The Abstract Wild Essay, Research Paper
Jack Turner?s The Abstract Wild is a complex argument that discusses many issues and
ultimately defends the wild in all of its forms. He opens the novel with a narrative story about a
time when he explored the Maze in Utah and stumbled across ancient pictographs. Turner tells
this story to describe what a truly wild and unmediated experience is. The ideas of the aura,
magic, and wildness that places contain is introduced in this story. Turner had a spiritual
connection with the pictographs because of the power, beauty, and awe that they created within
him upon their first mysterious contact. Turner ruined this unmediated experience by taking
photographs of the pictographs and talking about them to several people. His second visit to the
pictographs was extremely different- he had removed the wild connection with the ancient mural
and himself by publicizing and talking about them. This is Turner?s main point within the first
chapter. He believes that when we take a wild place and photograph it, talk about it, advertise it,
make maps of it, and place it in a national park that we ruin the magic, the aura, and the wildness
of that place. Nature magazines, photographs, and films all contribute to the removal of our wild
experience with nature. It is the difference between visiting the Grand Canyon after you have
seen it on TV and read about it in magazines, or never having heard of the place and stumbling
across it on your own during a hike. Unfortunately, almost every wild experience between
nature and the public has been ruined by the media. Through Turner?s story he begins to explain
the idea of the wild and its importance and necessity of human interaction with the wild.
The second chapter contains two major ideas. The first is Turner?s defense and
explanation of the appropriateness of anger. Turner thinks that society wrongly taught the
people to repress and fear their emotions. Turner finds primal emotions to be necessary to our
survival, as well as the survival of the wild. He explains that anger occurs when we defend
something we love or something we feel is sacred. He reminds us to cherish our anger and use it
to fuel rebellion. Turner criticizes the cowardice of modern environmentalists in the following
passage: "The courage and resistance shown by the Navajos at Big Mountain, by Polish workers,
by blacks in South Africa, and, most extraordinarily, by Chinese students in Tiananmen Square
makes much of the environmental protest in America seem shallow and ineffective in
comparison(21)." Maybe if we knew and loved wild nature we could properly defend and
preserve it. Maybe if we felt an intimate connection with wild nature we would react to the
damming of a river or the rape of an ancient forest as we would to someone raping our children.
The second major idea is Turner?s argument of how modern man is far removed from wild
nature. He describes how different nature is today compared with the mid-nineteenth century
nature of Thoreau and Muir. Government laws and organizations have severely degraded the
wild nature. They seek to preserve and remove problems within the wilderness; however, they
only remove the wild from nature. Zoos and national parks are poor substitutes for authentic
wild nature. Government laws and organizations, such as national parks and the Forest Service,
use anthropocentric ideas to manage the wilderness. They use surveillance and control every
aspect of ecosystems, and thus removing the process of wild nature from these ecosystems by
making them dependent on human maintenance. National Forests were created for humans for
recreation and resource utilization. They are literally a business, and only seek to preserve
nature based on anthropocentric needs rather than geocentric needs. Turner claims that true wild
nature does not exist within national forests because they are constantly being tampered with and
altered by humans. Wild nature, however, still exists in more remote wilderness areas.
The third chapter Turner returns to more narrative writing and explains his respect and
love for mountain lions. He expresses a relationship with mountain lions similar to that of Doug
Peacock and his experience with Grizzly Bears.
In chapter four, Economic Nature, Turner explains how John Locke and Adam Smith
shaped the ideas of our economy and how that has affected society?s perception of nature.
Hamilton, Madison, Jefferson, and Adams decided the early fate of the American wilderness
through Christian and Enlightenment ethics. They divided the land into a grid and sold it to
men. The land became the private property of men, who farmed and extracted resources as they
pleased. Turner comments on how language has added to ecological ignorance. The American
language is based on ideas of economy, and as ecological problems arise people use economic
terms to describe nature. Thus, ecological problems are not properly dealt with or even
understood because they are viewed and discussed in terms of economy. The economy views
nature anthropocentrically. The resources of the land are to be used for the purpose of
improving technology and economy. This problem of language is the reason why biological
scientists and shallow ecologists fail to see the answer to ecological problems. Turner raises the
question that if ecological problems are technology-based, then how could technology solve
ecological problems? According to Turner, this is a problem of language and perception, and
eventually transforms into a problem of morals and values. Another problem with viewing
things economically is that everything must be commensurate. Economically, everything has a
value in money. There is a major problem with viewing a forest as millions of dollars. When
you look at a forest as money you are completely blind to its true importance as an ecosystem.
