Deep Ecology A Central Theme of Environmental Ethics
Deep Ecology A Central Theme of Environmental Ethics
Introduction
Human civilisation grew in the lap of nature. Nature thus provides the locus for everything that
flourished over it. Or it may be understood in the way that that which provides the platform for
birth and development of anything and everything is Nature. It is that which surrounds, inspires
awe, and above all, provides the basic conditions and bare necessities for the birth and growth of
life over it. Either with or without this realisation, human beings since the early days of
civilisation developed some sort of respect, love and care for nature.
Environmental ethics appears as a wing of practical or applied ethics. Its main objective is to
retain the balance of the environment or the sustainability of environment as a whole. There are
countless environments and the belief in a global environment seems inescapable. Environment
exists essentially because it is inhabited by a particular living organism. Therefore, the field
comprises ‘an infinity of overlapping environments’. Given this sense of environment, each
human group and individual has its own environment, and each forms part of the environment of
many of the others. Thus, ‘environment’ here actually means ‘encompassing system’.
‘Environment’ is also used to mean the sense of eco-system, i.e., a system of interacting living
organisms and non-living elements (biotic and abiotic communities respectively). Since an
ecosystem is usually thought of as occurring within a self contained and restricted area, and since
complete isolation in the real sense of the term in most general areas is impossible, it can be
argued that the Earth itself is the only real ecosystem. Thus, our understanding of environment is
a single ecosystem.
We are talking in favor of an organic whole. Environments never exist before the environed
creature does, and cannot exist without such a creature. They comprise a process rather than a
fixed objective entity, and are continually under construction through the activities of the living
being environed. Hence, a distinction should be made between environment and nature, and we
should be wary of expressions such as ‘the natural environment’. In fact, nature is a world that
can exist apart from us and it can be studied in a detached, isolated and scientific manner.
Environment is fundamentally historical and it cannot be understood through scientific
detachment.
All kinds of distortions arise for ethics when the environment is conceived as the preconstituted
base of human action. We have pre-ethical commitments towards the environment. Our pre-
ethical commitments or engagement with our surroundings ends with this being described as a
condition ‘by virtue of which we are all fellow passengers on this planet of ours’. We have both
intentional (perspective-dependent) and also objective concepts of environment. Objective
concepts include the concept of the environment as an objective system of causes and effects.
This concept is, of course, a relational concept but the relation is different and can be quite
independent of awareness and understanding on the part of an environed subject. However, an
object of understating, a causal or objective environment or its components may be recognized as
the bearers of value, whether intrinsically or otherwise. Such an environment will usually be the
shared environment of many people and other creatures. Thus, it comprises an interpersonal
environment. A conscious subject may have thus an environment in at least two senses. We can
employ both the intentional sense and the interpersonal sense. Even, we can shift between these
senses because intentional and interpersonal spheres interrupt on one another too much for things
to be otherwise. Accordingly, if pollution threatens our favorite places, we appeal for
environmental preservation. We cannot ignore or set aside the fate of our future generations, our
children and our grandchildren’s legacy.
Environmental ethics is the fullest extension of objective ethics, extending the scope of moral
thought beyond one‘s community and nation to include, not only all people everywhere, but also
animals and the whole of nature, the biosphere, both now and immanent future to include future
generations. Global environmental ethics, through the logical extension of traditional ethics, is
revolutionary in that, it calls on us to think and act in the ways we hardly imagined,
subordinating our politics, economics, and technology to a holistic global understanding of how
we function within the ecosphere. It calls for a new deeper moral consciousness. (Pojman vi)
While elucidating deep and shallow ecology, Naess proposes several points as applicable to both
environmental philosophy and social philosophy and then he tries to extract considerable analogy
between the two fields. He then seems to realize that both environmentally and socially, the
individual is seen as a knot in a holistic fabric stitched together by intrinsic relations. Human
societies always attempt to extend diversity, complexity, autonomy, decentralization, symbiosis,
the principle of ‘live and let live’, egalitarianism, and classlessness. In this regard, ecosystems or
ecophilosophy seems to be healthy because of its diverse, complex, autonomous, decentralize
and symbiotic nature. Eco-philosophy thus paves the way for deep ecology and without the
perception of eco-philosophy, it would be very difficult to come by about the very nature of deep
ecology.
