- Ecosophy
Ecosophy, and ecophilosophy, are
neologism s formed by contracting the phrase ecological philosophy.Confusion as to the meaning (suggesting that such a meaning should be singular and exact) of ecosophy is primarily the consequence of it being used to designate different and often contradictory (though conceptually related) concepts by the Norwegian father of
Deep Ecology ,Arne Næss , and Frenchpost-Marxist philosopher and psychoanalystFelix Guattari .Naess's definition of ecosophy
While a professor at
University of Oslo in 1973, Arne Naess, introduced the terms "deep ecology movement" and "ecosophy" into environmental literature. Naess based his article on a talk he gave inBucharest in 1972 at the Third World Future Research Conference. As Drengson notes in "Ecophilosophy, Ecosophy and the Deep Ecology Movement: An Overview", "In his talk Naess discussed the longer-range background of the ecology movement and its connection with respect for Nature and the inherent worth of other beings." Naess's construction of a Nature which sits outside the human sphere of culture, and furthermore his preference for 'natural' values over cultural (particularly Western) values demarcates him as a dualist - which sharply contrasts with the alternative construction of ecosophy outlined by Guattari.Naess defined ecosophy in the following way:
Félix Guattari
Ecosophy also refers to a field of practice introduced by
psychoanalyst ,poststructuralist philosopher and political activistFélix Guattari . In part Guattari's use of the term demarcates what he observes as the necessity for the proponents of social liberation whose struggles in the twentieth century were dominated by the paradigm of social revolution andMarxism to embed their arguments within an ecological framework which understands the interconnections of social and environmental spheres.Guattari holds that traditional environmentalist perspectives obscure the complexity of the relationship between humans and their natural environment through its maintenance of the dualistic separation of human (cultural) and nonhuman (natural) systems; he envisions ecosophy as a new field with a
monistic and pluralistic approach to such study. Ecology in the Guattarian sense then, is a study of complex phenomena, including human subjectivity, the environment, and social relations, all of which are intimately interconnected. Despite this emphasis on interconnection, throughout his individual writings and more famous collaborations withGilles Deleuze Guattari has resisted calls for holism, preferring to emphasise heterogeneity and difference, synthesising assemblages andmultiplicities in order to tracerhizomatic structures rather than creating unified and, holisitic structures.Guattari's concept of the three interacting and interdependent ecologies of mind, society, and environment stems from the outline of the three ecologies presented in cyberneticist
Gregory Bateson 's 1972 textSteps to an Ecology of Mind .References
*Drengson, A. and Y. Inoue, eds. 1995. "The Deep Ecology Movement: An Introductory Anthology". Berkeley: North Atlantic Publishers.
*Guattari, F. 2000. "The Three Ecologies". Trans. Ian Pindar & Paul Sutton, London & New Brunwick, NJ: The Athlone Press.
*Maybury-Lewis, David. 1992. "On the Importance of Being Tribal: Tribal Wisdom." Millennium: Tribal Wisdom and the Modern World. Binimun Productions Ltd.ee also
*
Deep ecology External links
* [http://www.ecospherics.net/pages/DrengEcophil.html Ecophilosophy, Ecosophy and the Deep Ecology Movement: An Overview by Alan Drengson] Ecospherics.net. Accessed 2005-08-14.
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