“This is a book about nature and culture,” Eric T. Freyfogle writes, “about our place and plight on earth, and the nagging challenges we face in living on it in ways that might endure.” Challenges, he says, we are clearly failing to meet. Harking back to a key phrase from the essays of eminent American conservationist Aldo Leopold, Our Oldest Task spins together lessons from history and philosophy, the life sciences and politics, economics and cultural studies in a personal, erudite quest to understand how we might live on—and in accord with—the land.Passionate and pragmatic, extraordinarily well read and eloquent, Freyfogle details a host of forces that have produced our self-defeating ethos of human exceptionalism. It is this outlook, he argues, not a lack of scientific knowledge or inadequate technology, that is the primary cause of our ecological predicament. Seeking to comprehend both the multifaceted complexity of contemporary environmental problems and the zeitgeist as it unfolds, Freyfogle explores such diverse topics as morality, the nature of reality (and the reality of nature), animal welfare, social justice movements, and market politics. The result is a learned and inspiring rallying cry to achieve balance, a call to use our knowledge to more accurately identify the dividing line between living in and on the world and destruction. “To use nature,” Freyfogle writes, “but not to abuse it.”
The author describes his purpose as “This is a book about nature and culture, about our place and plight on earth, and the nagging challenges we face in living on it in ways that might endure.” Challenges, he says, we are clearly failing to meet.
I was never convinced about his environmental arguments, but along the way he has (well) written a brilliant book on the ethics inherent in modern society, particularly American society. Who would argue with Jefferson about the foundation of the USA being "life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness"? Freyfogle would say that at that time and in that place, that morality was workable, even exemplary. But in modern times, with the immense human population of Earth, there are serious flaws in Jefferson's vision. It isn't just Jefferson that comes up short, but all the great philosophers of ethics, except maybe Aristotle with virtue ethics.
In any case, Freyfogle makes us stop and think about everything we pretty much take for granted in a positive sense in our society. And his writing, while rigorous, is easy to read and follow. Every thinking person of good will should read this book.