Description
David Suzuki: An Elder’s Vision for a Sustainable Future
undefinedhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S2b7SpLpN5A
undefinedAt 0:59: Name three of the ways in which Perth, Western Australia is NOT a sustainable city.
undefined(climate change readiness, household debt, ecological footprint, biodiversity)
undefinedAt 2:07: Name two of the ways the speaker mentions that Perth is getting its fresh water NOW.
undefined(desalination and ancient aquifers)
undefinedAt 4:55: Where did Dr. Suzuki teach for 39 years?
undefined(University of British Columbia)
undefinedAt 6:35: What is Dr. Suzuki’s take on what an elder’s (older person!) agenda can be, and why can that be? Do you agree with him on this point?
undefinedAt 7:38: What is the percentage of shared genes that he states for chimpanzees and humans? What does this say about how “alone” we are as a species on planet Earth?
undefined(99%; not so alone!)
undefinedNOTE- At 8:46: He describes the first photosynthesizers as “plants”, but they were actually cyanobacteria. He is using the more archaic classification scheme here!
undefinedAt 10:06 – What is the ultimate source of energy of photosynthesizers and animals?
undefined(sunlight)
undefinedAt 11:14: Where did all humans originally live 150,000 years agao?
undefined(Africa)
undefinedAt 13:10: What is the physical feature that he points out is our “secret” to “success”?
undefined(our brain)
undefinedAt 13:38: What are the three characteristics he describes as humans’ three important characteristics that made us successful?
undefined(memory, curiosity and inventiveness)
undefinedAt 14:31: What characteristic of our cognitive abilities does he describe as pivotal in allowing us to become the “ruling species on Earth”?
undefined(foresight – being able to think ahead and pursue goals into the future)
undefinedAt 14:44: How many humans existed around 10,000 years ago (when we first developed agriculture)?
undefined(~ 10 million)
undefinedAt 14:58: around 2000 years ago, how many humans were around?
undefined(~ 100,000,000)
undefinedAt 15:05: When did we hit one billion humans on Earth?
undefined(early 1800s)
undefinedAt 15:17: This talk was made in 2012: What was the number of humans on Earth then?
undefined(6.9 billion)
undefinedNote: We are now at 7.7 billion in December of 2020. Look at this web site (the population clock from the U.S. Census Bureau: https://www.census.gov/popclock/)
undefinedA task for you: How many new people are added ON AVERAGE over a minute’s time, according to the clock? (Remember people are being born AND dying, and this clock shows the net increase). To do this, set a timer and note the last four digits on the “clock”. After one minute, note the last four digits and subtract the first number from the second. That is the number of NEW individuals entering the world in the past minute.
undefined(should be around 200)
undefinedWhat is your gut feeling about whether this trend is sustainable in the long run? Can we feed, house and cloth all people, AND allow other species to exist on the planet, too, at this rate of increase?
undefinedAt 16:17: What is the most numerous mammalian species on Earth? What are two factors that he mentions that have allowed this to happen?
undefined(humans; trade and technology)
undefinedAt 17:38: Which species has the largest ecological footprint in the history of life on Earth?
undefined(humans)
undefinedAt 21:10: What do YOU think about naming the current time period the Anthropocene (= the “Age of Humans”)?
undefinedAt 24:47: Think about the two ways of looking at the British Columbia forest that he describes: 1) Name three human or non-human GROUPS of organisms that benefit from an intact forest. 2) Name or describe a group or groups of organisms that benefit from the logged forest (after the trees have been removed).
undefinedAt 26:00: What was the largest city in the world in 1900, and how many people lived in it? (By the way, my grandmother was born in 1902, at just about that time – so not so long ago!).
undefined(London, 6.5 million people)
undefinedAt 26:26: So where did most people live in 1990 then (and what were they doing)?
undefined(rural areas, farming)
undefinedAt 27:21: How many people lived in Tokyo in the year 2000?
undefined(26,000,000 people)
undefinedAt 29:16: What do you think about this “issue” of humans being animals, especially in the light of our class, where you have been learning taxonomy!?
undefinedAt 34:37: About how many argon atoms from a given person who exhaled a year before elsewhere on the Earth are breathed in by you?
undefined(15)
undefinedAt 37:49: This should sound familiar from our class. When he refers to “sunlight being released back into our bodies” he’s referring to the energy in the bonds of what molecule?
undefined(ATP)
undefinedAt 41:43: What are the basic necessities for survival as biological organisms that he lists here?
undefined(clean air, water, soil, energy and biodiversity)
undefinedAt 42:36: The idea that humans have created our economic rules and principles is not unique to David Suzuki – it’s a cultural fact. What do you think about the necessity for maintaining markets, for example, which is all about having lots of people buying lots of certain things? Which things do we NEED, and which do we just like to have?
undefinedAt 44:17: What is Einstein’s quote here. This is a commonly seen quote, and was prominently displayed in my anatomy classroom at Southwestern College by the way! What is the “thing” Suzuki is referring tom repeating here?
undefined(dot-com and housing boom/busts and propping them up when they fail us, etc.)
undefinedAt 47:48: If nature, which must follow its own laws, continually “gives” when our economic situation is not ideal, what eventually happens to the natural world?
