Monday, December 30, 2019
Our Physical And Ecological Environment That Shapes Our...
In this paper, I will argue between our physical and ecological environment that shapes our society and culture. First of all, we already have a firm scientific basis by which to assess the effect it has on the development of biology. For example, Darwinian science makes it clear that environment provides the driving force over long periods of time, longer than recorded of human cultural history. Darwinââ¬â¢s legendary Galapagos finches, with their beaks each adapted to the differing food sources on different islands, are a perfect example of the sort of determinism that some scholars fallaciously wish to apply to the evolution of culture. But for culture, despite of popular cant about ââ¬Å"memeticsâ⬠that does not evolve biologically. As weâ⬠¦show more contentâ⬠¦Nevertheless, the larger correlation between biodiversity and cultural diversity does seem to persist in different studies of different regions. Such as, in Nabhan, Pines et al. in their 2002 article on ââ¬Å"Safeguarding Species, Languages, and Cultures in the Time of Diversity Lossâ⬠look instead at a different region, the Colorado Plateau in North America, where the same conclusions appear to hold, although in this case it seems that human intellectual culture (i.e., academia) remains hung up on old ideas that no longer have any relevance to a genuine objective assessment. Furthermore, the Colorado Plateau undoubtedly ranks among the top five American regions north of the Tropic of Cancer in terms of linguistic, cultural, and biological diversity, as well as in biological and linguistic/cultural endemism. Nevertheless there is not a single conservation plan that takes into account both the cultural diversity and the biological diversity of the region. It is as if the
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