The wild and the sacred of the forest is lost. The degradation of wild nature is a direct result of
our language and economic perceptions of the world. Of course, the first step toward finding
solutions to ecological problems would be changing our language. Turner offers the solution
that if "we refuse these three moves- the abstraction of things into resources, their
commensurability in translatable units, and the choice of money as the value of the units- and
economic theory is useless(64)." The preservation of the wild nature requires a deeper
geocentric view of the world.
Chapter five delves into the Turner?s knowledge and experience of the white pelican.
Little is known about these ancient birds because they avoid human contact. Turner is intrigued
by their behavior. He observes the white pelicans as enjoying their risky high dive flights. He
makes the connection between the peculiar behavior of the white pelican and the nature of wild
animals. He questions their love for soaring as a logical choice for enjoyment. Within this
chapter Turner also raises another big issue. He discusses the influence humans have on wild
animals when they try to study them, and he explains some of the detrimental effects that occur
upon human interference and control of wild animals and their habitats. Turner seeks a higher,
more idealistic, approach to learning about wild animals. He believes that if we sit quietly in
their habitat "they will come to us(71)." Turner displays an wild connection, understanding, and
respect for the white pelican. He thinks that the behavior of the white pelican is another insight
into the idea of the wild.
The main idea of chapter six is that one of the main roots of the modern environmental
crisis is the mistake of wilderness for wildness. It was Henry David Thoreau who was first
mistaken. Thoreau was an American pioneer of the wild. His most famous quote is "In
Wildness is the preservation of the World." Unfortunately, that quote is now severely
misconceived; for we have replaced Wildness with wilderness. The word Wildness has negative
connotations in today?s society. Thoreau was describing Wildness as a good virtue connected
with freedom. Thoreau looked pass the problems of wilderness and ecosystems. He wasn?t
concerned with deforestation or biodiversity. Thoreau went deeper and found the root of the
problem was in Wildness. That was where the fight was. Thoreau?s main struggle was the
preservation of wild and to reincarnate that virtue into humanity. Turner claims that our
wilderness is not very wild, and he gives four reasons for this. His first reason is that wilderness
areas are too small. He believes that for a person to really experience the wild they need to
spend a couple of weeks living out in nature. Unfortunately, most of our wilderness areas are
too small. His second reason is that wilderness areas lack wild predators. Visitors to these
wilderness areas are never threatened or even in the presence of predators, and Turner thinks that
the removal of predators from these areas is a bad idea. The predators add a special and
necessary dimension to the experience of the wild. When man is in the presence of predators he
realizes that he has become part of the web of life. Man experiences the wild when he realizes
that he is a meal to a mountain lion or bear. Being a part of the food chain, or at least the
possibility is an important part of experiencing the wild. Turner?s third reason is that the
government has tamed the wild for recreational purposes. This is done by placing signs, building
trails, and making maps. All of these create a mediated experience for the adventurer and steals
the wildness from there experience with nature. Returning to Turner?s experience with the
pictographs in chapter one, all of these signs and maps combine to remove the factor of surprise
from a wilderness area. An adventurer will never experience the wild of discovering a waterfall
or any surprise that nature has to offer because signs and maps ruin the experience. His fourth
reason that our wilderness is not wild is that we made laws that allow our wilderness to be
artificially controlled and managed. This is very unfortunate. Ecosystems are constantly being
altered, predators moved, and wildfires suppressed. Wild nature is autonomous and fixes its own
problems. Man?s interference is slowly making wilderness dependent of artificial influence.
Turner argues that tourism is destructive. Society wrongly views wilderness as a fun place for
human recreation. We have become wilderness fun hogs. Humans take an anthropocentric view
toward wilderness and only see it in terms of how much fun can I get out of this park; all the
while, completely ignoring the human need for wild experience and intimate connection with
nature. The result of our present perception is our emotional loss with wild nature. We have
lost the understanding of how to connect with the wild within wilderness. Turner claims that
most ecologists and conservationists turn to technology to help preserve the wilderness.
