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The text you'll want to read is, The Closing of the
American Mind: How higher education has failed democracy and impoverished
the souls of today's students. By Allan Bloom with a foreword by Saul
Bellow.
Most importantly for a discussion of ecology is part
two, chapters entitled, The Self beginning on pg 173, Culture
beginning on pg 185, and Values beginning on pg 194
Why read this book? The book is the
sine qua non for understanding America in the 20th century, especially the
latter half. Allan Bloom would be a member in good standing of the AAII, the
American of Association of Intelllectual Intelligentsia, were such an
organization to exist. The author's use of arcane syntactical constructions
should have been sufficient in and of itself to have, "angered all the right
people," as it is said he has done with this book. At times he is a painter,
dabbing his canvas with Socrates, Smith, Locke, Plato, Nietsche, Machiavelli,
Kant, Rousseau, Toqueville and other intellectualists in ways which readilly
anger the right people. Would you have the temerity to suggest that J.C. is a
mortal equivalent to Moses, Homer and Buddha? And by inference is significant
if only for western culture's inherent need for myth. How about these? "God is
myth." "It is not the truth of their thought that distinguished them, but its
capacity to generate culture." These are not quodlibets but, rather broad
slashing statements. The Washington Post in a review of the book
described Bloom as, "a scalpel-bearing and eloquent curmudgeon." Consider this
quote: "A religion must, it seems, be invented for the sole purpose of
defending capitalism." And he adds that religion was now intended to encourage
capitalism's propensities. Propensities used pejoratively. Scalpel?
Hardly. Erol flynn would have been proud. He is a swashbuckler and truth is the
sabre he fearlessly wields. He expresses truth not only with impunity but with
encouragement from the likes of Saul Bellow and a host of others..
Who gives a hoot about habitat? Religion, culture, myth, truth, values,
reason. Let's suppose that Allan Bloom has said something significant about
these concepts. And further, that the Gaussian bell curve of learned opinion
were to be such that 2SD accept, however implicitly, his suggestions,
inferences and statements as true. Whatever could that have to do with
ecology? Simple. Two of the most important, most fundamental concepts of
ecology are habitat and species diversity, more commonly refered to as
biodiversity. Both habitat and biodiversity are being destroyed at ever
increasing rates by humans. That fact is key for understanding what ecology has
been in a past perfect sense and what ecology will have become in a future
perfect sense. If one wishes to understand why humans do not stop this
ecological destruction, certain concepts must be examined, and not only pro
forma. For they determine the motivation of humans to do what humans do. If you
are on the other side of the previous conditional statement, i.e. if you don't
really give a hoot about habitat, relax. There are a bazillion diversionary
activities in which humans can engage themselves and never even think about
ecological destruction. We have chosen Allan Bloom's book because he speaks
candidly about these crucial concepts with impunity. Do we hope that
some impunity will rub off onto ourselves? Well a little impunity would be
nice, wouldn't it? Because we know that what we plan to say about ecological
destruction and its causes won't be liked by those on the right or the left or
in the middle. We plan to agree unabashedly with Dom Deloise that old King
Bob is wearing no clothes, viz. ecology.


The new American president said last
week that, "the evidence for global warming is, just not scientific." We
know some Buddycom members will want to know how or why he could make such a
preposterous statement. We would ask the president, "Quo animo?
Green
Peace and almost all other such environmental groups are just pretentiously
silly show-offs. We know that some Buddycom members understand why that is
true. Some do not. But for most it is a problem of the will. They will not
consider it much less understand it. And so we fully intend to explain how
Allan Bloom helps to understand ecology. After all we have to fill up the rest
of this page. In the mean time just remember what the Ecological Society of
America estimates about species extinctions. At least 50% of species will be
gone in evolutionary microseconds. How can they know? They understand concepts
like habitat and MVP, Minimum Viable Populations, Chi-squared and statistics.
You know. Boring stuff like that.
And practise your multiplication. 136
species per day times 7 days per week times 52 weeks per year times 10 years
per decade, that's about 500,000. But guess what jelly bean? You can't count
every organism. Not even if you are trying to count elephants. And they are so
big that they can be counted with satellite photography. 
What does it matter to the dead, the orphans, and the homeless whether the mad
destruction is wrought under the name of totalitarianism or the holy name of liberty or democracy? -- Mahatma Gandhi 
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