13. The 'human niche' is a network of complex-adaptive social-ecological systems, which humans conceive and build to sustain themselves. Human sense-making and practices are intrinsic and non-separable parts of the human niche. The feedback of human sense-making and human practices is iterative. The resulting feedback loop is pivotal for the dynamics of social-ecological systems.
Tuesday, 5 October 2021
Fifteen statements in times of pandemics, the Anthropocene [*]
13. The 'human niche' is a network of complex-adaptive social-ecological systems, which humans conceive and build to sustain themselves. Human sense-making and practices are intrinsic and non-separable parts of the human niche. The feedback of human sense-making and human practices is iterative. The resulting feedback loop is pivotal for the dynamics of social-ecological systems.
Monday, 4 October 2021
Managed Retreat - or What?
Introduction & Context
Industrialised production, global supply chains, and globalised societies require geoscience knowledge to function.
Applying
geosciences involves decision making with high economic, environmental, and
social costs, benefits, and risks. Therefore, professional geoscientists often face
circumstances like systemic uncertainty, context-dependency, path-dependency,
differentials of power, or conflicting values. These features of
socio-ecological systems emerge through profound intersections of natural and
social realms impacting professional dealings. Therefore, geoscientists have a genuine
praxis of responsible practices, although pertinent philosophical reflections within
geosciences consolidated only recently.
The philosophical school ‘geoethics’ evolved within
geosciences in the last decades, emphasising the importance of the intersection
of both natural and social realms wherever humans interact with the Earth
System. The Covid-19 health pandemic is an example of such an intersection.
Therefore, it can serve as a lesson, example and test case.
On the other side of the coin, a specific impact of climate change is forced retreat (migration) from ocean shorelines. The underpinning threat, the century-long rise of the global sea level, is scientifically evident, difficult to mitigate operationally, communicated through media, internalised through insight; and societal response requires lasting and massive cooperation.
Governing the retreat from ocean shorelines
because of rising sea levels due to global warming is one of the 21st and 22nd
centuries' challenges to make a ‘good’ Anthropocene.
Lessons from the COVID-19 pandemic?
Any pandemic is a social-ecological system. Such
systems exhibit complex-adaptive dynamics, including the emergence of counter-intuitive
system behaviour. The profound challenges of the Covid-19 health pandemic arise
because the economic and engineering prowess of developed societies combines tightly
natural processes and cultural practices. That feature is genuine to any anthropogenic
global change (e.g. global warming).
The features of the Covid-19 pandemic embed an experience of uncertainty, which is: (1) systemic, because of the complex-adaptive dynamics of the pandemic; (2) operational because action plans were missing; (3) perceptual, because any individual might fall ill seriously or, more likely, not; and (4) cognitive because many people have neither tangible experience (of the illness) nor understand the counter-intuitive dynamics of the pandemic.
The Covid-19 pandemic ruptured societal practices. For many in affluent societies, it is a unique collective experience of challenges to the preferred style of daily life and the perceptions of the likely personal future. The pandemic showed the (un)preparedness of contemporary societies to handle emergencies that cascade into their respective jurisdiction. It may be a cultural defect of contemporary (western) societies to expect a (governmental) plan. However, reacting in a context-depending learning-by-doing mode may be more appropriate because complex-adaptive dynamics of social-ecological systems require such heuristic strategies.
Hence, the following question: what (ethically
sound) principles may render heuristic strategies effective and efficient?
Sketching geoethics
Six tenets describe geoethical practices [1, 5]:
- agent-centricity,
- virtue-focus,
- responsibility-focus,
- [scientific] knowledge-base,
- all-actor inclusiveness, and
- universal-rights base.
These tenets offer a method, so the implicite claim of geoethical thinking, to reach a balanced decision and guide learning and acting when facing, for example, systemic uncertainty, which in turn suggests the search for effective and efficient heuristic strategies when learning-by-doing is the only option. In its current form, geoethics is less normative than the notion geoethics may indicate; instead, it promotes ‘practical wisdom’ (phronesis). Hence, geoethical thinking might be helpful in the Covid-19 health pandemic and, alternatively, lessons from the Covid-19 health pandemic may inform geoethical practices.
Example: Managed Retreat
For many, "retreat" will be a media-reported experience before understanding emerges that a coordinated response is required. A stepwise relocation of the population and infrastructures at a regional scale to higher grounds (behind a new line of shore defences) is needed with a hundred-year planning horizon. This process will involve many uncertainties, will be recurrent, and no unique strategy will be available.
Local retreat for example, from the shorelines of the North Sea because of high sea level, which is expected to exceed the threshold for safe shore defences in the early 22nd Century, would be a historical novum. So far, the lasting cultural response has been to rebuild settlements, protect them, and reclaim land from the sea. On the other side of the world, the options are not the same, for example in the Vanuatu archipelago (0.9 metres above sea level). Also, other island countries are at risk of being a vanishing nation, and their citizens risk Climatic Statelessness‘ refugees status [4].
