Current:Home > MarketsCharles H. Sloan-How Should We Think About the End of the World as We Know it? -Core Financial Strategies
Charles H. Sloan-How Should We Think About the End of the World as We Know it?
Will Sage Astor View
Date:2025-04-09 14:01:53
In the 14th century,Charles H. Sloan the Italian poet Petrarch wrote a letter to a friend in Avignon, describing his sense of “foreboding” after an earthquake shook the foundations of Rome’s churches. “What should I do first, lament or be frightened?” he asked. “Everywhere there is cause for fear, everywhere reason for grief.”
The earthquake was only one in a series of calamities endured in the poet’s lifetime to that point: floods, storms, fires, wars and finally, “the plague from heaven that is unequaled through the ages,” the dreaded Black Death, which would eventually kill more than a third of Europe’s population.
In his letter, Petrarch was distressed by the suffering of the present, but he was equally worried about what it meant for the future. His fears were “not only about the quaking of land but its effect on minds.”
Six hundred years after Petrarch grappled with the apocalyptic tremors of his own time, the effect of catastrophe on minds is the subject of several new articles published in the last few weeks by The New York Times, The Washington Post, and New York Magazine, all of them concerned with the end of the world as we know it. They’re tackling a question at the heart of our collective (in)ability to confront an existential threat: How should we think about—and through–the global disaster that is climate change?
After years of rising sea levels, warming temperatures, and mass extinction, why has this question bubbled to the American cultural surface now? For one perspective, I asked Elizabeth Weil, whose essay “How to Live in a Catastrophe” appeared in New York Magazine last week. She believes the flurry of writing on the topic is connected to the increasingly devastating extreme weather of the 2020s. “The idea that we weren’t already in the middle of the climate crisis just fell away,” she said. “You couldn’t deny it anymore.”
Since 2020, the Doomsday Clock has ticked ever closer to midnight. We are in a moment that the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists calls “both perilous and unsustainable,” listing among its reasons for alarm the fallout from the climate crisis, fears of nuclear war in Ukraine, and the Covid-19 pandemic. On climate change, the Scientists’ verdict on humanity’s response is “lots of words, relatively little action,” an assessment that negotiations at COP27 have done little to prove wrong.
Ranking climate change as number two on his list of “Top 10 Existential Worries,” Joel Achenbach confesses in the Washington Post that he is “cautiously optimistic,” positing that how you think about existential threats comes down to your faith in humanity–or lack thereof. “Do you believe, fundamentally, in the human race?” he asks.
Writing “Beyond Catastrophe” in the Times, David Wallace-Wells also finds reasons for optimism in 2022. With the aid of newly cheap renewable energy and a “truly global political mobilization,” Wallace-Wells envisions “a new climate reality” for humanity and the planet that will make true neither “the most terrifying predictions” nor “the most hopeful.”
In her essay, Weil consults activists and scholars, searching for strategies that others have deployed when confronted with the cataclysms of the past. “This isn’t the first time in human history when the world has been completely overwhelming,” she said, of her reasons for writing the piece. (Petrarch would agree: he describes the late 1340s as a period of such misery that “new forms of evil are inconceivable.”)
Weil’s piece considers the “intelligent sabotage” advocated by thinkers like the Swedish eco-Marxist Andreas Malm, author of “How to Blow Up a Pipeline,” as well as the “tools of religion” advanced by ecophilosopher Timothy Morton, and the “ritual comfort” of performances like a glacier funeral staged by anthropologists Cymene Howe and Dominic Boyer in Iceland in 2019. They installed a plaque, titled “A letter to the future,” with this message:
This monument is to acknowledge
that we know what is happening
and what needs to be done.
Only you know if we did it.
Knowing what needs to be done is one thing; having the will to do it is another. We are not experiencing this catastrophe in the same way or at the same pace. Some of us are still in the anger and bargaining phases of climate grief, while others have moved well past acceptance.
On a trip to Iceland this August, I stood on the edge of an aquamarine lagoon that is fed by the melting Breiðamerkurjökull glacier. Icebergs–glittery fragments broken off from the dying glacier–floated by, banded with volcanic ash, a record of Iceland’s ancient eruptions. I asked a few of the Icelanders who were working there as tour guides how they felt about this place. To me, the scene was both transfixing and tragic; the lagoon exists like this because of climate change, and for all its dazzling beauty, it is also a disturbing portent. But the Icelanders didn’t see it like I did, maybe because in their country it has long been impossible to ignore how rapidly we are shredding the fabric of the natural world. They do not have the luxury of shock. Watching the crowds of tourists snapping photos of seals frolicking in the water, their response was stoic. “This is just how it is,” one of them said.
The truth about catastrophe is that even in its tumultuous midst, we mostly forge ahead, sloughing off our terror. We adapt, we rebuild, and we convince ourselves that the fates of our neighbors will not befall us. When everything familiar is crumbling around us, our first instinct is so often to cling to any scraps of normalcy that remain. You could see this instinct clearly in the early months of the Covid-19 pandemic; around the world, panic soon gave way to grim routine.
