Second Language class. During the discussion session we were faced
with controversial over the trade off between environmental protection
and economic concerns. The text book Raise the Issue gave a very
extreme case that in Tennessee the construction of a dam was suspended
in the name of protecting an endangered species of snail. I was very
surprised about this. The dam may be of the welfare of many people in
terms of flood control and hydro-electricity production, which is on
the other hand good for the environment.
Then I ran into the idea that no consensus can be reached if we hold
on agonizing over these choices. The importance of wild life and
welfare of human being can hardly be preserved at the same time. And
we have to device a cut point, as we simply can not save every living
thing on our effort. An ideal cutting line is that on one side of it
the wildlife are protected, and on the other the wildlife protection
is not assigned top priority.
A very intuitive solution to this is to rank the living organisms
according to their genetic similarity with human. This argument is
well founded if we consider the ultimate goal of environmental
protection as self-protection. Thus the closer we are with some
non-human life, the more related our fate will be. The deterioration
of the habits of these living forms may lead to immediate threaten to
human society.
Another issue raises easily as how to find the cutting point.
Considering that the biosphere is a complicated graph of food chain,
where each point stands for a specie, and each edge stands for a
dependency relationship. We may simply find within our budget the set
of points with greatest sum of similarity and smallest dependency on
those which are not included in the set.
And this may give some rational criteria in the environmental issues,
and save the time and energy out of debates and campaigns. Some may
argue that the living things that are distant to human may also be
important. However, they may also get protected if they live within
the protection area for the larger living forms which are listed as
protection object.
Of course the idea above is no simple deed. While the current
development in biological science can provide a tree of phylogeny
similarity, the graph of direct dependence may not be easily obtained.
Besides, the budget mentioned above is difficult to estimate. Thus
this may take the synergy of both (bio)statisticians, biological
scientists, and economist to achieve the ultimate results.
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