"In other words, Homo sapiens succeeded because they made themselves less dependent on nature. It began with farming ten thouusand years ago. Once people could farm, they didn't have to roam over hill and dale hoping to find the right bush with the right berries on it. They could grow their own. People chose the most useful plants (grains, fruits, and vegatabels) and the mos useful animals (chickens, cows, pigs, hourses, sheep, and dogs), and more or less diregarded the others.
This was fine, and humans flourished,. But there were two problems. One had to do with scale. As long as people made their modifications on a small scale, the Earth went on running like before. As people's numbers swelled into the billions, however, the changes began to add up. This was no longer just a few fields of wheat, a few grazing goats, and a few chimneys sending puffs of smoke into the air. Humankind had begun changing the fundemantal workings of the Earth." (71)
Notes: To successfully live in a society, we must deteriorate nature and change it to suit our capabilities and preferences. This further darkens the line between Nature and Society creating a stronger, taller barrier between the two. The less dependent we are on nature the less we care for it and the more we don't mind destroying it. This brings a downfall for not our lives, but the lives of our children and further generations who will suffer the evironmental effects of our wrong doings.
Source: Zeaman, John. Overpopulation. New York: F. Watts, 2002. Print.