
Ecological Management and Indian Ethos - A Review
Author(s) -
Affiefa Liyaqat
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
international journal of health and medicine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2518-0630
DOI - 10.24178/ijhm.2017.2.3.12
Subject(s) - biosphere , environmental ethics , wildlife , civilization , ecology , anthropocene , geography , biology , archaeology , philosophy
Environment plays a very significant role in human civilization. Human beings have close relations with the biosphere in which they live. The whole environment and ecology consisting of earth, air, water, plants and animals provide the necessary and sufficient conditions for sustaining human life. The last few centuries have been dominated by human beings, and are referred to by some scholars as ‘anthropocene’, or a period of human domination over the planet. This domination has impacted the planet, leading to the rapid depletion of wildlife and their habitat. In the last few decades, growing human populations and their consumption levels, accompanied by greater need for water, electricity, metal, food, housing and other luxury items has led to the quick erosion of other species. This loss of species has been guesstimated by various scholars at anywhere between one per hour to one per day. Although human beings are considered the most intelligent life form on earth, they are responsible for most of the damage done to planet earth. Developing countries as well as developed countries alike are all suffering from environmental pollution. Therefore, today environmental problems have been the object of discussion everywhere from village to parliament.