustainable development. Some of
the key implications of new physics to ecosystem health are that
the biosphere and the surrounding universe is an indivisible whole;
that the human species, especially our consciousness, is integral
to the biosphere; that nothing is static; and that dynamism and
function are primary, whereas structure is secondary. It is suggested
that the understanding of the connectedness of humans to the rest
of the biosphere will alter the behaviour of the human species towards
more ecologically sustainable actions.
Keywords: new physics, ecosystem integrity, ecosystems approach,
human population, sustainable
development, human consciousness
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