The Murderous Church of Rachel Carson  
By Eli Lehrer
FrontPageMagazine.com | June 11, 2007

One hundred years after her birth in May of 1907, it's difficult to 
underestimate Rachel Carson's influence. Unfortunately, it's all bad. 
That hasn't stopped her from remaining an academic deity to the 
campus Left.

A wildlife bureaucrat by profession (she eventually became the chief 
publications editor for the Fish and Wildlife Service), Carson wrote 
what has become the seminal text of the environmental movement: 
1962's Silent Spring. The book, a gloomy, sometimes hysterical tract, 
argues that chemicals in the environment do enormous harm to humans 
and wildlife. The pesticide DDT gets singled out for particular blame 
and is indicted for destroying wildlife and causing enormous problems 
in humans. While DDT may harm certain types of wildlife, nobody has 
even come close to proving Carson's claim that "one in four" people 
might die from chemically caused cancers, her strong implication that 
the most pesticides were first developed as a chemical weapons, or 
her new-age speculation that human bodies build up enormous stores of 
dangerous environmental toxins.

In the wake of the book, however, DDT faced a near-total worldwide 
ban. In the developed world, where alternatives were available, this 
ban had little consequence. For the world's truly poor, the ban on 
DDT proved a disaster. As a result, deaths from mosquito-borne 
malaria and other diseases that the pesticide had controlled 
skyrocketed.

Millions, most of them children under five living in the 
underdeveloped world, have died as a result. Clearly, the book had a 
negative influence.

But that hasn't stopped the academic Left and its political allies 
from continuing to lionize Carson. The book remains required reading 
on leading college campuses and has evolved into the centerpiece of a 
sort of environmental theology. All too often, it's read the way 
fundamentalists read religious texts: without any critical analysis. 
I wanted to see how widely the book still found use on college 
campuses. Through a series of telephone calls and web searches, I 
found that all eight Ivy League campuses stock in their book store 
and at least three required it as course reading last term. (At least 
two others have required it at some point in the recent past.) Other 
colleges like Pomona and MIT also have also assigned it as required 
reading.

Of course, there's noting wrong with reading Silent Spring or 
assigning it in class. Although the book seems shrill and overwritten 
in places, plenty of people have had praise for its prose style. 
Given its influence, furthermore, anyone who wants to understand the 
political background of the environmental movement could benefit from 
reading it.

But it's interesting how it gets assigned. Simply by virtue of being 
45 years old, it has almost no use as a scientific text. No field of 
science pursued on university campuses is anything close to a 
completed body of knowledge. Even moderately advanced courses in 
fields like planetary astronomy, cell biology, and a host of other 
disciplines rarely even have printed textbooks because the fields are 
evolving much too fast for publishers to keep up with new 
developments. Unlike a work of history or literature, scientific 
texts expire after awhile. Thus Carson doesn't get assigned in hard 
science courses: the courses where she's assigned all deal with 
politics, environmentalism, and, in one case, feminism. She's a 
favorite of people who with few real scientific credentials—people 
who prefer a quasi-religion of environmentalism to serious 
intellectual inquiry or critical thought about environmental issues.

A recent anthology of essays about Carson issued in honor of her 
100th Birthday, Courage for the Earth: Writers, Scientists, and 
Activists Celebrate the Life and Writing of Rachel Carson, includes 
only one piece by a bona fide research scientist (Harvard's E.O. 
Wilson.) Although a few authors do hold doctorates in the sciences, 
they are all professional writers or activists rather than 
researchers. Nonetheless, there's an academically oriented non-profit 
group (devoted to environmental causes of cancer) named after Carson 
and her alma mater has established a research institute that also 
bears her name. Counties she was associated with can't seem to stop 
naming schools after her and she's received just about every major 
civilian award the United States has to offer.

In context, this shouldn't come as a surprise. To those who lionize 
her it doesn't matter that Carson's work was destructive or that it's 
out of date. It's considered worthy of study for because it affirms 
certain spiritual values. The call for papers from the group "Nature 
and Environmental Writers - College and University Educators" gives a 
sense of how Carson gets taught today. Among other topics, the 
conference calls for papers that emphasize:

Thee timelessness and constancy of all things within the web of 
creation. 
Awakening of emotional responses to nature. 
Cultivating a sense of wonder among children and adults as an 
emotional response to the living world.
Papers on all of these topics by necessity present subjective value 
judgments: Particular, romantic (that is, strongly emotional) ways of 
looking at the world. They may be worth writing but the content, one 
assumes, would be much closer to theology than science. People are, 
of course, entitled to hold whatever values suit them. But, given the 
negative consequences of Carson's work, it's difficult to see much 
merit in the academic quasi-religion that has sprung up around her.


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