Usivius wrote:Now unlike others complaining about the "Nobel savage" issue, I don't have a problem with it. There is something to be said about RESPECT for where you live and how you live. And that is the difference between the 'savages' and the 'humans'. This is NOT about supplying for your group/city/nation on a large scale, it's about "need" versus "want". And history is full of examples of cliche greedy business men/corperations who see "bottom-line" over the effect their greed is having.
As chief complainer, I'll respond to that.
I don't have a problem with the idea of a mythical noble savage any more than I have a problem with Tolkien's Elves. If we're only talking about mythical characters, then that would be fine. My problem is that people forget that we're talking about a myth, and think that the noble savage is something we should actually strive to emulate (not to mention the whole historical debate started with Rousseau in which people have argued that this ideal
actually existed, and that it was civilization which made humans "bad").
I have no problem with the idea that we should respect the environment. But it is a mistake to think civilization is the problem, and living closer to nature is the "solution" (I say this as we debate on the Internet with our computers that run on electricity

). Despite what you see in movies, primitive humans didn't take care of the environment because they loved it more than we do. Their smaller impact on the environment was due to being dirt poor, combined with their extremely inefficient means of production. There was nothing
noble about their poverty and impotence. It wasn't like they had the means to destroy the environment and then chose not to. Given the opportunity to live like we do now, I'm sure most of them would love to have AC and running water and 75 year life spans. There is plenty of forest on this planet. Any one of us can go live in a tree if we want to.
[Actually, I must contradict the above by pointing out that primitive man hunted 1000s of species into extinction long before we had civilization. So they actually did have the power to rape the planet, and did so frequently. American Indians also burned down huge forests in order to have farmland.]
Avatar was unambiguous: technology and nature are incompatible. Greed and nature are incompatible. There is no middle ground, no place for people like you and me who can't get our own avatar and marry the tribal princess. If we're to take Cameron's message at face value (a message which he needs $400 million and lots of technology that was produced by capitalism in order to convey), we're screwed because there is absolutely nothing redeeming about humans or capitalism.
Yes there is something to be said about respecting the environment. But this isn't it. And there is also something to be said about capitalism and "greed." But this isn't it, either. Capitalism and greed have produced more nobility than all the savages put together. I'll take civilization over slavery, cannibalism, superstition, poverty, disease, and human sacrifice any day.
[As long as we're going to use movies to exemplify our idea of savages, I recommend Apocalypto. Watch that and then get back to me on which type of society you'd rather have. I rather like not having my head chopped off in order to stop an eclipse.

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