Some possibly controversial posts:
The dog ate global warming
It’s all the Palestinians own fault
Obama is a narcissist (in the non-technical sense)
Amateur hour at the White House
What is Christianity for?
Category Archives: crisis
Why bother saving the planet?
I’ve been pondering that conversation that I linked to a while back. I just want to throw out a line of thought and see what people make of it.
If we accept that Peak Oil and the related limits to growth are real, then our present industrial system is unsustainable – ergo [as the Architect says] it WILL come to an end. I expect that to be quite soon, certainly in my hoped/expected lifetime (I’ve just turned 39).
There’s not a lot that we can do to stop that happening. The processes and mechanisms involved are vast, beyond (probably) everyone’s comprehension, and tie in just about every aspect of our existence.
In response to this predicament we might:
– become a survivalist, with the mentality that “I” (or: my family, tribe, nation) will SURVIVE!!!!! I’m sure you’re all familiar with that approach;
– adopt a devil-may-care, laissez-faire, apres-moi-la-deluge form of not caring about it (or ignoring it, which is the same thing) – again, I’m sure people are familiar with forms of that;
– adopt a ‘we must save the planet’ approach and do all that we can to alleviate and minimise the inevitable human suffering.
What I’m exploring is a distinction _within_ the third of these options – although it might look more like the second from some points of view.
Let me bring in some philosophy to take this a bit further, the distinction in ethics between ‘consequentialism’, ‘deontological ethics’ and ‘virtue ethics’.
A consequentialist understanding of ethics says that an action is right or wrong according to what the consequence of the action is. The worth of adopting a low-carbon lifestyle is that it will minimise the problems of climate change.
In contrast to this, the deontological approach says that there is something inherent in the act itself which constitutes its character as good or bad: the worth of adopting a low-carbon lifestyle is something intrinsic to itself.
The virtue ethics approach says that an action is right or wrong according to how it will affect the character of the person making the choice: the worth of adopting a low-carbon lifestyle is assessed by what sort of person you become when you choose that lifestyle.
What I’m getting at is that arguments that take the form ‘we must do X because it will (help to) save the planet’ leave me cold – in part because I don’t like consequentialism as an ethical theory (I’m much more of a virtue ethicist myself, basically an Aristotelean as mediated by Alasdair MacIntyre).
There are various practical reasons why it leaves me cold. I’m very much of the view that we have to be honest about where we stand – that, to a very great extent it is too late to preserve a very great deal of our culture and habits. I also suspect that, even if per impossibile we succeeded(!) in saving the planet, we’d end up realising that we had missed some rather important things; that is, I’m not inspired to make the world safe for modern industrialism! (I should say, I tend to the view that our environmental problems are ultimately symptoms of a more fundamental social justice problem – and that it is the latter that we most need to address).
What motivates me are arguments that say ‘we must do X because it is the right thing to do’ (the deontological approach) or, even better, ‘we must do X (or even a contagiously enthusiastic “Let’s do X!!”) because it allows us to be the people that God has created us to be’. In other words, the inner logic of choosing, eg, a low-carbon lifestyle is completely different in the one case than the other. Wittgenstein once used the comparison of two puppets – one being handled by string from above, one being directly manipulated by a hand inside – the actions might look the same but the forces involved are completely different.
There is a spiritual path through our present predicament which involves, I would say, a trust in a greater providence – the counterpart to abandoning our own pride – and walking in the Way of Life. We can never know all the eventual consequences of our actions; we can’t know – I would say – whether it is possible to ‘save the planet’ or not. Yet we can know that choosing a simpler life, more strongly rooted in our particular local contexts and ecologies, more concerned to nurture social justice, more connected to all that makes for meaningful human relationships and vocations – all these things are the right things to do and help us to become the right sort of people. I think we can let God look after the consequences, for what does he require of us, but to do justice, love kindness, and walk humbly before him?
TBTM20090818

A conversation on environmental matters between Paul Kingsnorth and George Monbiot. I’m mostly with Paul; the difference is that I don’t rule out divine “intervention”. (Yes, I am being serious).
NB Do check out the Dark Mountain Project. I have great sympathy with it – I even managed to be a founding subscriber!
Tesco, sex, and what it really means to live as a Christian
Go read this (via Tim – also read that – and David, so read that too).
I was recently asked to be more explicit about what Christians can do to go further in their faith; to not just talk about the why and the what, but the how. Yet when I have done this, eg in saying Christians should not shop at Tesco, I meet great resistance. People simply don’t want to be told this. It is seen as a curious quirk of the Rector’s, not realistic, and certainly not much to do with Christianity. Christianity, after all, is about becoming a better person, more spiritually centred – and, in many cases, a rather obsessive and Levitical attitude to sexual practices.
I really don’t think that God cares half as much as we do about human sexuality, most especially now that procreation is separable from it. Of course, there are ways of becoming wicked through the pursuit of disordered sexuality, but such a risk is vastly overestimated. The wickedness that is casually acceptable in Western society through the systematic exploitation of the poor and vulnerable in this country and worldwide is of far more concern to the God of justice and compassion who was incarnated in Christ. How often does Jesus speak about sexuality? As much as a whole column of a standard Bible at most? Yet concern for the poor and criticism of the rich runs throughout his ministry, as it does throughout the Bible as a whole. It is simply not possible to be a faithful Christian and not be concerned about issues of economic justice – indeed, to be much more concerned about such questions than about questions of human sexuality about which so much fuss is presently being made. That is simply one more example of how our church community has been captured by worldly idolatries – the world is presently obsessed with sex, and the church falls in with that emphasis. No wonder the church is seen as being irrelevant and out of touch. If this is all the Christianity in general, and the Church of England in particular, is capable of being, then it deserves a fate on the scrapheap of history.
/rant
A shameless plug and self-advertisement
That reminds me… I’ve been invited to be the lead speaker at the Christian-Ecology link conference in Scarborough next February – details here.
Do come along if you’re interested in exploring a theological response to our present crisis!
I’m so excited!! (Theology and Peak Oil)
Following a failed attempt of mine three years ago some of the lead figures in on-line Peak Oil research and writing have started up a Yahoo Group to explore Peak Oil from a religious perspective. What bliss!
The home page is here: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/peakoilinterfaith/
To subscribe, send an email to peakoilinterfaith-subscribe@yahoogroups.com.
TBTM20090717
On disagreeing with Mrs Palin
Sarah Palin has an op-ed piece in the Washington Post here. It would be fair to say that she hasn’t ‘got it’ about the need to abandon growth. If I’m right that she is basically a pragmatist, then she will.
Now, as this isn’t really a Palin-centric blog, I’ll shut up about her again for a while.
TBTM20090709

Fascinating article at the Technium which, inter alia, explores why Wendell Berry can’t have the last word on technology. Excellent stuff.


