生态审慎的文化进化

Madhav Gadgil
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引用次数: 21

摘要

动物经常表现得肆意挥霍,并大量毁灭它们所依赖的动植物种群。然而,他们可能会在特殊条件下进化出谨慎的行为,即当这种谨慎大大提高了不太容易被挥霍的个人入侵的人群的成功率时。人类社会的文化进化也可以导致在类似条件下采取谨慎的做法。这些更有可能在稳定的环境中实现,在这种环境中,当人类群体封闭时,当技术停滞不前时,人口往往会增长到接近承载能力的水平。这些条件可能在热带和亚热带的狩猎采集社会盛行,并导致对植物和动物资源的使用采取了一些社会强加的限制。这种做法以自然崇拜的形式被合理化了。印度种姓社会为了满足这些条件而变得如此有组织,并产生了两种宗教,佛教和耆那教,它们强调对一切形式的生活的同情。另一方面,中东的游牧民族生活在一个不利于谨慎的环境中,这些社会催生了基督教等宗教,向自然宣战。随着统治精英和国家权力的增长,他们试图从当地社区夺取对自然资源的控制权。这有时会导致在国家指导下进行保护和谨慎使用,但往往会导致与当地人口的冲突,损害谨慎行为。现代技术进步也往往消除了保护的必要性,比如当煤炭的可用性允许英格兰的森林砍伐时。虽然现代科学理解使人们更好地认识到谨慎的必要性,但正如捕鲸史所示,当前的社会和经济条件往往不利于这种理解的任何实施。然而,第三世界国家穷人生存的必要性最终可能会带来这样的条件,在这种条件下,生态审慎可能会再次主导人类文化,就像它曾经在稳定的狩猎采集社会中所做的那样。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Cultural evolution of ecological prudence

Animals often behave in a profligate fashion and decimate the populations of plants and animals they depend upon. They may, however, evolve prudent behaviour under special conditions, namely when such prudence greatly enhances the success of populations that are not too prone to invasions by profligate individuals. Cultural evolution in human societies can also lead to the adoption of prudent practices under similar conditions. These are more likely to be realized in stable environments in which the human populations tend to grow close to the carrying capacity, when the human groups are closed, and when the technology is stagnant. These conditions probably prevailed in the hunter—gatherer societies of the tropics and subtropics, and led to the adoption of a number of socially imposed restraints on the use of plant and animal resources. Such practices were rationalized in the form of Nature-worship. The Indian caste society became so organized as to fulfill these conditions, and gave rise to two religions, Buddhism and Jainism, which emphasize compassion towards all forms of life. The pastoral nomads of the middle east, on the other hand, lived in an environment which militated against prudence, and these societies gave rise to religions like Christianity, which declared war on nature. As the ruling elite and state have grown in power, they have tried to wrest control of natural resources from the local communities. This has sometimes resulted in conservation and prudent use under guidance from the state, but has often led to conflicts with local populations to the detriment of prudent behaviour. Modern technological progress has also often removed the need for conservation, as when availability of coal permitted the deforestation of England. While modern scientific understanding has led to a better appreciation of the need for prudence, the prevailing social and economic conditions often militate against any implementation of the understanding, as is seen from the history of whaling. However, the imperative for survival of the poor from the Third-World countries may finally bring about conditions in which ecological prudence may once again come to dominate human cultures as it might once have done with stable societies of hunter—gatherers.

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