In 1996, while I was in divinity school, I had the opportunity to take an unusual course. It was an interdisciplinary class offered at Harvard Law School that was team-taught by four professors: a microbiologist, a law professor, a comparative religions scholar and a professor of ethics. The class was called “Topics in Environmental Ethics.” It had a profound impact on me. It forever transformed the way that my faith life influences my everyday life. The class was an energetic seminar with several well-known guest lecturers coming in to talk about their area of study.
During this semester, we studied the growing environmental crisis in this country and what ethical systems got us into the current situation and more importantly what ethical systems are going to get us out. You may not think that ethics have a lot to do with the environment. However, ethics deal with what is right and wrong in our actions, and it is our actions both as individuals and societies that have caused the dire environmental problems which we now face.
Now, if I had to distill the implications of that class for me into one phrase, this is what it would be: it is virtually impossible to do just one thing in this world. Every action that we make has both intended and unintended consequences. While we may be focused on one desired outcome of an action, there will always be other effects that we may not be aware of or foresee. If there is anything we have learned from Twentieth Century biology and physics, it is that we live amidst a complex, and interconnected world; one where small actions here can have enormous effects far away. For every action, there is almost always one - if not several - unintended reactions because we live amidst a great huge web of interconnections—whether we know it or not, whether we like it or not.
Allow me to tell you a true story to illustrate my point. The story is called “Operation Cat Drop.” It is the founding parable for the Rocky Mountain Institute in Colorado. The story takes place on Borneo, that big island located along the equator just north of Australia and south of Southeast Asia. The nations of Malaysia and Indonesia share it today. Well, in the early 1950s, the Dayak people, the indigenous people of Borneo, suffered from malaria. The World Health Organization was called in. They had a solution. As some of you know malaria is a disease that is spread by mosquitoes. Thus, the World Health Organization, sprayed large amounts of the pesticide DDT to kill the mosquitoes that carried the malaria. Well, the mosquitoes died; the malaria declined; so far, so good.
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