a new covenant with nature…

Tuesday, March 12th, 2013
God gives the spark of life to Adam

Adam and God ©Michaelangelo

It is no surprise that human rights as a formal system, as legislation, should have arisen from the two cataclysms of ‘civil war’ that the Europeans brought upon themselves, and into which they drew so much of the rest of the world. As a way of trying to avoid descent into the horrors of the Rape of Nanking, of the Eastern Front, and of the Holocaust, it is essential, that at the heart of our politics, we should enshrine a reverence for human beings.

No doubt one reason why some regimes resist Western attempts to make them adopt human rights legislation is because they wish to continue abusing, with impunity, the people they have power over. China, for example, has long resisted pressure from the West to ‘improve their human rights record’. Governments in Africa, to whom the West offers loans with human rights conditions attached, are turning for help to China, who is only too happy to provide this aid without such pre-conditions. Of course human rights are not the only strings attached when you deal with the West, there are also economic conditions – such as the opening up of a country to the ‘free market’ – as well as all manner of other political demands. Not that any of this is new: the West now offers what once it imposed, when it had the power to do so. Colonial ‘development’ was explained to the ‘natives’ as being in their best interest. Importantly, those economic and political interventions of the West went hand in glove with a proselytising morality: Christianity and Christian values.

Christianity was at the heart of the European imperial project. It was there with shackles and burning when the Spanish ravaged the Americas; it was there with the missionaries that penetrated various ‘dark continents’. It seems to me that this was not a different project, but an earlier form of the modern one: for it is accepted that ‘human rights’ are a refined and ‘de-god-ed’ evolution of Christian values. As such, it is possible to see Chinese resistance today to American diplomats trying to attach human rights conditions to a trade agreement, as a continuation of the earlier attempts to force China to open herself up to missionaries, as she was forced, by gunboats, to open herself up to trade.

Here we see the problem I believe is inherent in Western human rights: their genesis in Christianity. If human rights occupies the same space in Western hearts that was once occupied by Christianity, is it surprising that people of different faiths, of cultures that did not evolve with Christianity, should resist this imposition? That we in the West do not recognize this link allows us to be as blind in our conviction of the superior morality of our position, as we were when we destroyed and enslaved the Aztecs, while all the time convinced that we were doing them a favour – after all, were we not saving their souls? Thus, the functional goal of attempting to stop holocausts, can be lost in this natural human resistance to our zealotry.

But even this is not my primary concern. Rather it is that I believe that there is a profound error at the very heart of Christianity, one that is so deeply embedded at the very beginning of the Bible that its effects permeate Judaism and Christianity: namely that man is made in God’s image and that His creation was put here for our use. This, it seems to me, is the fatal flip side of human rights: the primacy of humanity and our divinely ordained dominion over all other living things and the planet Earth itself – the Universe even. This flip side is evident in everything the West does – it contaminates our culture on every level – and as our culture has become the global culture, this error seems destined to become the birthright of humanity. The hubris that we see demonstrated all around us, is built into Western culture at its most inner, Christian core. It informed, and informs, the path of history from industrial revolutions, to the colonisation of North America, and the imperialisms of the West. It profoundly determines the way we live now. The whole economic drive that we are using to destroy the planet and to exterminate the wondrous variety of ecosystems and living beings on it, is informed by that central understanding that we are made in the image of god, and that that god has made the world for us to use as we wish. It does not matter that so many of us in the West have lost our faith, for we still hold that covenant between us and creation to be true.

So I say that we need a new covenant with Nature, one that is guided by what science is teaching us about the true nature of the world and our place in it. Once we see that we have no such human right to exert dominion as we do, then perhaps we can stop this wilful destruction, and so save the world and ourselves, from ourselves…

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going barefoot…

Monday, August 2nd, 2010
standing on Mother Earth...

standing on Mother Earth...

I had a revelation some years ago while camping with some friends near Cape Wrath when, over three days, I went barefoot. Not only did I discover that my feet could cope with any kind of terrain (by changing shape, they proved to be the best all terrain ‘shoe’ *grin*) but, more importantly, I realized in what a profound way feet ‘feel’ the earth. We clump around our world with ‘space suits’ on our feet – as if we are walking on an alien planet. Another way to think about it is that we inflict deliberate leprosy on our feet – making them entirely numb and ‘blind’ to the earth.

Various conclusions seem me to arise from this. Firstly, that what we fear seems predominantly be the human environment – the danger of broken glass, for example: it is in our cities that we feel footwear to be most essential. Then there is a notion of ‘pollution’ – that we might inadvertently stand on some dog shit. How many of us can’t even walk on gravel without behaving as if it were white hot. We seem to believe that our feet are too delicate to walk naked on anything harder than a rug. Tough, of course, the human foot is as perfectly developed for walking on the earth as any hoof or paw. (It’s possible that we’ve evolved a more delicate foot – but I’m not convinced we’ve been wearing footwear long enough for this to have happened.)

