"Environmental Thought as Cosmological Intervention"

Greenbaum, Allan | from Multimedia Library Collection:
Environmental Values (journal)

Greenbaum, Allan. “Environmental Thought as Cosmological Intervention.” Environmental Values 8, no. 4 (1999): 485–97. doi:10.3197/096327199129341932.

An important tradition in popular and academic environmentalist thought concentrates on cosmological issues, to do with overarching (or underlying) views about the nature of reality and the place of humanity in nature. This tradition connects the environmental crisis with anthropocentric and mechanistic cosmologies, and tries to address this crisis through cosmological critique and reconstruction—a practice I call “cosmological intervention.” This practice presupposes a link between “world view” and “ethos.” I argue that an environmentalist ethos does not necessarily or automatically follow from the world view elements propounded in cosmological interventions. Rather, world view symbolises ethos. Cosmologies favoured by environmentalists describe the abstract and necessary properties of the world in ways which reflect those concrete and contingent properties of the world that the ecology movement seeks to protect, extend and celebrate.
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