A realistic prediction of the future depends upon recognition that humanity originated in Africa by a series of accidents bordering on the bizarre. The unique winning combination was, first, a relatively immense body size, roughly over 10 kilograms, attained by fewer than 1 in 10,000 species in the history of the animal kingdom. Large bodies make possible the evolution of large brains. Add to this our fast, very precise audiovisual communication, where the vast majority of animal species, along with plants and microorganisms, depend on taste and smell.
(Read Britannica’s biography of this author, E.O. Wilson.)
We alone can think back and forth through time. Language refined into written literacy has allowed us to envelope and dominate the planet. Tragically, Homo sapiens is not prone to be benevolent to the rest of life. We have proceeded to extirpate all those species of organisms that do not provide us with food, shelter, energy, or entertainment. Meanwhile, we are deeply conflicted in our moral reasoning toward nature and among ourselves. The cause for this condition appears to be the multiple-layered nature of the natural selection that shaped our progenitors’ emotional apparatus. Our responses were crafted by a mix of individual selection, defined as competition among members of the same group for status and resources (“selfish” behavior), versus competition between groups that requires cooperation within groups (“altruistic” behavior). Therein lies the curse visited upon humanity. Its most dangerous and seemingly ineradicable consequence is conflict among competing religious faiths as well as among competing religion-like ideologies.
The consequence that causes me greatest personal concern for Earth’s ultimate future is the ongoing mass extinction of the rest of life. We share the planet with a roughly estimated 10 million other species. They are being extinguished at a rate between 100 and 1,000 times faster than before the arrival of our own species. The effect could be the reduction of Earth’s biodiversity to half its present amount by the end of the century. I prayerfully hope that somehow we can slow the extinction rate and avoid a permanent horrific catastrophe for Earth and ourselves, but, as a career-long student of the subject, I am not optimistic. Yet, we must, and soon. To fail will be the folly our descendants are least likely to forgive.
This essay was originally published in 2018 in Encyclopædia Britannica Anniversary Edition: 250 Years of Excellence (1768–2018).