Ecology is a science.  It  is no more about "environmentalism", for
example, than is physics, IMHO. Ecologists study the interaction between
organisms and their environment. As a matter of fact, we know very
little of ecology. If you want to refer to the founding  of ESA, one of
the major motivations was to get the non-science and pseudoscience out
of "ecology" and try to establish ecology as a real science. With all
the political hackery and pseudo-science trying to call itself ecology
these days, ecology as a science has really not progressed much further
than the original basic objectives of the founders of the ESA. The
"Earth Manifesto" does not involve ecology.

Robert Hamilton, PhD
Professor of Biology
Alice Lloyd College
Pippa Passes, KY 41844


-----Original Message-----
From: Ecological Society of America: grants, jobs, news
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Baker, David
Sent: Tuesday, November 15, 2011 10:16 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [ECOLOG-L] Ecology What is it?

Hmmm......you can't read our minds without active input to the listserv?
I must be too used to working for the Fed. 

I am following the thread with interest. I may have some input. Just as
you may only have 10 minutes to spare to respond, I am not funded to do
half the work I am asked and expected to do, much less question or
respond to why am I here (as an ecologist... etc.). Don't let my title
fool you; as a district botanist my funded 'work' is to kill invasive
plants, an inherently unsatisfatory task. My training is as a community
ecologist, and whileI have my own ideas about what the study or
application of that is, your and wayne's and other's discussion keep me
engaged and I assume that speaks to others as well. 
Maybe the thread loses importance, as the Occupy movement, with time,
but it continues to surface, so let's none of us quit thinking, or
expressing our thoughts. discourse keeps the process alive.
thank you.
david

David C. Baker
Botanist, Tiller Ranger District
541-825-3149 Phone
541-825-3110 Fax

-----Original Message-----
From: Ecological Society of America: grants, jobs, news
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Matt Chew
Sent: Monday, November 14, 2011 2:41 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [ECOLOG-L] Ecology What is it?

As of the latest digest I received, this thread had attracted input from
fewer than 0.1% of the list's 12K recipients.  Perhaps there are 12K
reasons for remaining unengaged but I suspect they are all variations or
combinations of a few basic themes.  Rather than debate plausible
rationalizations, I challenge you all to consider Wayne's question
carefully.

Sociologists who study the formation and dynamics of scientific
disciplines use the concept of "boundary work" to describe the process
of deciding what ideas (and those who adhere to them) are "inside"
(therefore also
"outside') of the group.

So, what's "in" and what's "out" of ecology?  Academic ecologists and
biogeographers have a long tradition of border skirmishing.   But beyond
that ecology seems to have been accreting adherents, methods and ideas
at quite clip for the last 40 years or so.

As an "-ology", is ecology limited to studying something?  Strictly
speaking, yes; but we do not speak strictly.

Is "ecology" a thing to be studied? We speak of the ecology of a place,
of a geographical feature, of a species, of a population, of an
assemblage, of a community (whatever that is) of an ecosystem (whatever
that is) or of a landscape (etc.).

Is ecology a method, a philosophy, an ethical stance, a moral
commitment, a religious belief?

Are you an ecologist?  What makes you one? Recycling stuff?  Organic
gardening? Watching a TV show?  Joining the Sierra Club, Audubon, and/or
TNC (etc.)?  Taking a class?  Two classes? Earning a certificate?  An
Associate's degree?  A BA? A BS? An MA? An MS? A Ph.D.? Some other
accredited degree?  Working in the field for 1/5/10/20 years?

Should anyone who calls whatever they feel, think or do "ecology" be
considered an ecologist because they call themselves one?  If so, why
does ESA have a certification process?  Does that process exclude anyone
who seeks certification?  If so, can excluded individuals still call
themselves an ecologists?  Can those of us who never seek certification
call ourselves ecologists?

Does being certified mean you know what you're talking about, or merely
that you're using the right words?

If ecology means all those things, can it really mean any one of them?

The impending 100th anniversaries of Rachel Carson's "Silent Spring" and
of ESA and BES as organizations are good excuses to ponder all this.

I'm expecting 12,000 answers by Monday night. But don't cc me.  Just
respond to the list.

Matthew K Chew
Assistant Research Professor
Arizona State University School of Life Sciences

ASU Center for Biology & Society
PO Box 873301
Tempe, AZ 85287-3301 USA
Tel 480.965.8422
Fax 480.965.8330
[email protected] or [email protected]
http://cbs.asu.edu/people/profiles/chew.php
http://asu.academia.edu/MattChew

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