Is the law really the law, if changes in personnel result in dramatic change? That鈥檚 the question Americans are grappling with as a momentous Supreme Court term opens this week.
How do you 鈥渟ee鈥 silence?
For photographer Pete McBride, who has documented the world鈥檚 remotest spots, it鈥檚 about understanding that a place derives its beauty as much from its soundscape as from its visual power 鈥 something we caught glimpses of amid pandemic quiet.
Mr. McBride鈥檚 focus is 鈥渘atural silence鈥 鈥 what emerges when the human cacophony doesn鈥檛 drown out birdsong, or the rush of wind and water. It鈥檚 about 鈥渆xploring ... the importance of natural sounds ... which in many places we鈥檙e sadly losing, as we鈥檝e created such a noisy planet,鈥澛爃e told the radio show 鈥1A鈥 in an about his聽new collection of photos and essays, 鈥淪eeing Silence: The Beauty of the World鈥檚 Most Quiet Places.鈥
It鈥檚 widely accepted that natural sound informs our sense of well-being. But it鈥檚 increasingly scarce. In 1984, 鈥渁udio ecologist鈥 Gordon Hempton聽聽21 places in Washington state that had no human-made noise for 15 minutes or more at a stretch. By 2007, he found three. Today, he says such spots are rare across the United States and Europe.聽聽
Then came COVID-19 lockdowns, producing what Science magazine called 鈥渢he longest ... global seismic聽聽in recorded history.鈥 Cities were less clamorous. Sparrows, no longer needing to 鈥渟hout,鈥 famously began to sing more operatically.
Will those monastery-like聽moments have staying power? Last year, Quiet Parks International recognized聽the world鈥檚聽, in Taiwan. As Mr. McBride puts it, 鈥淚 hope these photos can serve as reminders of what the natural world has to tell us 鈥 .鈥