On the other hand, as Weil points out in her piece, there is nothing irrational about catastrophizing when you’re living through a genuine catastrophe. “Yes, it’s a catastrophe,” she writes. “And no, you would not be better off if you continued to tell yourself otherwise.” In order to avoid the pitfalls of denial and despair, we will need to chart a practical path through the ambiguous abyss that lies between optimism and doom. “We’re going to have to live with hope,” Weil said. “And we’re going to have to live with a lot of fear.” To safely evacuate a burning building and put the fire out, you need to communicate the urgency of the emergency; you also need to project confidence and encourage calm.
This is another way to think through catastrophe: seek solace in the clarity of action. Weil recounts Günther Anders’ reimagining of the Great Flood, where Noah appears before the people in mourning dress, telling them that they have already died because total catastrophe will soon be upon them. That night a carpenter comes to his workshop and offers to build an ark so that Noah’s terrible vision “may become false.” A future that seemed preordained is altered through work.
Anders’ story is like the common proverb that warns against the folly of relying only on faith when you are in danger. “Call on God, but row away from the rocks,” is one version in English, though similar warnings exist in other languages and cultures. Faith in the human spirit might be a necessary balm to the mind in catastrophe, but balm alone can’t save us from ourselves. Hope without action is just a wish.
In another of Petrarch’s letters, he comforts his correspondent with a quotation from Virgil. “Hold on,” he writes, “and find salvation in the hope of better things.” Our hopes for the future should not be pinned on preserving the tattered, unequal status quo. “Change is scary, and big change is really scary, but our world is not perfect. It’s very, very, very far from it,” Weil said in our interview. “What if change truly does bring us to a better place? Even though we’re terrified?”
Also Trending
Populations of sand dollars, sea biscuits, and heart urchins, which are vital inhabitants of the coastal ecosystems of the Florida Keys, have remained “relatively stable” since the 1960s, a new study found. This was true even as fish, coral, seagrass, and manatees have declined in the region. Researchers don’t know why the urchins have survived in greater numbers, but they speculated that it may be because they are “neither of commercial nor of recreational interest” to people.
The climate scientist and activist Peter Kalmus was arrested at an airport facility for private jets in North Carolina, trying to raise awareness about climate change and fossil fuel emissions. This is the second time this year he has been arrested for protesting. “It just feels very weird that I have to do this, that it’s gotten to this point,” Kalmus said. “I feel desperate.”
In Israel, scientists are building a seed bank of wild crops in the hopes that this foraged genetic material may contain solutions to the growing problems related to climate change and agriculture. Experts are particularly eager to collect seeds in this region because it was once part of the Fertile Crescent, with a history of farming that stretches back 10,000 years. Once-domesticated plants that now grow wild there have had many generations to adapt to changing conditions.
veryGood! (3)
Related
- McConnell absent from Senate on Thursday as he recovers from fall in Capitol
- Invasive worm causes disease in Vermont beech trees
- Dark past of the National Stadium in Chile reemerges with opening ceremony at the Pan American Games
- New trial date set for father of Arizona boy who died after being locked in a closet
- Sam Taylor
- Gaza has long been a powder keg. Here’s a look at the history of the embattled region
- Defendant in classified docs case waives conflict of interest concerns
- Starbucks, union file dueling lawsuits over pro-Palestine social media post
- Whoopi Goldberg is delightfully vile as Miss Hannigan in ‘Annie’ stage return
- Bachelor Nation’s Becca Kufrin and Thomas Jacobs Get Married One Month After Welcoming Baby Boy
Ranking
- McKinsey to pay $650 million after advising opioid maker on how to 'turbocharge' sales
- 5 Things podcast: Why are many Americans still stressed about their finances?
- Altuve hits go-ahead homer in 9th, Astros take 3-2 lead over Rangers in ALCS after benches clear
- High mortgage rates push home sales decline, tracking to hit Great Recession levels
- Trump's 'stop
- A tent camp for displaced Palestinians pops up in southern Gaza, reawakening old traumas
- Georgia prison escapees still on the lam after fleeing Bibb County facility: What to know
- Maluma Reveals He’s Expecting His First Baby With Girlfriend Susana Gomez in New Music Video
Recommendation
Taylor Swift makes surprise visit to Kansas City children’s hospital
'My benchmark ... is greatness': Raiders WR Davante Adams expresses frustration with role
'Marvel's Spider-Man 2' game features 2 web slingers: Peter Parker and Miles Morales
Ukraine displays recovered artifacts it says were stolen by Russians
The Grammy nominee you need to hear: Esperanza Spalding
How a hidden past, a name change and GPS led to Katrina Smith's killer
Russian-American journalist detained in Russia, the second such move there this year
EU discusses Bulgaria’s gas transit tax that has angered Hungary and Serbia