The Reviews Below are from Opinion Journal from the Wall Street Journal Opinion Page and can be found at:
http://www.opinionjournal.com/weekend/fivebest/?id=110007473
Green Gray Areas
Books that question the conventional wisdom on the environment.
BY MICHAEL CRICHTON
Saturday, October 29, 2005 12:01 a.m. EDT
1. "Playing God in Yellowstone" by Alston Chase (Atlantic Monthly Press, 1986).
That raw sewage bubbles out of the ground at Yellowstone National Park--after
more than a century of botched conservation--would come as no surprise to Alston
Chase, who 20 years ago wrote "Playing God in Yellowstone: The Destruction of
America's First National Park." Mr. Chase, a former professor of philosophy
turned journalist, presents a clear critique of ever-changing environmental
beliefs and the damage that they have caused the actual environment. As a
philosopher, he is contemptuous of much conventional wisdom and the
muddle-headed attitudes he calls "California cosmology."
2. "The Culture Cult" by Roger Sandall (Westview, 2001).
In "The Culture Cult: Designer Tribalism and Other Essays," anthropologist Roger
Sandall explores romantic primitivism--the myth of Eden and the Noble Savage.
Mr. Sandall's histories of utopian communities (Robert Owen's New Harmony, John
Humphrey Noyes's disastrous Oneida) are vivid, and his portraits of leading
primitivists, from Rousseau to Mead to Levi-Strauss, are sharply drawn. This
ignorant nostalgia for our tribal past ignores the truly horrific reality of
tribal initiation, warfare, mutilation and human sacrifice.
3. "Man and the Natural World" by Keith Thomas (Oxford, 1984).
Don't be put off by the academic title of Keith Thomas's "Man in the Natural
World: Changing Attitudes in England 1500-1800." The book's a delight. Mr.
Thomas's account is both detailed and charming as he guides the reader from the
Tudor view, that nature was made for man to exploit, through the later sense
that nature was to be worshipped and cherished (such that trees became pets and
aristocrats gave names to their great estate trees and said good-night to them
each evening). Still later came the Romantic preference for untouched nature and
rough settings, a rarified taste that required "a long course of aesthetic
education." At every turn, Mr. Thomas emphasizes the contradictions between
belief and behavior.
4. "The Skeptical Environmentalist" by Bjørn Lomborg (Cambridge University
Press, 2002).
No one should miss Bjørn Lomborg's "The Skeptical Environmentalist." The author,
a Danish statistician and former Greenpeace activist, set out to disprove the
views of the late Julian Simon, who claimed that environmental fears were
baseless and that the world was actually improving. To Mr. Lomborg's surprise,
he found that Simon was mostly right. Mr. Lomborg's text is calm and devastating
to established dogma.
5. "The Logic of Failure" by Dietrich Dörner (Perseus, 1998).
Future environmentalists will heed Dietrich Dörner's "The Logic of Failure." Mr.
Dörner is a cognitive psychologist who invited academic experts to manage the
computer simulations of various environments (an African herding society, a town
in Maine). Most experts made things worse. Those managers who did well gathered
information before acting, thought in terms of complex-systems interactions
instead of simple linear cause and effect, reviewed their progress, looked for
unanticipated consequences, and corrected course often. Those who did badly
relied on a fixed theoretical approach, did not correct course and blamed others
when things went wrong. Mr. Dörner concludes that our failure to manage complex
systems such as the environment reflects bad habits of thought, overreliance on
theory and lazy procedures. His book is brief, cheerful and profound.
Mr. Crichton is author of the novels "State of Fear" and "Jurassic Park," among
many others, and creator of the television series "ER."