31st October 2013 | Dave Bookless | 6 comments

To boldly go? Exploring planetary boundaries

Once upon a time we believed ‘the sky’s the limit’. Then we discovered ‘space, the final frontier’. Now we reach out ‘to infinity and beyond’. Is there no limit to our ambition? In an era when yesterday’s science fiction is tomorrow’s world, where virtual reality unleashes our imagination, and fact and fantasy intermingle, there are plenty today seeking to transcend any remaining boundaries they can: space, time, sexuality, even death.

Planetary boundaries. Drawing by Christian Leichsenring

The idea of boundaries, of any kind of limits, has become counter-cultural. You can be whatever you want. Choice and freedom have become idols. The world, and space beyond it, contains unlimited resources for consumption, manipulation and desire. It’s the worldview of the first European settlers in America writ large by globalisation: an endless landscape of unbounded possibilities.

It’s also a major part of why tackling humanity’s massive global footprint never gets to the top of most political agendas. We simply don’t want to be told ‘Enough! You can’t have that.’ Perhaps it’s also why one of the most important concepts of recent times, that of ‘planetary boundaries’, has remained largely an in-house idea for the eco-aware.

Planetary Boundaries was first proposed in 2009 by Johan Rockström and colleagues from the Stockholm Resilience Centre, and has gained widespread scientific support and stimulated much debate. It consists of nine planetary systems upon which all life depends, with a calculation of the threshold, or boundary for each. Remaining within these boundaries gives the possibility of a ‘safe operating space for humanity’, whilst transgressing them could lead to abrupt and disastrous environmental change. Worryingly, although findings are still tentative and in some cases disputed, scientists judge that the boundaries in three systems (rate of biodiversity loss, climate change and human interference with the nitrogen cycle), have already been exceeded.[*] We are possibly beyond the point of no return, not in terms of survival (yet) but in terms of stability and hence safety.

So, what does a theologian think of all this? Firstly, a quibble: the concept is limited to a ‘safe operating space for humanity’, but God designed this planet as an ark for every species and cares about all that he has made. Yet the anthropocentrism is understandable. It is humans who are putting pressure on planetary boundaries, and it is therefore we who need to get our act together.

More importantly, the concept of boundaries is a helpful one theologically. In Genesis 2, Eden is a safe operating space for humanity as long as boundaries are respected. Humans are described as contingent beings, tied to the earth (souls from soil, Adam from ‘adamah’, humans from humus). We are animated by God’s Spirit, not by a cartoonist’s brush, a surgeon’s scalpel, or a scientist’s genetic manipulation. We are bounded by space and time, and by our utter dependence upon God and the environment of which we are part. We are not at liberty to mutate or evolve away from our calling as humans, which is in essence to worship God, to love our neighbours, our enemies and ourselves, and to serve and preserve the fellow creatures with which we share this planet.

We need boundaries. Ask any parent. ‘God gave me skin, to keep me in’ as the kid’s song goes. Boundaries are vital, biophysically and also spiritually. Christians, of all people, should celebrate that God has created boundaries, not to restrict but to enable our freedom, and to give us a safe operating space within which to thrive. If politicians aren’t going to take up the vision of planetary boundaries (they’re too scared of limits to growth), then perhaps the global church should take up the cause? Let’s learn to celebrate living within the safe space of God-given boundaries.

[*] There is particular debate around whether some boundaries, particularly biodiversity and land, have clear ‘tipping points’ or rather at the global level display slow variables. However it is suggested that local and regional tipping points for these variables could collectively add up to global concern. See their page Addressing some key misconceptions.

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Categories: Reflections
About Dave Bookless

Dave is Director of Theology for A Rocha International, where he works to embed creation care into international Christian organizations, theological institutions, and mission movements. His past roles with A Rocha include being an International Trustee and the co-founder of A Rocha UK (with his wife Anne). He has a PhD from Cambridge University on biblical theology and biodiversity conservation, and has contributed to many books and articles, including Planetwise, available in six languages. Born and raised in India, Dave has a love for Indian food, Indian culture and Indian Christianity. Dave is also a qualified bird-ringer and loves birding, islands, running and mountains.

View all posts by Dave Bookless (76)

6 responses to “To boldly go? Exploring planetary boundaries”

  1. Ken says:

    We looked at this paper as one of our key discussions on the resilience theory, complexity theory and the use of a “basin” to illustrate safe boundaries to operate in. Once we cross the tip of the basin at any one point, we may enter into another basin with much uncertainty, possibly without being able to get back into the original safe basin. I guess people just want larger and ever less limiting basins…

  2. Byron Smith says:

    Thanks Dave. The concept of living within the space afforded by nature and our nature is not distinctively Christian; it is a strong element in much Greek thought, as well as certain strands of Eastern thought (amongst others). Nonetheless, there is, as you indicate, strong scriptural and theological reasons for taking it seriously. To make the concept more specifically Christian, I wonder if we need to talk not just about living in the space available, but about “making room” for one another for our fellow creatures. The idea is not to fill the potential space, but about mutual hospitality, where we welcome others (including the non-human) into “our” space and find ourselves welcomed into spaces that might otherwise seem alien.

  3. Byron Smith says:

    PS I meant to say: thanks for this post! These ideas are crucial. I did not want to critique your use of them, merely suggest a possible extension.

    PPS I also meant to ask: what is the etymological basis for the link between soul and soil? I am familiar with human from humus and ‘Adam from ‘adamah, but the online etymological dictionary seems to link (very tentatively) soul with sea rather than soil. Or were you thinking of a theological rather than etymological link? Soul in Greek (psyche) means life (more or less). In Hebrew, it is “throat” (nephesh).

  4. Dave Bookless says:

    Thanks Byron, I do like the idea of ‘making room’. It’s significant that in the Genesis account God tells other creatures as well as humans to ‘fill the earth’ (specifically sea creatures and birds to fill the oceans and earth 1:22), so ‘filling’ is part of being a creature rather than specific to being human …

    In terms of my ‘souls from soil’ mention, yes that’s a theological rather than an etymological link. I heard a good lecture this week on the Jewish concept of the person, from Dr Daniel Weiss (Cambridge University), in which he argued that in both the Hebrew Bible and the Rabbinic Talmud the concept is of an embodied soul, not a dualistically separable body and soul, and he translates ‘nephesh hayah’ (Gen 2:7 in NIV ‘living being’) as embodied soul.

  5. Byron Smith says:

    Yes, I totally agree regarding non-dualist readings of “soul”.

    And I often say that since the blessing of multiplication and filling is shared with the other living creatures, if our filling is squeezing out other lifeforms, then we’re doing it wrong.

  6. Anthony Hereward says:

    Thanks Dave. Why do we, as a species, not perceive the risks? I wonder if we are called to be Jonah’s or Jeremiah’s? Ninevah responded and were saved; KingZ understood and believed and did nothing. Jeremy Leggett in latest New Sci talks of risk blindness and dangers inherent in this. I am not optimistic that we will keep to any boundaries till beyond point of no return – not that that will stop me trying – so how should we be preparing ourselves, communities, next generation for the uncertainties ahead?