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NYTimes: Natural Happiness

An interesting piece in the New York Times Magazine about how humans are wired to benefit from nature:

You might think that technology could provide a simulacrum of nature with all the bad parts scrubbed out. But attempts to do so have turned out to be interesting failures. There is a fortune to be made, for instance, by building a robot that children would respond to as if it were an animal. There have been many attempts, but they don’t evoke anywhere near the same responses as puppies, kittens or even hamsters. They are toys, not companions. Or consider a recent study by the University of Washington psychologist Peter H. Kahn Jr. and his colleagues. They put 50-inch high-definition televisions in the windowless offices of faculty and staff members to provide a live view of a natural scene. People liked this, but in another study that measured heart-rate recovery from stress, the HDTVs were shown to be worthless, no better than staring at a blank wall. What did help with stress was giving people an actual plate-glass window looking out upon actual greenery.

All of this provides a different sort of argument for the preservation of nature. Put aside for the moment practical considerations like the need for clean air and water, and ignore as well spiritual worries about the sanctity of Mother Earth or religious claims that we are the stewards of creation. Look at it from the coldblooded standpoint of the enhancement of the happiness of our everyday lives. Real natural habitats provide significant sources of pleasure for modern humans. We intuitively grasp this, and this knowledge underlies the anxiety that we feel about nature’s loss. It might be that one day we will be able to replace the experience of nature with “Star Trek” holodecks and robotic animals. But until then, this basic fact about human pleasure is an excellent argument for keeping the real thing.

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Here are some thoughts on monarchy and Samuel 8. As I see it, Israel 1) wanted to be like the pagan nations, 2) wanted a monarch for military reasons, 3) and probably wanted a strong central government, although that is not quite in the text.

Secondly, the praise of government in the Bible shifted. Yes, the reconstructionists/Christian America types are correct on one level: the old testament law does teach a type of theocratic republicanism.

However, the Psalms always praise the monarch, never the president.

Finally, I want to be unlike the pagans today. They want a a democracy.

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