undefined(it becomes degraded more and more)
undefinedAt 49:09: What do you think of the value statements here (this is similar to the ideas at 24:47)? Who or what organisms gain from the intact trees, and who benefits from the cut trees? And is there INTRINSIC value in the trees (value just because they exist)? You may change your answer here after reaching 50:24.
undefinedAt 53:30: How many cells do we have in our bodies?
undefined(100 trillion)
undefinedAt 54:01: WHAT kind of cell is this one cell that he is referring to?
undefined(a cancer cell)
undefinedAt 56:02: How many minutes does it take to fill his first bacterial test tube with bacteria?
undefined(60 minutes)
undefinedWhat kind of growth do the bacteria exhibit?
undefined(exponential)
undefinedAt 56:12: At what point is the test tube half full?
undefined(59 minutes)
undefinedDoes this seem strange to you that it’s only half full at such a late “date”?
undefinedAt 57:22: What IS the doubling time in this example?
undefined(1 minute)
undefinedBy the way, the human doubling time is estimated to be about 63 years. We are just under 8 billion people now, so roughly when (in terms of a date) will we reach 16 billion, if the doubling time stays steady?
undefined(2083)
undefinedIf you had a child in the next year, your child would be “young” – only in their 60s when we hit 16 billion people on Earth. What do you think (briefly) the conditions on Earth may be like then?
undefinedAt 1:00:54: Do you remember hearing this headline about plant extinction (yes, it was several years ago)?
undefinedAt 1:01:56: What are three of the problems with the oceans that he mentions here, and which one is related directly to CO2 and atmospheric carbon pollution?
undefined(garbage, overfishing, ocean acidification – which is the climate-related one)
undefinedAt 1:02:10: When is it predicted that there may be no large, intact forests left (what year, approximately)?
undefined(2012 plus 20 = 2032)
undefinedAt 1:11:02: Name at least three of Suzuki’s “imaginings” that you think could be done to increase sustainable living on the planet.
undefinedAfter 1:11:33 – You may stop watching here, but if you're curious about the question/answer period, please watch on.
undefinedSummary:
undefinedDescribe three parts of Suzuki’s talk that changed your view of the world and our place in it:
1.
2.
3.
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Explanation & Answer

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1
David Suzuki: An Elder’s Vision for a Sustainable Future
Student Name
Institutional Affiliation
Instructor’s Name
Course Title
Date
2
David Suzuki: An Elder’s Vision for a Sustainable Future
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S2b7SpLpN5A
At 0:59: Name three of the ways in which Perth, Western Australia, is NOT a sustainable city.
1. Ecological footprint.
2. Biodiversity.
3. Climate change readiness.
At 2:07: Name two of the ways the speaker mentions that Perth is getting its freshwater NOW.
1. Desalination.
2. Ancient aquifers
At 4:55: Where did Dr Suzuki teach for 39 years?
(University of British Columbia)
At 6:35: What is Dr Suzuki's take on what an elder's (older person!) agenda can be, and why can
that be? Do you agree with him on this point?
(He says that elders can offer something without a hidden agenda for the desire for power,
fame or money. I agree with him because they focus on speaking the truth that will leave behind
a legacy that will make them be remembered at the end of their life).
At 7:38: What is the percentage of shared genes that he states for chimpanzees and humans?
(99%) What does this say about how “alone” we are as a species on planet Earth?
(This indicates that we are not so alone because all life on the earth is related to humans).
NOTE- At 8:46: He describes the first photosynthesizers as “plants”, but they were actually
cyanobacteria. He is using the more archaic classification scheme here!
At 10:06 – What is the ultimate source of energy of photosynthesizers and animals?
(Sunlight)
At 11:14: Where did all humans originally live 150,000 years ago?
(Africa)
At 13:10: What is the physical feature that he points out is our “secret” to “success”?
(Human brain)
At 13:38: What are the three characteristics he describes as humans’ three important
characteristics that made us successful?
1. Memory
2. Curiosity
3. Inventiveness)
3
At 14:31: What characteristic of our cognitive abilities does he describe as pivotal in allowing us
to become the “ruling species on Earth”?
(Foresight – being able to think ahead and pursue goals into the future)
At 14:44: How many humans existed around 10,000 years ago (when we first developed
agriculture)?
(~ 10 million)
At 14:58: around 2000 years ago, how many humans were around?
(~ 100,000,000)
At 15:05: When did we hit one billion humans on Earth?
(Early 1800s)
At 15:17: This talk was made in 2012: What was the number of humans on Earth then?
(6.9 billion)
Note: We are now at 7.7 billion in December of 2020. Look at this website (the population clock
from the U.S. Census Bureau: https://www.census.gov/popclock/)
A task for you: How many new people are added ON AVERAGE over a minute’s time,
according to the clock? (Remember people are being born AND dying, and this clock shows the
net increase). To do this, set a timer and note the last four digits on the “clock”. After one
minute, note the last four digits and subtract the first number from the second. That is the number
of NEW individuals entering the world in the past minute.
(Around 200)
What is your gut feeling about whether this trend is sustainable in the long run? Can we feed,
house and cloth all people, AND allow other species to exist on the planet, too, at this rate of
increase?
(Am afraid that this trend may not be sustainable in the future. This is due to the high rate of
birth rate of humans on the planet, which may lead to depletion of resources and extinction of the
remaining species. Moreover, a large population of humans may lack even a place for th...
