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1
The Planet Earth
• Unique in the universe (?)• Mild, relatively constant
temperatures• Biogeochemical cycles• Millions of species• Diverse, self-sustaining
communities
PART 1: UNDERSTANDING OUR ENVIRONMENT
What are the following ?
• “Being Green”
• Sustainability
• Resources
• Ecotourism2
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Environment is the circumstances and conditions that surround an organism or a group of organisms.
Environmental science is the systematic study of our environment and our place in it.
Ecology is the study of an organism or organisms, the impact of the environment on them, and their impact on the environment.
Environmental Science
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Part 2: Science as a Way of Knowing
• Modern science has its roots in antiquity
• Greek philosophers
• Arabic mathematicians and astronomers
• Chinese naturalists
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Quotes to think about regarding Ecology:
The reasonable man adapts himself to the world; the unreasonable one persists in trying
to adapt the world to himself.
Therefore all progress depends on the unreasonable man.
[George Bernard Shaw]
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Quotes to think about regarding Technology:
The only two things that are infinite in size are the universe, and human stupidity. And I'm not
completely sure about the universe.
[Albert Einstein]
Scientific Investigation
• Humans learn about environment and environmental problems through the process of scientific investigation.
• Scientific investigation depends on two types of reasoning, deductive and inductive.
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Reasoning
• Deductive reasoning uses a series of logical steps to think about a phenomenon and come to a conclusion. For instance, Isaac Newton observed that nearly any object of significant density will fall downward toward the center of the earth. We would be able to deduce that an object, such as a brick, is likely to do the same thing, and pretty much be assured of being correct.
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Reasoning
• Inductive reasoning relies on observations of specific events to predict other, similar events. This process can involve formulating a hypothesis and then testing it. Scientific theory is developed when hypotheses are tested many times and the overwhelming body of data and experience supports the hypothesis. The hypothesis is then accepted as a theory. An example of scientific theory is the theory of evolution.
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Scientific Investigation
• Deductive vs. inductive reasoning
• Hypothesis - a conditional explanation that can be verified or falsified
• Scientific theory - an explanation that is supported by an overwhelming body of data and experience
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Models and Natural ExperimentsModels• Simulate real environmental systems;• Can be physical or mathematical;• Provide heuristic information (suggestions of how
things MIGHT be); and• Are influenced by researchers' assumptions.
Natural Experiments• Gathering of historic evidence; and• Conducted by scientists who can't test their
hypotheses directly.
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• In some ways, children are the “ultimate” practical scientists…no pre-conceived bias in their investigations.
• However, Society uses numbers, called “statistics” to let you evaluate and compare things. Information known by only one person isn’t useful to Society, and communication is essential. This is one reason why scientists are rewarded so much for publishing in scientific journals. “Publish or Perish” is a
real threat in academia.
Open Minds are Learning Minds
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Scientific Design
• Blind Experiment– Conducted so investigators do not know
which is the control and which is the experimental group, until after data have been gathered and analyzed.
• Double-Blind– Neither the subject nor the investigators
know which participants are receiving an experimental treatment.
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Statistics and ProbabilityQuantitative data• Precise and easily compared; and• Good benchmarks for measuring change.
Probability• Measure of how likely something is; and• High degree of scientific certainty: 95% probability.
Statistics• Important tool in both planning and evaluating scientific
studies; and• Sample size, number of replications important.
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Paradigms and Scientific Consensus
Paradigms • Overarching models of the world that guide our
interpretation of events• Examples: tectonic plate movement, Einstein's theory of
relativity
Paradigm shift • Occurs when a majority of scientists accept that the old
explanation no longer explains new observations very well
• Paradigm shifts are sometimes contentious and political.
Thinking
• Critical thinking includes analytical thinking (in terms of deconstructing what makes up the problem you are thinking about).
• Logical thinking (how can ordering and trying to put things together in reasoning work).
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Thinking
• Creative thinking (how could I do things differently, what's wrong with this picture and how can I change it?)
• Reflective thinking (after looking at all the other situations, what does this mean?).
