
Deeper Organic Agriculture
By David Orton
The Norwegian eco-philosopher Arne Naess was the leader of the deep
ecology movement. He died recently, at the age of 96. His influence
was enormous on the environmental and green movements and in other sections
of society which see the necessity of humans coming into a different
relationship with the natural world. As Naess said, "The earth
does not belong to humans." The ideas of Naess are seen by many
as having expressed in broad strokes what should be our relationship
to the natural world in the 21st Century. He saw and wrote about the
necessity to move away from human-centeredness and towards an
Earth-centeredness which is respectful of all species and not just humans.
Naess said if we are to hope to avert ecological and social disaster,
individuals need to define their "selves" as being part of
the natural world.
One can perhaps illustrate the influence of Arne Naess by looking at
two better known Canadian thinkers who were intellectually indebted
to him. They are Stan Rowe (1918-2004) and John Livingston
(1923-2006).
Rowe was employed as a professor of plant ecology at the University
of Saskatchewan from 1968 until 1985, and earlier in his career by the
Canadian Forestry Service. As a Forest Service employee Rowe wrote the
much cited book ”The Forest Regions of Canada.” There are
also two books of essays by him, ”Home Place: Essays on Ecology”
(1990), and ”Earth Alive: Essays On Ecology” published posthumously.
Rowe upheld the deep ecology viewpoint that "We are Earthlings
first, humans second." For him, we humans need a new view of the
Earth, a new value system which is being born in the current ecological
crisis. This value system challenges in a fundamental way our past,
culturally acquired, human-centered view of Nature as just "resources"
for humankind to exploit. For Rowe the Earth-centered biologist, it
was quite false to make absolute distinctions between the organic and
the inorganic or between the animate and inanimate. "What would
qualify as animate, living, organic and biotic without sunlight, water,
soil, air?”
Like Naess, Rowe also opposed the taken for granted 'truths' of the
dominant ideas in our society, that we need population growth along
with economic growth, city growth, consumption growth, etc. As many
others have shown (for example Richard Heinberg in ”The Party's
Over”), it was an expanding agricultural production fed by fossil
fuels which enabled the astonishing growth of the world's population.
But this cheap energy is coming to an end. Naess, Rowe and Heinberg
all saw the necessity to vastly scale back human populations, if we
are to have any long term sustainable relationship with the Earth.
John Livingston, a mentor for David Suzuki, was a naturalist, broadcaster,
and university teacher and influenced by the ideas of Arne Naess. He
wrote a number of books with perhaps the two most influential being
“The Fallacy of Wildlife Conservation” and ”Rogue
Primate” Livingston took the basic deep ecology idea that nonhuman
life has value in itself and is not dependent upon humans for justification,
countering this to the widely accepted belief that Nature and wildlife
are commodities or resources solely for human exploitation. For Livingston
and for deep ecology supporters, wild nature is not here to serve humans
but must be defended and valued for its own sake.
For deep ecology supporters, food production goes hand in hand with
the defense of wild nature. Many deep ecology supporters are vegetarians.
Regardless, they advocate wildlife-friendly farming, not raising sheep
while coyotes are being trapped or poisoned. For Naess, "animal
factories interfere with the dignity of pigs." He supported agriculture,
not agribusiness, and believed that "in future green societies
food calculated as a percentage of income will cost us substantially
more than it does today."
Deep ecologists also support local food rather than food which is shipped
thousand of miles and produced by fossil-fuel based industrial agriculture.
I believe there is quite a "fit" between the ideas of Naess
and that part of the organic farming and gardening movement which sees
the production of wholesome, regionally-based, non-chemically nourished
food, as going hand in hand with the protection of wildlife and wild
nature.
A tribute to Naess called "Remembering Arne Naess (1912-2009)
can be
found at http://home.ca.inter.net/~greenweb/Arne_Naess.pdf
David Orton submitted this article to the Organic Agriculture Centre
of Canada. Please send comments or questions by phone to 902-893-7256
or by email to oacc@nsac.ca.
See an additional article about Stan Rowe, "Finding
Our Way Home", by Brenda Frick
en français
Posted June 2009