stefano mancuso, standing up for plants

Plants are way smarter than humans give them credit for being…

Here’s a cool, thought­ful video from the very cool TED pro­gram that I was first pointed out to me cour­tesy of a link sent out by Inter­na­tional Car­niv­o­rous Plant Soci­ety. (Yes, there are a cou­ple shots of a Venus flytrap.)

You can select sub­ti­tling into any of ten lan­guages in case you’d like to catch every word Ste­fano Man­cuso, one of the founders of plant neu­ro­bi­ol­ogy, has to say. Part of his mes­sage: Gen­e­sis got it all wrong, but then so did Aristotle.

(An aside: I’ve writ­ten at least once about pro­nounc­ing sci­en­tific Latin names. Lis­ten to how Man­cuso pro­nounces the Latin name of California’s own giant sequoia, Sequoiaden­dron gigan­teum at the 3:51 mark. If there’s any coun­try that can lay claim to even begin to pro­nounce Latin cor­rectly it’s gotta be Italy, and the way the name comes out sound­ing has almost noth­ing to do with how I’m used to hear­ing it. Of course the word “Sequoia” orig­i­nates on this side of the pond, so this is a puz­zle with no real answer–the most inter­est­ing kind!)


October 28 2010 | Categories: gardening | Tags: | 4 Comments »

those arrogant humans…

Are gar­den­ers more hum­ble peo­ple? Do we know things a lot of oth­ers don’t or believe in things oth­ers choose not to believe? Here are a cou­ple thoughts for Earth Day, the first one a soft feather bed of a quote, the sec­ond one a bed of nails.

Human beings–any one of us, and our species as a whole–are not all-important, not at the cen­ter of the world. That is the one essen­tial piece of infor­ma­tion, the one great secret, offered by any encounter with the woods or the moun­tains or the ocean or any wilder­ness or chunk of nature or patch of night sky.–Bill McK­ibben in an inter­view with Susan Salter Reynolds, in the Los Ange­les Times Book Review, April 13.

If wildlife species are to become extinct, that will be regret­table. But any lit­er­ate per­son knows that extinc­tion is the way of evo­lu­tion, and is in the fun­da­men­tal flow of life. How­ever, man is dif­fer­ent. If man is not immor­tal, then there is no pur­pose or mean­ing in his exis­tence. Which in turn would mean no pur­pose or mean­ing in the uni­verse. The human immor­tal­ity imper­a­tive is absolute and rad­i­cal. That is why wildlife con­ser­va­tion has never been per­mit­ted to move to the ques­tions of ulti­mate value. There is no place for an ulti­mate non­hu­man value in our west­ern meta­physics, because of neces­sity, the human inter­est is the cos­mic inter­est. That is what it is all about. Wildlife is an “exter­nal­ity.” — John. A. Liv­ingston in The Fal­lacy of Wildlife Con­ser­va­tion, in The John A. Liv­ingston Reader (2007: 101).

April 22 2008 | Categories: gardeningquotesrambles | Tags: | 1 Comment »