I think a reasonable-seeming metric on which humans are doubtless the winners is “energy controlled”.
Total up all the human metabolic energy, plus the output of the world’s power grids, the energy of all that petrol/gas burning in cars/boilers. If you are feeling generous you could give humans a percentage of all the metabolic energy going through farm animals.
Its a bit weird, because on the one hand its obvious that collectively humans control the planet in a way no other organism does. But, you are looking for a metric where plants and single-celled organisms are allowed to participate, and they can’t properly be said to control anything, even themselves.
I think there’s something to this. Also since making the OP, I’ve been thinking that human control of fire seems important. If trees have the majority of the biomass, but humans can burn the trees for energy or just to make space, then that also makes humans special (and overlaps a lot with what you say about energy controlled).
This also neatly connects human society to the evolutionary ecology since human dominance hierarchies determine who is able to control what energy (or set fire to what trees).
I think a reasonable-seeming metric on which humans are doubtless the winners is “energy controlled”.
Total up all the human metabolic energy, plus the output of the world’s power grids, the energy of all that petrol/gas burning in cars/boilers. If you are feeling generous you could give humans a percentage of all the metabolic energy going through farm animals.
Its a bit weird, because on the one hand its obvious that collectively humans control the planet in a way no other organism does. But, you are looking for a metric where plants and single-celled organisms are allowed to participate, and they can’t properly be said to control anything, even themselves.
I think there’s something to this. Also since making the OP, I’ve been thinking that human control of fire seems important. If trees have the majority of the biomass, but humans can burn the trees for energy or just to make space, then that also makes humans special (and overlaps a lot with what you say about energy controlled).
This also neatly connects human society to the evolutionary ecology since human dominance hierarchies determine who is able to control what energy (or set fire to what trees).