Micro-Landscapes of the Anthropocene

The Gaia Puzzle

The concepts addressed in Merah’s analysis of Thomas Lewis’s’ ‘The world’s biggest membrane’ made me think of The Gaia Hypothesis that I stumbled across in my leisure time. Suggesting the notion that the universe is organised through collective organic compounds, and such arranged molecules support life on this planet collectively in a cycle. The planet, therefore, is considered a macro-organism whose purpose is to keep the basic environmental conditions constant, that are necessary for life on earth.
The very theory was introduced in order to understand how interrelating compounds altered features of Earth. In the young years of Earth, the atmosphere mostly contained carbon dioxide, until life arrived and the balance altered. Bacteria produced nitrogen, gas, and photosynthesizing plants produced reactive gases and oxygen. Since then, Earth’s atmosphere has rearranged its molecules to support life such as utilizing nitrogen to keep oxygen stable. Earth is a property of the eco system that regulates the flow of energies and functions as a transfer system for the entities in the life cycle.
Leading eco-critic Ursula Heise engages with environmental connectedness by arguing for ‘the urgency [to] develop an idea of eco-cosmopolitanism.’ Claiming that in order to understand cultural and ecological systems in the natural landscape one must reject the cosmopolitan notion that adheres to all human beings belong to one, singular community. The necessity in envisioning humans as part of planetary communities from human and non-human categories should not merely be a suggested ideology, but should also be a shared morality that comes intrinsically to the self. Developing habits of co-existence and encompassing “obligations to others, obligations that stretch beyond those to whom we are related by the ties of kith and kind, or even the more formal ties of a shared citizenship” (Appiah 2006) is the phenomenon in which humanity should align with to natural communities.

Tash

Pak. C, 2016, Terraforming: Ecopolitical Transformations and Environmentalism in Science Fiction, Chapter 4: Edging towards an Eco-cosmopolitanism vision, pp137-167

Appiah. K, 2006, Cosmopolitanism: Ethics in a World of Strangers, pp1-50

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