Sometimes I feel like we have become quite arrogant and self-centered in the way we live on this planet over the last few centuries. We self-proclaimed "Homo sapiens" which means "Man Wise" whereas we are just as much intelligent as the current point of reference we can compare ourselves to. As James Cartwright puts it in his article "How to Think Beyond Ourselves", the storytelling around our species gives us the impression that we are dominant when, in reality, there are so much things we know we can’t explain and, by consequence, probably even more things we don’t know that we don’t know. Over the past centuries, we were able to make significant discoveries and achievements but as James reminds us, we are just starting to scratch the surface. We must not forget that, millions of years ago, other species had already built things that we have achieved ourselves only very recently. For instance networks of mycorrhizal fungi shared information millions years before we created the internet and bacterial bioluminescence brought light to the oceans long before Thomas Edison’s work made it available to our homes. And still, some species can do things human can’t even do and explain today. "There exists a humbling amount of complexity, progress and innovation happening every second outside the confines of our species, and many millions of achievements that rival and surpass our own." says James. Despite that, we bluntly impose our understanding of the world on them. Our confidence have permitted many successes but also left many damages. "Many of the qualities that define our species and have permitted its success throughout the millennia are now causing its undoing." James writes. The truth is, we take a lot but we rarely give back compared to the many species we share this planet with. We, humans, are not dominant, we simply have a bigger power of nuisance and destruction. We should not forget that many of the species that surround us participate in maintaining a habitable environment for us to live in. The humbling and eye-opening article from James Cartwright article is a good reminder.
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Human wise(ass)
Sometimes I feel like we have become quite arrogant and self-centered in the way we live on this planet over the last few centuries. We self-proclaimed "Homo sapiens" which means "Man Wise" whereas we are just as much intelligent as the current point of reference we can compare ourselves to. As James Cartwright puts it in his article "How to Think Beyond Ourselves", the storytelling around our species gives us the impression that we are dominant when, in reality, there are so much things we know we can’t explain and, by consequence, probably even more things we don’t know that we don’t know. Over the past centuries, we were able to make significant discoveries and achievements but as James reminds us, we are just starting to scratch the surface. We must not forget that, millions of years ago, other species had already built things that we have achieved ourselves only very recently. For instance networks of mycorrhizal fungi shared information millions years before we created the internet and bacterial bioluminescence brought light to the oceans long before Thomas Edison’s work made it available to our homes. And still, some species can do things human can’t even do and explain today. "There exists a humbling amount of complexity, progress and innovation happening every second outside the confines of our species, and many millions of achievements that rival and surpass our own." says James. Despite that, we bluntly impose our understanding of the world on them. Our confidence have permitted many successes but also left many damages. "Many of the qualities that define our species and have permitted its success throughout the millennia are now causing its undoing." James writes. The truth is, we take a lot but we rarely give back compared to the many species we share this planet with. We, humans, are not dominant, we simply have a bigger power of nuisance and destruction. We should not forget that many of the species that surround us participate in maintaining a habitable environment for us to live in. The humbling and eye-opening article from James Cartwright article is a good reminder.