Oceans The ocean covers Seventy-one percent of our planets surface. Life is concentrated, however, in about four percent of it, and it is this four percent that is being polluted by the tons every day. Everyone needs to understand that the oceans are not endless, and not bottomless. They also much see that the ocean contains much marine life which are essential to our eco-system. And in order to preserve this other world of life, we must stop polluting the oceans, and begin to clean them up. Although using the ocean for a toxic waste dump may provide for a cheap alternative, we must not succumb to these barbaric urges.
If we neglect to deal with these ideals, than the world as we know it may not be as great a world for our children as it was for us. First, we need to understand that the oceans are not the vast resources that we believe them to be, but just vulnerable natural resources. Before Columbus’ day, the ocean were thought to be boundless. Although Columbus proved this theory incorrect, the thought still remains in today’s societies. “For we of the 20 th century still treat the ocean as the endless, bottomless pit it was considered to be in medieval times.” (Heyerdahl) The majority of the world’s population still lives under the misconception that the ocean is a hungry abyss, eager to devour all their waste.
The Essay on The Life World of Alfred Schutz
Fourth, people experience the working self as the total self in the life-world. Fifth, the social life of the life-world is characterized by intersubjectivity. Sixth, the actor's flow of time intersects with the flow of time of society. The life world is an intersubjective world, one that existed before our birth; it was created by our predecessors and it was given to us to experience and ...
These beliefs, however, are all untrue. The average depth of the oceans is only a little more than a mile, when in fact, some lakes exceed this depth rather handily. Although the size of the ocean is often pondered, the thought that it may one day be gone, is never even considered. The vast majority of all life in the ocean, inhabits only 1/25 of these waters, but it is these surroundings that are in the most danger. In the beginning of the world, marine plankton was vital to the evolution of man. Today, it is even more important to us, being that it provides us with a great percentage of oxygen we receive.
“These minute plant species manufactured so much oxygen that it rose above the surface to help form the atmosphere we have today.” (Heyerdahl) With the disappearance of the plankton through increased pollution, the obvious result will be a total deprivation of our oxygen supply, in turn limiting all people to certain limits. And with urban expansion leading to deforestation, our dependence upon marine life becomes heightened. The importance of marine plankton cannot be emphasized enough, yet most people fail to recognize it as the vital life supply it is. Further, since the turn of the century, humans have continually polluted the waters of the ocean. The trend has not lessened; but has increased as time has passed. “Most of our new chemical products are not only toxic: they are in fact created to sterile and kill.
And they keep on displaying these same inherent abilities wherever they end up.” (Heyerdahl) Although pollution reforms are in place, the clean-up efforts cannot keep up with the constant pollution. These wastes are not degradable; they remain in the ocean causing more death until they wash up on a distant shore. “Through sewers and seepage they all head for the ocean, where they remain to accumulate as undesired nuts and bolts in between the cogwheels of a so far smoothly running machine.” (Heyerdahl) Everyday, over 40, 000 tons of garbage from the major cities of America alone a retaken on a one-way excursion. Where to? The ocean, to sit like the many generations of waste before them. This constant abuse to our natural resources will not be endured for long; for even the ocean has limits. In order to survive longer as a species on this planet, we must stop polluting the oceans, save the fragile marine eco-system, and understand that even the ocean has limitations, and that they are being pushed too far.
The Essay on Ocean Dumping & Marine Pollution
The practice of ocean dumping should be banned. Marine pollution is at the heart of interest in today’s search for a clean environment. Not only does ocean dumping add to the unsightliness of the once beautiful and pristine waters; it also kills the marine life which inhabits those waters. Pollution on a grand-scale is wreaking havoc on the Earth. The ocean is not an exception. In 1996, a bill, ...
“Can man survive with a dead ocean?” (Heyerdahl) The answer is clear and obvious: no. We cannot conceivably survive without the immeasurable subsistence the ocean provides us. Currently, we are on the path to self-destruction. We need get off this often traveled beaten path, and blaze a new one for ourselves. These ideas have been around since the beginning; now its time to adhere to them.