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Christopher J. Preston

Writing on wildlife, technology, and nature

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Category: wildlife

Posted on February 20, 2023February 20, 2023

When Wildlife Isn’t So Wild.

Bears are wild animals. Dogs are pets. It's pretty simple, right? Events in my hometown this summer had me rethinking this. I wrote a short essay on the topic for The Philosophical Salon. One part of the essay explores a growing disenchantment with the words 'wild' and 'wilderness.' Another looks lovingly, and a bit critically, …

Continue reading "When Wildlife Isn’t So Wild."

Posted on December 26, 2022December 26, 2022

When Biology Goes Extinct

It's purely coincidence so soon after P-22's death, but I got the opportunity to be part of a science fiction exchange in Slate.com this week about a lion running loose on city streets. Margrét Helgadóttir's escaped lion is roaming the dark corners of Longyearbyen on Svalbard. The remote Arctic outpost is now a busy metropolis …

Continue reading "When Biology Goes Extinct"

Posted on April 18, 2022September 6, 2022

Wildlife as a Philosophical Matter

Anyone who loves wildlife in the West should pay attention to what has been going on around Yellowstone National Park. Montana’s position on wolves has, to put it delicately, taken a ‘hard turn.’ This needs to change. The 2021 Montana state legislature crafted aggressive laws to reduce the state’s wolf population. Wolves can now be …

Continue reading "Wildlife as a Philosophical Matter"

Posted on December 3, 2020January 24, 2022

A Transatlantic Wild

The news caught my eye. The European Bison, or 'wisent,' will be reintroduced to Southern England. The Wilder Blean Project plans to use a small herd of bison to regenerate a former pine plantation. They will be the first bison to browse an English forest in six thousand years. Together with some wild ponies and …

Continue reading "A Transatlantic Wild"

Posted on August 3, 2020

Salmon in the Mountains

I knew my chances were slim. Only a handful of salmon make it into the Idaho mountains this close to the Montana border.  The fact any do at all is remarkable. I was standing six hundred and twenty-four river miles from the Pacific, upstream from eight major dams, three and a half thousand feet above …

Continue reading "Salmon in the Mountains"

Posted on April 10, 2020

How to Keep Returning Wildlife Wild

For the latest post on the Plastocene, I'm linking to a piece I published yesterday in The Atlantic on the complicated question of how to keep wildlife wild on a crowded planet. We go to restoration sites in Italy and the UK, before bringing the lessons back to Montana. Saving nature clearly ain't what it used to …

Continue reading "How to Keep Returning Wildlife Wild"

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Topics

  • aesthetics
  • Alaska
  • Albert Borgmann
  • anthropocene
  • Arctic
  • batteries
  • bears
  • biodiversity
  • biotechnology
  • bison
  • Blackfeet
  • carbon capture
  • climate
  • Climate Change
  • Climate Engineering
  • cloning
  • cloud brightening
  • Conservation
  • CRISPR
  • de-extinction
  • deextinction
  • earth systems
  • ecology
  • electric vehicles
  • ethics
  • fire
  • flood
  • food
  • forests
  • gardening
  • Gene Drives
  • heat
  • hurricane
  • Italy
  • justice
  • lynx
  • Mark Zuckerberg
  • Montana
  • Nanotechnology
  • nature
  • oceans
  • owls
  • passenger pigeon
  • peregrine falcon
  • philosophy
  • plastic
  • Plastocene
  • pollution
  • Pope Francis
  • primates
  • recovery
  • restoration
  • Rewilding
  • Rocky Mountains
  • salmon
  • sea otters
  • ships
  • snow
  • solar panels
  • solar radiation management
  • Sussex
  • Synthetic Age
  • Synthetic Biology
  • tallgrass prairie
  • technology
  • Tenacious Beasts
  • Tesla
  • Tim Cook
  • transportation
  • whales
  • wildlife
  • wind turbines
  • winter
  • wolves
  • Yellowstone

the author

Christopher J. Preston is a writer, a professor of philosophy, and a one-time commercial fisherman who is obsessed with the sight of freshly falling snow. The most inflated title he ever possessed was Distinguished Visiting Fellow in the Ethics of the Anthropocene.

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