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Part 3: Thinking About Thinking
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Table 1.3 Steps in Critical Thinking
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Applying Critical Thinking• Identify and evaluate premises and
conclusions in an argument;• Acknowledge and clarify uncertainties,
vagueness, equivocation, and contradictions; • Distinguish between facts and values;• Recognize and assess assumptions;• Distinguish source reliability or unreliability;
and• Recognize and understand conceptual
frameworks.
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Steps in Critical Thinking• Identify and evaluate premises and conclusions
in an argument.• Acknowledge and clarify uncertainties,
vagueness, equivocation, and contradictions.• Distinguish between facts and values.• Recognize and assess assumptions.• Distinguish source reliability or unreliability.• Recognize and understand conceptual
frameworks.
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Part 4. History of Conserva-tion and Environ-
mentalism
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Our Conservation and Environmentalism History has four Distinct Stages:
– Pragmatic Resource Conservation– Moral and Aesthetic Nature Preservation– Modern Environmentalism– Global Environmental Citizenship
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Pragmatic Resource Conservation
President Theodore Roosevelt and his chief conservation advisor, Gifford Pinchot, believed in utilitarian conservation.– Forests should be saved so they can be
used to provide homes and jobs.– Should be used for “the greatest good for
the greatest number, for the longest time.”
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Moral and Aesthetic Nature Preservation
John Muir, first president of the Sierra Club,
opposed Pinchot’s utilitarian policies.– Biocentric Preservation– emphasizes the fundamental right of all
organisms to pursue their own interests
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Modern Environmentalism
Rachel Carson’s Silent Spring (1962) started the modern environmental movement.
– awakened the public to threats of pollution and toxic chemicals to humans as well as other species
– modern environmentalism extends concerns to include both natural resources and environmental pollution.
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Global Concerns
Increased travel and communication enables
people to know about daily events in places
unknown in previous generations.
Global environmentalism is the recognition
that we share one environment that is common to
all humans.
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Part 5: Current Environmental Conditions
• Half the world's wetlands were lost in the last 100 years.
• Land conversion and logging have shrunk the world's forests by as much as 50%.
• Nearly three-quarters of the world's major marine fish stocks are over-fished or are being harvested beyond a sustainable rate.
• Soil degradation has affected two-thirds of the world's agricultural lands in the last 50 years.
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Major Causes of Environmental Degradation
(1) Population Growth
• Almost 6.5 billion people now occupy the earth, and we are adding about 85 million more each year.
• In the next decade, most population growth will be in the poorer countries - countries where present populations already strain resources and services
http://www.census.gov/main/www/popclock.html
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• burning of fossil fuels• destruction of tropical
rainforests and other biologically rich landscapes
• production of toxic wastes
(2) Resource Extraction and Use
Major Causes of Environmental Degradation (cont’d)
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Major Causes of Environmental Degradation (cont’d): Acid Deposition
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Part 6: Human Dimensions of Environmental Science
• More than 1.3 billion people live in acute poverty, with an income of less than $1 (US) per day. These people generally lack access to an adequate diet, decent housing, basic sanitation, clean water, education, medical care, and other essentials.
• Four out of five people in the world live in what would be considered poverty in industrialized countries.
• The world's poorest people are often forced to meet short-term survival needs at the cost of long-term sustainability.
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The American Lifestyle
To get an average American through the day takesabout 1,000 pounds of raw materials, including• 40 pounds of fossil fuels• 22 pounds of wood and paper• 119 gallons of water.
Every year, Americans throw away some 160 million tons of garbage, including• 50 million tons of paper• 67 billion cans and bottles• 18 billion disposable diapers.
35…and may we continue to be worthy of consuming a disproportionate share of this planet’s resources
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SustainabilitySustainability
How can the nations of the world produce the goods and services needed to improve life for everyone without overtaxing the environmental systems and natural resources on which we all depend?
Sustainable development:progress in human well-being that we can extend or prolong
over many generations, rather than just a few years.
To be truly enduring, the benefits of sustainable development must be available to all humans, not just to the members of a privileged group.
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Indigenous Peoples
Indigenous peoples are generally among the least powerful, most neglected groups.– In many countries, traditional
caste systems, discriminatory laws, economics, or prejudices repress indigenous peoples.
– In many places, indigenous people in traditional homelands guard undisturbed habitats and rare species.
– Recognizing native land rights may safeguard ecological processes.
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