The living resources of the world -- ecosystems and its species -- are still largely unexplored, much less studied for the benefits they might hold for humans, for example, new pharmaceuticals or water purification. Some ecologists and economists have estimated that the total value of these natural ecosystems, that's the total amount of services they provide to humanity, is in the vicinity of 30 trillion dollars a year. That's more than the total of the gross national products of all nations combined. And it's free!To save and make fuller use of them in a non-obtrusive way is economically valuable to us. To destroy them is to force humanity into an artificial world in which we have to personally manage our water systems, our food supply, and our atmosphere by prosthetic devices day by day instead of relying on powerful organisms to do the work for us. Do we want to turn Earth literally into a spaceship that requires constant tinkering?
segunda-feira, agosto 15, 2005
magister dixit / ARTIFICIAL WORLD
The living resources of the world -- ecosystems and its species -- are still largely unexplored, much less studied for the benefits they might hold for humans, for example, new pharmaceuticals or water purification. Some ecologists and economists have estimated that the total value of these natural ecosystems, that's the total amount of services they provide to humanity, is in the vicinity of 30 trillion dollars a year. That's more than the total of the gross national products of all nations combined. And it's free!To save and make fuller use of them in a non-obtrusive way is economically valuable to us. To destroy them is to force humanity into an artificial world in which we have to personally manage our water systems, our food supply, and our atmosphere by prosthetic devices day by day instead of relying on powerful organisms to do the work for us. Do we want to turn Earth literally into a spaceship that requires constant tinkering?