Review of Literature
According to Callicott, one may sense Darwinian roots in the Land Ethic of Leopold. Here
resources are used with an ever ending recycled process. The natural community is characterized
by countless of these interdependencies. Its health is characterized by its long-term integrity and
stability. The land ethic of Leopold thus appears as a fairly comprehensive theory including both
biotic and abiotic communities within the sphere of environment. It also functions as a decision-
making process for most environmental and ecological issues. It equally offers normative
guidance about issues as diverse as wilderness preservation, pollution, conservation, energy,
resource depletion, and so on.
In this context Leopold says, “Philosophy, then, suggests one reason why we cannot destroy the
earth with moral impurity namely that the ‘dead’ earth is an organism possessing a certain kind
and degree of life, which we intuitively respect as such.” The point that can be taken care of is
that if the earth itself is alive and if we can attribute to it such attributes as health, sickness,
growth, and death, we can argue along familiar lines that the earth itself warrants moral
consideration.
George Sessions edited Deep Ecology for the 21st Century (1995) anthologizes the discussion of
the nature of deep ecology by various theorists. Particularly, Naess‘ deep questioning process,
the platform principles, the human need for the process of identification with nonhuman life
forms etc. are some common focuses of this volume. Naess‘ personal philosophy, that is,
Ecosophy-T, as well as his response to the criticism from Social Ecology, Ecofeminism etc. and
misunderstandings of his position is also well furnished in this book. It also addresses the issues
of deep ecology as a movement like its development from Thoreau, Muir, Carson, to Arne Naess
as offered by various theorists. The discussion of wilderness and wild and its preservation get
prominence in one part of this anthology. The book is ended with the Naessian optimistic note of
the possibility of deep ecology in the twenty-second century.
Alan Drengson and Yuichi Inoue edited book The Deep Ecology Movement: An Introductory
Anthology (1995) has anthologized select articles explicating Naess‘ view of deep ecology. This
book is basically set in support of the radical ecocentrism and Naessian position elaborating the
views on Ecological Self, conservation and Self-Realization, platform principles etc. It also
includes the important topic on the relationship between deep ecology and ecofeminism as well
as urges the essentiality of rituals and council of all Beings. The editors of this volume claim that
pieces of writing in this anthology ―are not dull reading‖ but ―are of fundamental human
importance.‖
Specific philosophical discussions on deep ecology and other schools of environmentalism took
place under the auspices of the journals like Environmental Ethics, The Trumpeter, Hypatia etc.
Since 1979 the journal Environmental Ethics, edited by Eugene Hargrove, has been associated
with publishing papers on environmental philosophy.
William C. French‘s ―Against Biospherical Egalitarianism‖ (1995) etc. The Trumpeter, purely
dedicated to the development of ecosophy, has a number of references in the present work
quoting the deep ecology papers of Naess and other deep ecologists. Again, the academic journal
Hypatia: A Journal of Feminist Philosophy devoted an entire issue in 1991 under the editorship
of Karen J Warren to a debate with the deep ecology standpoint. Many trends changing papers
published in that issue have made explicit connections between feminism and deep ecology.
The problem before Naess is that his study of deep ecology will be criticized from different
quarters. Particularly, the proponents who try to see environmental crisis as a conflict between
man and environment instead of man-in-environment criticize the Naessian way of viewing the
world. The main objective of this wstudy is to see if deep ecology of Naess can be defended.
Moreover, the proposed study aims at the evaluation and introduction of new perspective, if any,
in environmental philosophy under the light of the Naessian deep ecology. In the course of the
study, it is proposed to compare and contrast deep ecology with its critics to see if there is any
converging point.
Methodology:
This present study will be based on primary as well as secondary data. The primary data will be
collected from disscusson and interview method and the secondary data will be collected fom
books, journals, periodicals, magazines and internet etc. The present work will make a
conceptual study of the present thread of environmentalism. This work will be attempted to
conceptually overview the gravity and seriousness of the visible environmental crisis as well as
to see the philosophical solution as enunciated by deep ecology. Deep ecology is a shift from
anthropocentrism to ecocentrism developed in 1970‘s. This work is a critical study of deep
ecology as formulated by Naess. In order to see if Naess can be defended, various methods will
be adopted. The methods will be used are mainly critical through the conceptual study with
select schools of environmental philosophy. In other words, this study will be a descriptive
study of select schools of thought in order to find out whether the Naessian version of deep
ecology can effectively function on its theoretical formulation in meeting will stated
environmental crisis.
Chapter plan:
This present study “Deep Ecology : A central theme of environmental ethics” will be cover six
chapters, which follows:
Chapter-1: Introduction
Chapter-6 : Conclusion
Reference