Ecodharma: Chapter 3 Part 2; page 89 to 97 (The Ecology of Property to end of Chapter)
David continues the discussion about the relationship of our species to the earth. In this section he focuses on ‘property’. Ownership of land and all that it contains is a strongly held view. In the United States private property rights are the rallying cry of many, especially when the government or others attempt to restrict how that property is used. He points out that the rights of the owner are what has historically been the focus and not the rights of the owned. However, he suggests that the Buddhist nondualist view suggests a different perspective.
The question here is not necessarily do we have the right to own things such as a house or book but whether private ownership of land, which is a portion of the ecosystem that we and all other species depend upon, gives the right to degrade the land for the benefit of a few at the detriment of many?
In the early 1970s the idea of whether other components of the land also have rights began to get traction. In 1972 Christopher D. Stone wrote a book “Should Trees Have Standing? Laws, Morality, and the Environment” where this topic was explored. The environmental movement embraced this concept to protect the environment and species. This discussion continues. Towards the end of the Chapter David discusses laws enacted in New Zealand, Ecuador, and India where the rights of the natural world have been recognized.
What are your thoughts of whether “trees having standing”?
Doshin
st
David continues the discussion about the relationship of our species to the earth. In this section he focuses on ‘property’. Ownership of land and all that it contains is a strongly held view. In the United States private property rights are the rallying cry of many, especially when the government or others attempt to restrict how that property is used. He points out that the rights of the owner are what has historically been the focus and not the rights of the owned. However, he suggests that the Buddhist nondualist view suggests a different perspective.
The question here is not necessarily do we have the right to own things such as a house or book but whether private ownership of land, which is a portion of the ecosystem that we and all other species depend upon, gives the right to degrade the land for the benefit of a few at the detriment of many?
In the early 1970s the idea of whether other components of the land also have rights began to get traction. In 1972 Christopher D. Stone wrote a book “Should Trees Have Standing? Laws, Morality, and the Environment” where this topic was explored. The environmental movement embraced this concept to protect the environment and species. This discussion continues. Towards the end of the Chapter David discusses laws enacted in New Zealand, Ecuador, and India where the rights of the natural world have been recognized.
What are your thoughts of whether “trees having standing”?
Doshin
st
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