Haley Conroy - 2/14/23 - John Muir - (Outside of Class Reading)

 In the beginning section of John Muir’s essay titled Wild Parks and Reservations, he goes into depressing detail about noticeable changes in landscapes, particularly plant life, in many different regions of the United States. As I read this section I found myself thinking that it seems somewhat similar to something you would see in an essay on the environmental changes induced by climate change today. One connection between the text and modern-day was between ecotourism and the quote "Thousands of tired, nerve-shaken, over-civilized people are beginning to find out that going to the mountains is going home; that wilderness is a necessity, and that mountain parks and reservations are useful not only as fountains of timber and irrigating rivers but as fountains of life." (721). Muir has taken the ideas of simplicity in life suggested by philosophers such as Thoreau and embodied them, although I think that Muir is a well-educated man that understood the complexities that exist within natural systems. I believe that Muir's understanding of said ecological systems in nature was what gave him a greater appreciation for the natural world. Someone can see a natural landscape and appreciate its beauty then become underwhelmed soon after, but when you understand the amount of perfection there is in any given ecological unit you could forever study how it functions so well and this definitely relates to our class discussion about the enviornment.


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