-- 
*Mar*Absolutely. Below is a *short, one-act ecological drama* inspired
by *“Impressing
Nature vs. Impressing the Economic Man.”*

It’s written for stage or reader’s theatre — philosophical, emotional, and
symbolic — with minimal props and an allegorical tone.
------------------------------
*Drama: “The Trial of the Economic Man”*

*Inspired by the ideas of YM Sarma*
*Characters*

   -

   *The Economic Man* – A cold, confident figure dressed in metallic gray;
   speaks in numbers and logic.
   -

   *Nature* – A serene yet wounded presence, in green and brown; her voice
   echoes with wind and rain.
   -

   *The Professor* – A representative of the modern University; proud,
   analytical, torn between both sides.
   -

   *The Student* – A young seeker; confused, questioning, and full of
   yearning.
   -

   *The Voice* – A disembodied sound that sometimes speaks as *God* or
   *Conscience*.

------------------------------
*Setting*

A dimly lit courtroom in the ruins of a university. One half of the stage
is steel and concrete; the other half, a patch of overgrown grass and wild
flowers. A broken computer flickers beside a growing sapling.
------------------------------
*Scene 1: The Indictment*

*Voice:*
This is the trial of the age — the case of *Nature versus the Economic Man*.
The charge: the destruction of the Biosphere, the betrayal of Life.
Let the accused step forward.

*Economic Man:*
(stepping confidently)
I am here. I built your cities, your machines, your progress. Without me,
mankind would still crawl in caves.

*Nature:*
And without me, you would have no breath to boast with. You build empires
on my body and call it civilization.

*Economic Man:*
Sentiment! Emotion! Nature must serve reason. My laws are of growth, of
profit, of motion!

*Nature:*
Your growth devours. Your profit poisons. Your motion leads to extinction.
------------------------------
*Scene 2: The Professor Speaks*

*Professor:*
(stepping between them, uneasy)
Enough. I am of the University — the temple of knowledge. We serve truth,
not greed.

*Nature:*
Do you? Your halls echo with machines, not birdsong. You have replaced
wisdom with algorithms.

*Professor:*
We teach science. Science liberates!

*Nature:*
You mistake liberation for domination. You have imprisoned your students in
a world of steel.

*Student:*
(quietly)
She’s right, Professor. We study everything *about* life, but never *with*
life. I’ve never felt the wind without measuring its velocity. I’ve never
seen a tree without thinking of its market value.

*Professor:*
(conflicted)
Then what are we teaching…?
------------------------------
*Scene 3: Collapse*

*Economic Man:*
(pacing)
You all fear progress! Machines replace drudgery; efficiency is divine!

*Nature:*
Efficiency without empathy is death. Your machines have replaced workers,
and soon they will replace *you*.

*Voice:*
(booming)
And when there are no jobs, no incomes, and no markets—
what will your numbers feed upon, Economic Man?

*Economic Man:*
(faltering)
But… without me, who will sustain order?

*Nature:*
Order will return through balance. The ants will rebuild what you have
burned. The rivers will wash your ruins clean.
------------------------------
*Scene 4: Revelation*

*Student:*
(to Nature)
What must we do?

*Nature:*
Return. Learn to live as my children, not my masters. Build schools that
grow from the soil. Let knowledge breathe again.

*Professor:*
(softly, to the Student)
Then the new university must be a *forest*, not a factory.

*Voice:*
So it shall be. Let this be the new curriculum:
To touch the earth and feel it live.
To measure not by numbers, but by compassion.
To study not from screens, but from streams.
------------------------------
*Scene 5: The Verdict*

*Voice:*
The verdict is spoken. The Economic Man must die — not in body, but in
spirit. Let him shed his machine-soul and remember his humanity.

*Economic Man:*
(trembling, slowly kneeling)
I… have forgotten how to feel. Teach me.

*Nature:*
Then plant this seed. (hands him a small sapling)
When it grows, you will remember.

(The Economic Man kneels, planting the sapling. The light shifts to dawn.
Birds sing faintly.)

*Student:*
(to the audience)
The trial is over. But the sentence is ours to serve —
To live, not against nature, but within her.

*(Silence. The sapling glows as light fills the stage.)*

*Curtain.*
------------------------------
*Themes*

   -

   The mechanization of knowledge and economics
   -

   The ecological and spiritual crisis of modern civilization
   -

   The redemption of humanity through reconnection with nature
   -

   Education as an act of ecological awakening

------------------------------

Would you like me to turn this into a *full-length play* (three acts, more
dialogue and character arcs — suitable for performance or publication)?

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