By Noah Rothman
Monday, May 12, 2025
Well, they’re not. Not yet, that is.
If Cambridge University’s professor of literature and
environmental humanities, Robert Macfarlane, had his way, a little clever legal
maneuvering may yet undo this injustice.
The Economist recently reviewed Macfarlane’s new book, Is
a River Alive?, in which the author posits an answer to the question he
poses: “yes.” With that premise fully established, he proposes the only policy
that should follow such a revelation: recognition of “rivers as living
beings, as indigenous cultures so often have,” which “is a useful step towards
providing them with personhood and rights.”
I have not read Macfarlane’s book and don’t want to
mischaracterize it. The banal reconceptualization of rivers as thriving, vital
links in the ecological latticework does not, however, seem to have been the
foundation on which the author’s conclusion rests. I am willing to be surprised
by his findings — perhaps the extent to which rivers appear to respond to their
own changing environmental circumstances or the variety of life that inhabits
them. How that amounts to consciousness, existential self-awareness, and, thus,
personhood eludes me, but there are certainly more things in heaven and earth
than are dreamt of in my philosophy.
And yet, the argument to which the Economist’s
readers were privy was far more metaphysical than that. To make his case, the
approvingly author cites the extension of legal rights to Ecuador’s Río Los
Cedros — a rather theatrical effort to block mining projects along the river,
but has since resulted in a variety of surreal scandals including the dispute
over whether the river is the “co-creator of a musical composition” and should, therefore,
recoup royalties. In sum, he’s serious.
“Rivers cannot read books,” the Economist continues.
“But Dr. Macfarlane believes they can write them.” Once again, this is not
intended to be symbolic. Indeed, Macfarlane is “explicitly treating them as his
co-authors,” which seems like a bad business decision. If the author got his
way, Macfarlane would soon have to kick a portion of his advance to every
tributary, estuary, and delta on Earth.
Whatever the author’s thesis lacks in comprehensibility,
it apparently makes up for in tortured prose that nevertheless possesses the
trite lyrical quality that never fails to impress those who believe they must
be impressed by beat poetry. The hagiographical description of Macfarlane’s
literary invention is sufficient to convince any skeptic that they’re being
sold a bill of goods:
Assuredly deployed assonance and
an ear for metre make the flow of individual sentences a joy; the occasional
deployment of neologism and esoteric but apt vocabulary, along with a taste for
anthimeria, punctuate that flow with ripples and reverses. Scales shift to
sublime effect: some passages reveal the book as a whole in microcosm; others
echo out to encompass vast reaches of time and space.
Again, I have not read the book. Even if we allow for the
unlikely possibility that the professor wields his pen masterfully with talents
rivaling the Bard’s, the thesis his “sublime” composition is meant to
popularize is rubbish. No one can gainsay the Economist’s reviewer’s
assumption that Macfarlane is sincere and his prescriptions “heartfelt.” But
passion and verse do not alone make for a sound legal theory, much less policy.
“Everyone who has ever found something to love in a river
should find something to love in this book,” the Economist concludes.
One wonders who this doesn’t describe. Rivers are lovely, calming,
majestic spectacles, and the biodiversity they shelter beneath their depths is
of inestimable aesthetic and utilitarian value. That doesn’t make them people
with standing in courtrooms. Extending that to them doesn’t empower rivers; it
empowers lawyers.
The Economist might have been entranced by a
metaphor in which rivers are anthropomorphized to the degree that deriving any
benefit from their labors, including using their currents to propel turbines
and generate power, amounts to slavery. It is still morally vacuous and
intellectually bankrupt to extend the rights reserved for human beings to
anything and everything, thereby diluting the concept of personhood to the
point of insignificance.
It may lack the divine wisdom and compositional
flawlessness that ensorcelled this reviewer, but we can nevertheless dispense
with the author’s conclusion monosyllabically. Streams are good, but they do
not live or think and don’t have rights. What that sentence lacks in sprightly
vivacity, it has the value of being undeniably, obviously, self-evidently true.
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