Title: ENVIRONMENTAL CONCERNS
1- ENVIRONMENTAL CONCERNS
- conservation, sustainable development,
environmental health, animal welfare and species
preservation . . . And all their economic,
political, and even spiritual implications . . .
Do not belong to any one department! - Arguably, great cultures rise and fall as their
relationship with their environments waxes and
wanes, is more or less harmonious.
2- Great Universities provide world-class
- Education
- Research
- Outreach
- AND have a responsibility to deploy their
resources to address major social issues for the
common good
3INTERDISCIPLINARITY
- Creates an ideal environment for . . .
- . . . the expression of unprecedented or
novel perceptions, thoughts, or actions . . . - Exposes disciplinarians to new ways of
seeing, ways of thinking, ways of acting that
can be applied to real problems, and thereby . .
. - builds bridges between previously unrelated
domains of knowledge - It is virtually a formula for creativity
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5University Studies Projects
Attitudes about our relationship to nature
profoundly affect public policy . . . And are
forged in part by spontaneous behavioral
responses and in part by our cultural environment
and development.
In this regard, historians of art, culture,
religion, ecologists, sociologists and economists
have much to learn from each other.
Nam et ipsa scientia potestas est
6- The University of Tennessee, Knoxville has
designated Spring semester of 2005, the
ENVIRONMENTAL SEMESTER. - From January through May the University will
celebrate the teaching, research, and outreach
activities of the University in which concern
with the environment, conservation, or
sustainable development is a central or
significant component.
7- Campus-wide events featuring lectures,
presentations, shows, and performances by
distinguished visiting scholars, artists, and
performers will provide our 27,000 graduate and
undergraduate students and the community many
opportunities to experience and learn about the
diverse ways in which we affect and are affected
by our relationship to the environment.
8Campus-Wide Lectures
- Robert F. Kennedy Jr.
- Michael Klare and David Hill
- Jonathan Weiner
- E.O. Wilson
- Holmes Rolston III
- Lisa Newton
- Sy Montgomery
- Bruce Coull
9Almost 200 courses in over 40 departments
In addition to the usual suspects, there are
innovative courses in
- University Studies
- Interior design
- Journalism
- Philosophy
- Planning
- Political Science
- Anthropology
- Economics
- English
- History
- Sociology
- University Honors
10Campus-Wide Exhibits
- Agnes Denes Projects for Public Spaces
- Gregg Schlanger Holston River Diaries
- Lost Worlds Discovering Past Environments
- Solar and Wind Power Demonstration Project
- University Center Concourse Gallery Nature Photo
shows Senator Baker and PhotoContest winners
11Campus-Wide Performances
12Campus-Wide Conferences
- SE Regional Student Clean Energy Conference
- Howard Baker Center Clean Air Conference
13Campus-Wide Lecture Series
- Architecture Mondays at 530
- Forestry, Wildlife and Fisheries Thursdays at
330 - Documentaries in the Library series
- Dedicated environmental topics in many other
seminar programs identified in the website
calendar
14Centripetals
- February Joe Clark Ecology of Black Bears in
the Okefenokee Swamp - March Tom Galligan Toxic Torts
- April Scott Frey The Globalization of
Hazardous Wastes
15Celebrations
- Make Orange Green Dorm Competition
- Earth Day
- Earth Fest
16Key Sponsors
- Office of the Chancellor
- College of Arts and Sciences
- College of Agricultural Sciences and Natural
Resources - College of Architecture and Design
- College of Business Administration
- Student Central Program Council
- Howard Baker Center for Public Policy
- Energy, Environment and Resources Center
17DEEP ECOLOGY
BEHIND APPEARANCES
18Sir Francis Bacon
- Nam et ipsa scientia potestas est. For knowledge
itself is power. Meditations Sacrae - Naturam non vinces nisi parendo You will not
master conquer nature unless you obey it. Novum
Organum, 1620
19Decisions, decisions
- Responsible citizenship requires broad
understanding education of the heart as well as
the mind. - "The personal participation of the knower in the
knowledge he believes himself to possess takes
place within a flow of passion. (Polanyi
1958300).
20Perceptions of Nature
How the sciences, arts, and humanities inform
perceptions of nature and guide public policy
21The Biologists Bias
- Meeting NEEDS is the basic business of life.
When real (or perceived) needs are not met,
stress is created. - Organisms have ancient and powerful mechanisms
for relieving stress more recent evolutionary
innovations include education the university! - Needs exist in a hierarch of urgency. When the
most urgent need is met, all the organisms
energy is focused on the next need. - The university can give us tools and (hopefully)
the judgment to use them wisely.
22The Hierarchy of NEEDS
- Physiology (food, drink, exercise, homeostasis)
- Safety (security, order, protection)
- Belonging ( sociability, acceptance, love)
- Esteem (status, prestige, acknowledgment)
- Self-Actualization (personal fulfillment)
- --Abraham Maslow
23NEEDS
- Biological fitness is an expression of
self-actualization and it is the same for as for
a sea-slug - Be all you can be . . .
- (US Army recruiting slogan)
24NEEDS
- "The aim of life is self-development. To realize
one's nature perfectly - that is what each of us
is here for. . . . (Oscar Wilde)
The aim of the University is a true enlargement
of mind which is the power of viewing many things
at once. . (John Henry Newman, 1873)
25Educating the heart as well as the mind
- "The intuitive mind is a sacred gift and the
rational mind is a faithful servant. We have
created a society that honors the servant and has
forgotten the gift." --Einstein