Conclusions
1. Marone E, Bohle M (2020) Geoethics for
Nudging Human Practices in Times of Pandemics. Sustainability 12:7271.
https://doi.org/10.3390/su12187271
2. Kulp SA, Strauss BH (2019) New elevation
data triple estimates of global vulnerability to sea-level rise and coastal
flooding. Nat Commun 10:4844. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-019-12808-z
3. Piguet E (2019) Climatic Statelessness: Risk Assessment and Policy Options. Popul Dev Rev 45:865–883. https://doi.org/10.1111/padr.12295
4. Bohle M, Preiser R, Di Capua G, et al (2019) Exploring Geoethics - Ethical Implications, Societal Contexts, and Professional Obligations of the Geosciences. Springer International Publishing, Cham
5. Bohle, M., and Marone, E. (2021). Geoethics, a Branding for Sustainable Practices. Sustainability 13, 895. doi:10.3390/su13020895.
Sunday, 3 October 2021
A story of making
“Geo-societal Narratives - contextualising Geosciences.”
What made
this book possible?
All co-authors
cooperated, although they never met face-to-face, and most did never meet in the
past. The co-authors' scientific networks were segregated from each other
before the publication project. More than half of their connections went
through the editors' weak links on (scientific) social media platforms. A
simple analysis of past cooperation indicates less than two bilateral links
between authors. The number drops below one when the editors are excluded from
the analysis.
Hence, the
willingness of all co-authors to cooperate with unknown peers as well as the
trust of the publisher’s editors in this untested partnership was paramount for
the making of the book.
What is the didactic idea
of this book?
So far, geoscientists have engaged with the implications of 'responsible science' on their own. However, studying the societal
relevance of geosciences requires the interaction of earth-sciences / geosciences
and people-sciences, that is, the
social sciences, political sciences, and humanities. Therefore, this
book gathers scholars from the people-sciences to join geoscientists in
studying geosciences' societal contexts. In that sense, this book offers an antithesis
to simplistic views of societal geo-dynamics.
What is the background
to this book?
Contemporary societies use
geosciences know-how in business, public undertakings, and cultural activities (Bohle, 2021).
In times of anthropogenic global change, geoscience expertise shall enable people to take care
of seven-billion-plus fellow humans. Therefore,
geoscience expertise needs a comprehensive understanding of the social and
political facets of the 'human condition' (Hamilton, 2017), a ‘human
planet’ (Lewis and Maslin, 2018).
So far, and like scientists from other
disciplines, professional geoscientists have engaged with the concept of 'responsible
science' (United Nations, 2013). This book is a cross-disciplinary exchange of narratives of various
philosophical, applied, or political subjects to strengthen interdisciplinary
inquiry.
What is this book about?
This book initiates a
direct exchange between scholars in 'Earth sciences' (geosciences) and 'People sciences' (Castree, 2017) in
the spirit[2]
of the philosopher and
physicists Mario Bunge (1919-2020) and his imperative 'Enjoy life and help
live'. Mario Bunge is inspiring because he taught the rebellious character
of philosophy that it must be linked with the best of up-to-date science, be happy
to give society something in exchange for the education getting, be tolerant
regarding all authentic philosophies and rational debates among them. This book
applies that philosophy is about engineering thinking, hence 'A philosophy
without ontology is invertebrate; it is acephalous without epistemology,
confused without semantics, and limbless without axiology, praxeology, and
ethics. [3]'
What is
the methodology of this book?
The
editors created an environment to extract novel ideas. They gathered a diverse
group of authors who, so far, did not cooperate. Ideas and opinions are
juxtaposed, e.g. how to approach anthropocentrism in the Anthropocene. As
sketched in the first chapter (Bohle and Marone,
2021), the emphasis was on breaking new ground in a common
quest for ‘societal geosciences’.
References:
Bohle, M. (2021). ‘Citizen, Geoscientist and Associated
Terra-former’, in Global Threats in the Anthropocene: From COVID-19 to the
Future, eds. L. Mercantanti and S. Montes (Il Sileno Edizioni), 169–186.
Bohle, M., and Marone,
E. (2021). ‘Why Geo-societal Narratives?’, in Geo-societal Narratives
(Cham: Springer International Publishing), 1–16.
doi:10.1007/978-3-030-79028-8_1.
Castree, N. (2017).
Speaking for the ‘people disciplines’: Global change science and its human
dimensions. Anthr. Rev. 4, 160–182. doi:10.1177/2053019617734249.
Lewis, S. L., and
Maslin, M. A. (2018). The Human Planet - How We Created the Anthropocene.
London: Penguin Random House.
Marone, E., and Bohle,
M. (2020). Geoethics for Nudging Human Practices in Times of Pandemics. Sustainability
12, 7271. doi:10.3390/su12187271.
Mokyr, J. (2016).
Institutions and the Origins of the Great Enrichment. Atl. Econ. J. 44,
243–259. doi:10.1007/s11293-016-9496-4.
United Nations (2013).
World Social Science Report 2013. , ed. UNESCO OECD Publishing
doi:10.1787/9789264203419-en.
[1] https://www.palgrave.com/us/book/9783030790271
[2] https://a-g-i-l.de/mario-bunge-the-big-questions-come-in-bundles-not-one-at-time/ (accessed 23rd February 2021).
[3] Bunge, M.
(2016) Between Two Worlds: Memoirs of a Philosopher-Scientist. Springer
Biographies, Springer, 496 p. (p 406).