Introduction In an article by Philip W. West, "contamination is good for you," the authors argue that pollution is a health and prerequisite for maintaining life on the planet. He used examples of air and water pollution to support his thesis. This is done through various analysis methods and research on this problem. But the aim of this paper is to analyze his argument about formality and validity using philosophical logic rather than falling into contamination itself.
Contamination is defined as contamination of air, water or soil by substances that interfere with human health, quality of life, or natural function of the ecosystem. Air pollution is air pollution emitted from plants, incinerators, internal combustion engines, and other sources. In a coal-fired power plant, combustion of fossil fuel coal forms pollutants. When burning coal at high temperature, nitrogen oxides are produced. The interior of coal is a compound of sulfur and nitrogen. These are from dead creatures that make up coal. When coal is burned, sulfur and nitrogen are oxidized to produce SOX and NOX, which are released into the atmosphere as major pollutants. NOX produced by combustion of nitrogen in coal is called fuel NOX. Burning of oxygen and nitrogen in the air also produces NOx. This is called hot NOx. (Peirce, J. F & R. F. Weiner & P. A. Vesilind. 1998)
There are mainly two types of air pollution. Ambient air pollution (outdoor pollution) and household (or indoor) air pollution are contamination from burning homes (by burning fuel such as coal, wood, kerosene) using naked fires or bad ventilation. Basic Stoves Indoor and outdoor air pollution may encourage each other as air moves from the inside of the building to the outside and vice versa. Main pollutants: (1) mixtures of solid and liquid droplets from particulate matter, mainly fuel burning and road traffic; (2) nitrogen dioxide in road traffic or indoor gas stoves; (3) fossils Sulfur dioxide generated by the combustion of fuel Ozone at the ground level caused by the reaction between sunlight and exhaust pollutants of automobiles. The most influential contaminants are particulate matter (abbreviated as PM, which is used as a measure of air pollution)