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The
reductionist, compartmentalized approach to science and problem-solving that has prevailed
throughout the 20th century is proving inadequate to deal with the problems we face at the
cusp of the Millennium. We need innovative, transdisciplinary approaches, new coalitions
among biological, physical, behavioural and social scientists, and scholars from outside
the range conventionally regarded as "science." Economists, politicians,
representatives of management and labour, religious leaders, scholars from the humanities,
ethics and philosophy, all have a role. One ingredient of successful adaptation to the
challenges we face, especially from the threat of global change, is a change in human
behaviour, that will have to be preceded by a change in values, or attitudes and beliefs. There
is a necessary sequence to control health problems: awareness that the problem exists,
understanding what causes it, capability to control the cause, a sense of values that the
problem is important or worth solving, and political will. I am encouraged by what I see
around me to indicate that this sequence has begun to operate in responses to
human-induced ecological determinants of disease.
We have a long way to go. But as Mao Tse Tung put it, our journey must begin with a
single step. Let us take that step, towards a world that lives in greater ecological
harmony than our world does today.
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