Thanks Audie for your serious response.
My points were actually serious so I appreciate your words back.
Despite what I say, I think this is an important issue. Because our beliefs here also affect perhaps that way we should look after Earth and other creatures in it.
Again, like with the evolutionary beliefs that I believe are best supported by Theistic foundations,
I also believe the idea that we ought to be good stewards of the Earth and creatures is best founded upon Theism.
Audie wrote:Kurieuo wrote:Audie wrote:Kurieuo wrote:Imagine how good that first chicken and egg would have tasted.
Definitely no added hormones. Truly free range.
It's lucky I didn't exist when it came into being.
There might not be any chickens today.
Just remember, the sooner all the animals are extinct
the sooner we will find out where their money is hidden.
That can happen -- all the animals become extinct?
Wouldn't they just adapt. According to environmental pressures, selected mutations, all that.
So I wouldn't be to concerned.
It's not like we're above the natural order.
Nature has a way of keeping a balance it seems.
Obviously, not all animals could be extirpated by people. Very large and ever increasing numbers are going extinct tho, as a direct or indirect consequence of human activity. Where this is going, how bad it will get, who knows.
Discarding my current theistic beliefs for a moment, I'm not sure that is "bad".
That is, nature always manages to take care of itself. Life always manages to find a way.
Many species have gone extinct over time, always to be replaced by something better (intelligent?), even more complex.
We can no more rise above nature than a fish. We're a product of nature just the same after all.
Unless humanity is somehow more significant in that we can transcend nature, I just don't see anything bad.
If we destroy most other life on earth, well such is just nature taking its course.
We're obviously the most fit, then so be it. There's nothing bad in that for us to really get emotional about.
Audie wrote:Some few are finding ways to benefit from people. Cats, rats, dogs, cockroaches, starlings, cows..actually there are a lot of plants and animals that have greatly extended their range and numbers, often at the expense of local species that are exterminated.
Your cane toads, say.
And that's just nature following its course.
You might find it distasteful, but there's nothing inherently bad about these things.
Nature has just used us as a mechanism for change throughout the world, that's all.
Audie wrote:If you are not concerned, it is definitely not because there is nothing to be concerned about. The adaptation you speak of is the rarest of exceptions.
Naturally speaking, I'm not sure I understand your concern.
I'm not trying to be dense here, but seriously, unless we can somehow rise above nature, then it's just nature.
There's nothing really wrong or to be concerned over with a lions eating wildebeest, zebra, giraffe, buffalo and wild hogs to sometimes rhinos and hippos.
They're just fulfilling their role as set by nature. Likewise, there's nothing really wrong with fulfilling our role as set by nature.
Audie wrote:As for balance, "balance of nature" is essentially about limiting factors that prevent any
species or group of same from exponential growth at the expense of others.
See cactus and rabbits in Oz, for that. You got lucky with the cactus.
Over time, the feral cats and the toads will cease to extend their
range and cease to exterminate. Eventually people will too.
The new balance will be in a vastly depleted, impoverished landscape.
And then new growth will just re-occur again, right?
It's not like nature really cares that it might take a few million more years.
Like bushfire burns all old shrubbery, plants and trees to see re-growth,
well then maybe nature will burn all life to the ground only to see it replaced with something fresh and new.
We might be a more dominant species now, but perhaps nature will keep us in check and restore a balance through a more advanced species or even killing us all off, or maybe we'll blow ourselves all up and everything with us.
While I'm sentient enough to think, "oh, no" and I have some kind of speciesism feelings, again there's nothing really wrong with us all dying off.
The only way such can really be tragic is if there is something more than nature.