Source: Gifford Pinchot, *The Fight for Conservation*, 1910
"The first principle of conservation is development, the use of the natural resources now existing on this continent for the benefit of the people who live here now. There may be just as much waste in neglecting the development and use of certain natural resources as there is in their destruction... The second principle is the prevention of waste... Conservation stands or falls on the question of whether or not it is reasonable to expect that the men of our time will be as wise and as public-spirited as those who went before them."
The philosophy outlined in the excerpt contributed to debates during the Progressive Era primarily by doing which of the following?
- Exposing a growing ideological division within the environmental movement between advocates of planned resource management and proponents of complete wilderness preservation.Cevap
- BPromoting a return to Gilded Age laissez-faire policies that allowed private timber and mining corporations unregulated access to federal lands.
- CFulfilling the Populist Party's demand that the federal government nationalize all natural resources and agricultural land.
- DAttempting to reverse the environmental transformations and infrastructure expansions initiated by the nineteenth-century Market Revolution.
Cevap
Exposing a growing ideological division within the environmental movement between advocates of planned resource management and proponents of complete wilderness preservation.
The correct answer describes the primary debate within the Progressive-era environmental movement. Gifford Pinchot's conservation philosophy focused on the efficient, scientifically managed development of natural resources to prevent waste and benefit the public interest. This utilitarian approach stood in sharp contrast to the preservationist philosophy championed by John Muir and the Sierra Club, who advocated for protecting nature in its pristine state, free from human development or economic exploitation.
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Progressive Era Environmental Politics (Conservation vs. Preservation)