Howard Bloom affirms the book's message of hope, contrasting it with apocalyptic predictions and advocating for an optimistic vision of the future, highlighting nature's drive for change.
[120:02-120:08]
Speaker confirms the book's message of hope, stating it counters apocalyptic views by saying humans are not a cancer on the planet.
And this book says, "No, you are not a cancer on the planet." All right.
[119:42-120:08]
Speaker declares the book is about hope, contrasting it with the apocalyptic views of Greta Thunberg and deep ecologists who believe humans are violating nature.
It is a book of hope. It's a book of hope because, um, Greta Thunberg says we're about to have the great apocalypse. The deep, uh, deep ecologists, the ones who want to pare the population down to 200 million people say that we're, uh, violating na- nature in every conceivable way and we're a cancer on the planet. And this book says, "No, you are not a cancer on the planet." All right.
[120:08-120:40]
Speaker describes nature's inherent drive for change and progress, advocating for an optimistic future and rejecting visions of death and destruction.
Change is nature's way of doing things. Going up is nature's way of doing things. The next great adventures are just around the corner. Um, the We can shoot for paradises. We don't we should never allow ourselves to be trapped in a vision of the future in which everything is death and destruction, and it's all our fault, and we should be ashamed, and we should be making sacrifices all over the place. That's not how nature made any of her creatures to live.
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