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Man's language-based technology has altered his immediate
environment, while man the biological organism has remained essentially
unchanged. It is true that man lives better, has loftier goals, grander
schemes, and plans that project further and further into the future, but
modern man's environmentally-biochemically controlled behavior is little
changed from that of his remotest ancestors. He feels elation and
despair, happiness and sorrow, and knows truth, beauty, and ugliness.
Conditioning may modify his responses but not his basic reactions.
So we begin with the city as a creation of man, a biological organism
who, through language, discovered the means of controlling and enhancing
his environment. One of the ways that he controls and enhances his
environment is by modifying it to suit his purposes and needs, and one
of these is the city. The fact that knowledge plus resources equals
wealth is a recent discovery, but one that man has probably always known
intuitively. If we look at the city in its simplest aspect, we must
acknowledge that its primary function is the creation of wealth. The sum
of the people, the interaction of their diverse interests, and the
ferment created by the trading and commercial activity adds up to a
melting pot of human intellect that has made the city the fountainhead
of technology, the arts, commerce, learning, and government. The city as
a human community developed in response to man's activities, but it has
never lost its primary function as the mechanism which, through
communication, freed man from the trap of the limitations imposed by his
preoccupation with survival. The city has come to be man's outstanding
achievement and has generated unprecedented wealth and inspired the
great technological advances of which we are so proud. But not lasers,
skyscrapers, SST's, machineguns, nuclear bombs, split-levels, TV
dinners, computers, color television, electric guitars, toothbrushes,
and carving knives, nor any of the other 1001 wonders of the 20th
century have changed the biology of man in any essential way. By every
criteria the city is a biological community and it responds to the same
factors that influence the growth, development, and demise of any
biological community. Its appearance may deceive one into thinking that
the buildings and streets have a life of their own, but the city's
activity, its functions, its very life is guided by living, growing,
developing organisms who invented the city for the production of wealth
and who are aided by the speech-tool behavioral response mechanism of
communicationcourtesy of IBM and AT&T. And it is the human
element of the city that will ultimately determine its health,
viability, vigor, stability, and longevity. If the city loses its
capacity to reproduce itself or fails to provide for the commonwealth of
its members, it will wither and ultimately perish. But if it is endowed
with vigor born of diversity, with interlocking functions, and primary
elements providing suitable environments for secondary elements, the
city must thrive, It can do nothing else.
Above all, the city must be a place where human beings can
demonstrate their humanity. This requires the opportunity for peaceful
association and a built-in response network and environmental conditions
that discourage violence and anti-social behavior and encourage
individual creativity and progress. If man creates an environment that
is basically destructive of protoplasm, the biological organism we call
man will deteriorate via the very mechanisms that perpetuate him. But if
the environment expands the horizons of his genetic potential, there is
no reason to predict any end to the development of wealth and resources
and the good life for everybody in the city. There are those who believe
that life in New York City is already intolerable; that the pollution,
congestion, traffic, and crime make it impossible for New York to remain
a viable human community. And they may be right, for as long as the
production of wealth alone is the overriding priority the deterioration
of New York will continue. But the existing conditions have set in
motion autoregulatory mechanisms that are driving people away, and as
large organizations leave New York the wealth-producing base
shrinksbut so does the pollution and congestion. As more and more
people leave New York we may witness a spontaneous autoregulation of the
dynamics of the city.
Art galleries, museums, universities, and the tallest buildings in
the world will be entirely irrelevant if the city is not a viable
community. We must understand the growth and development potential of
our cities and harness them for the common good in order to make our
cities safe and prosperous.
By using predictable behavior of biological communities, the basis
for creating the city as a well-balanced ecosystem is possible at the
present level of technology and knowledge. The biological process is an
evolutionary heritage and the technical skill exists as one of man's
great achievements. What is needed is an understanding of their
relationship to each other, and that is urban ecology.
Theodore W. Sudia
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