And here is what I consider to be most important: if it is the case that footwear is one of the ‘gifts’ of civilization – is it possible that this profound numbness to the earth: to soil, to stone, to stream, to boggy ground, to plants, to sand (perhaps the only one we regularly walk on – and, interestingly, one of the most sterile) – is it possible that it walks hand in hand with the literal disconnection from our planet that makes it easier to despoil, pollute and destroy her?

I play with some of these notions in the Stone Dance. It is the Masters who make a phobia of touching the earth. The Plainsmen are not entirely free of this prejudice, at least their men are forbidden to walk barefoot upon the earth – though here it is, perhaps, the result of a too strong matriarchy and, really, this is the flip side of the Masters’ neurosis

It seems to me that much could be gained by moving towards – if not walking barefoot – the development of some kind of footwear that would allow as much sensation to come through to our feet as possible…

As ‘civilization’ marches on, more and more people are cutting themselves off from touching, daily, Mother Earth. Soon, not one of us will stand barefoot upon her and that seems to me a dangerous divorce…

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Eastercon – panels and launch…

Wednesday, April 8th, 2009

The following are the panels I will be on during my visit to Eastercon 2009… So you can listen to me waffle on all these subjects. I don’t know what I will be doing at my launch… but there is free wine… and you can chat to me. In fact, if you’re around, and you spot me (I look much the same as the picture above) do PLEASE say hello… I am VERY friendly :)

Researching your world
Fri 20:00
“Do you research first or do you invent it all? Does it give you more
freedom or constraints? Do you feel free to ignore scientific or
historical accuracy? Is building your alternate timeline, is it as
complex as building an alternate world?”
Ricardo Pinto (moderator)
Oisin McGann
Cory Doctorow
Charlie Stross
Jon Courtenay Grimwood
Ian MacLeod

Mapping the mysterious

Sat 12:30
An epic story needs an epic setting. Find out what you need to do when
desiging your world. Then create your own maps.
Ralph Horsely (moderator)
David Angus
Ricardo Pinto
Liam Sharp

Music of the Spheres
Sat 14:00
“How music and our understanding of the universe have developed, hand in hand.”
Ricardo Pinto (moderator)
Doug Fazzani
Emma J. King
Nicholas Jackson
Gary Lloyd
Andrew Patton

“SF, technology and games”
Sat 17:00
“Almost every SF trend, from artificial intelligence to virtual
reality was embraced by the gaming industry first (or at least that?s
what some gamers like to think). But what has the gaming world really
been like over these last few decades? How did it compare to what SFi
promised us it would be? Which are the noteworthy games in this
regard, past and future? And where is the industry really heading to?

Ricardo Pinto (moderator)
Chris Wooding
John Coxon
Alison Scott

Are role-players authors?
Sat 22:00
“Role-players often describe role-playing as a collaborative process a
creative outlet for interactive stories. Can the stories we weave
around the gaming table or online be compared to those written by
authors consciously working to create plot and characterization to
stimulate and entertain others? Do we want them to compare? Do
role-players create novels, and are they any good?”
Ricardo Pinto (moderator)
Kari
Max
Amanda Kear
Jonny Nexus

Music as Universal Communication
Sun 10:00
“Given its mathematical base, perhaps music would make an ideal
universal language?”
Liam Proven (moderator)
Ricardo Pinto
Sparks

Ricardo Pinto Book Launch
Sun 19:00
Ricardo Pinto launches his new book from Transworld
Ricardo Pinto post@ricardopinto.com

World-building with Music
Mon 10:00 Tech required for this item
“The power of music to inspire imagination & world-building, including
Tolkien’s Middle Earth books (Tolkien’ s universe was sung into
existence as part of the wider creation myth in The Silmarillion),
Wagner’s Ring Cycle (and the concept of Leitmotif), Narnia, Marianne
L’Engle. H. Beam Piper (Omnilingual), Piers Anthony, Greer Gilman…”
Valerie Housden (moderator)
Ricardo Pinto
Vince Docherty
John Clute

Unfortunately, because this clashes with a radio interview I agreed to do for the BBC, I will not longer be attending the following panel:

Terraforming vs Pantropy
Mon 12:30
“If we ever make it to other solar systems, we’ll find that we need a
place to live. Discuss concepts for colonizing away from Mother Earth
- biospheres, terraforming, and more.”
Colin Harvey (moderator)
David Angus
Nik Whitehead
Ricardo Pinto

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