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![]() Bill Tuthill wrote: Larry C wrote: I'm not sure that I buy the arguement that the Native Americans were all that environmentally conscious. For example, the Iroquois Confederation was formed to expand the tribes territory for the Fur Trade and as a response to the encroachment of the Northern Tribes supported by the French. They needed more territory because they had decimated the furbearing populations in their original tribal areas. Hardly a conservation ethic. I'm not saying that Native Americans were environmentalists, just that modern Environmentalism had its roots in indigenous religion. In the Torah and classical Greco-Roman literature, you seldom or never encounter wonder of the natural world. Virgil's Bucolic (Eclogues) are mostly about farming. In European literature, nature worship reached its peak with German Romanticism, and even there, nature is largely tamed by man. Whereas in (many tribes') Native American religion, places are sacred in and of themselves. There might be a rock (present-day Devil's Tower), or a place on a river (Ishi Pishi Fall on the Klamath) considered sacred. It could be this respect for natural features that inspired Thoreau, Leopold Aldo, John Muir, Edward Abbey (etc.) to formulate the seminal ideas of Environmentalism. Unless you have a different theory. If one considers earlier Native cultures, there seem to have been several that suffered from environmental collapses, maybe due to climate change. The Adena in the East and the Cliff Dwellers in the west for an example. I don't know about the Adena, but the Anasazi cliff dwellers were either escaping severe drought, or pushed out by invading Navajo, or both. If I would compare Environmentalism to a religion, I would have to compare it to pre-christian Celtic religions (commonly referred to as Druids), which would qualify as nature worship. |
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