Realistically, the solution lies in our past, our roots, not in the future of technology. The solution
lies within the knowledge of wild people, such as the native Americans whose cultures have
been wiped out by American imperialism and western expansion. Turner does not find hope in
the solutions that deep ecologists have to offer either. He claims that there ideas are based on
abstract philosophies of Spinoza and Whitehead that are too difficult for the public to understand
and grasp. The solution must be more simple and natural than understanding complex
philosophies. Turner also doesn?t believe that the effort of deep ecologists to change the idea of
the world from a mechanical model to an organic model will convince the public. Turner writes
that reason will not make "us respect and care for wild nature…Philosophical arguments,
moralizing, aesthetics, political legislation, and abstract philosophies are notoriously incapable
of compelling human behavior(88)." Turner returns to his idea in the chapter two that we only
express anger to violently defend something we love or feel is sacred. Ecological preservation is
only possible through a loving and intimate relationship between humans and wild nature. Our
love of nature is supported by the art, literature, poetry, myth and lore of wild nature. It is these
things that develop the language that our society so greatly lacks. Turner finds his solutions
more from the ideas of Thoreau and Muir. He finds the preservation of the wild we must
establish residency in the wilderness and gain knowledge of the wild. Only then might we
develop the love of the wild that is necessary for its defense and preservation.
In chapter seven, Turner discusses the importance of Doug Peacock. Turner comments
on how unique Peacock?s message about wildness is and how different it is from most nature
literature. Through Peacock?s Grizzly Years and Faulkner?s Big Two Hearted-River, Turner
describes the wild as a place of healing. He also explain some of the rituals, traditions, and
experiences that help restore the wild within humanity.
Chapter eight offers more ideas on wildness and further discusses the defense of nature.
Turner agrees with Thoreau and Gary Snyder that wildness is a quality, and it is closely linked
with sacredness and autonomy. He continues to point out that modern civilization has recreated
nature to meet the needs of the economy and society. We have created a wilderness hyper
reality. Our wilderness areas are becoming more like theme parks. Turner explains that "a
created environment is a neutered wild, and a wild to which we no longer live in vital
relationship. Artificial influence on the wilderness is creating laboratories out of habitats. He
believes that conservationist and biodiversity theories are wrong in their principle. Again he
feels that the land should be left to fix and manage itself without human interference and control.
Turner argues that the reason we impose human order on nonhuman orders is to gain prediction,
control, and efficiency. Although Turner agrees that we cannot preserve wild habitats if their
inhabitants are not free, he does not believe that human existence within an ecosystem will
destroy its wildness. It is in essence human control that will destroy the wildness within an
ecosystem. Turner does not believe that the ideas of biodiversity or conservation biology will
provide solutions to the viability of wild nature and ecological problems because their
prescription calls for more control with ideas of resource management. In fact, he call the
autonomy of the natural systems the "skeleton in the closet of our conservation ethic(119)."
Turner finds that even radical environmentalists have faltered and are now beginning to agree
with biologists on solutions to ecological problems. He wisely notes that "true change comes
from alteration of structure, not the treatment of symptoms(115)." According to Turner,
scientific solutions only offer the latter type of treatment. Turner offers the "leave it alone and
let nature sort it out method" to achieve ecological preservation. He closes by offering hope that
Wildness is still out there, and he encourages us to explore the Wild within ourselves.
Although I agree with many of Turner?s ideas in The Abstract Wild, I do believe that
some of his ideas are in need of a logical critique. In chapter two and later in chapter six, Turner
builds up to the argument that maybe if we loved wild nature and lived intimately with it we
might be able to properly defend or preserve it. This is a full-proof argument. The key word in
that idea is love. Most people might think, "Oh yeah, I love nature. In fact, I went mountain
biking in the Sierra last week." Unfortunately, this is not a statement that defends a powerful
emotion, such as love. Turner is correct in his argument that most people haven?t experienced
and don?t know wild nature. Nature is a place for humans to escape the confinements of the
city-life and indulge in recreational activities. It is not home. Humans don?t feel a personal or
loving connection with nature because they view it selfishly from an anthropocentric perception.
Besides the selfish view of the recreational nature, most people carry with them Christian values
and the ideas of Hamilton, Jefferson, Locke, and Smith that nature is property of man and a
resource measured in economical terms. Thus, we may like nature, but we don?t love nature.
We don?t treat nature like we treat our family and home, which brings us back to Turner?s idea
that if we loved nature we could defend it with true passionate anger. Without this
understanding and personal connection with wild nature, humans will not be able to properly