The Wounding of the Earth: The Presence of the Ontological Rift and Eco-Dissonant Spiritualities
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. Civilization, the Emergence of the Abrahamic Religions, and the Ontological Rift
It is as if determining the border between human and animal were not just one question among many discussed by philosophers and theologians, scientists and politicians, but rather a fundamental metaphysico-political operation in which alone something like “man” can be decided upon and produced. If animal life and human life could be superimposed perfectly, then neither man nor animal—and, perhaps, not even the divine—would any longer be thinkable.(p. 92)
It is not just a matter of asking whether one has the right to refuse the animal such and such a power (speech, reason, experience of death, mourning, culture, institutions, technics, clothing, lying, pretense of pretense, covering of tracks, gift, laughter, crying, respect, etc.—the list is necessarily without limit and the most powerful philosophical tradition in which we have lived has refused the “animal” all of that). It also means asking whether what calls itself human has the right rigorously to attribute to man, which means therefore to attribute to himself, what he refuses the animal, and whether he can ever possess the pure, rigorous, indivisible concept, as such, of that attribution.(p. 135, emphasis in original).
3. The Creation of Eco-Dissonant Spiritualities and the Wounding of the Earth
4. A Psychoanalytic View of the Dynamics and Resistance of Eco-Dissonant Spiritualities
5. Conclusions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
| 1 | For Agamben (2009), the term “apparatus” refers to “a set of practices, bodies of knowledge, measures and institutions that aim to manage, govern, control, and orient—in a way that purports to be useful—the behaviors, gestures, and thoughts of human beings” (p. 13). Referencing Foucault, Agamben writes that “in a disciplinary society, apparatuses aim to create—through a series of practices, discourses, and bodies of knowledge—docile, yet free, bodies that assume their identity and their ‘freedom’ as subjects” (p. 19). The apparatuses associated with Christianity include its attending theologies, narratives, and rituals. |
| 2 | Interestingly, there is clear evidence that Freud ([1933] 1964) recognized this rift long before Agamben, Derrida, Latour, and Stenger offered their elaborations. Freud wrote that human beings “have no business to exclude themselves” from the whole animal kingdom (p. 204), which is an idea going back to Aristotle and brought to further light by the works of Charles Darwin—works that Freud would have been familiar with. In another work, Freud ([1917] 1955) claimed that the emergence of civilization accompanied man’s “dominating position over his fellow creatures in the animal kingdom. Not content with his supremacy, however, he began to place a gulf between his nature and theirs. He denied the possession of reason to them and to himself he attributed an immortal soul and made claims to a divine descent which permitted him to break the bond of community between himself and the animal kingdom” (p. 140). Freud, remarkably and to his credit, put his finger on a central problem in Western political philosophy, theology, and Cartesian-Baconian science. He hoped to diminish this gulf, but it is not clear to me he was able to do so because he continued to rely on the foundational epistemological premises associated with Western philosophy, as well as Western political philosophy’s unquestioning adherence to the view that civilization and sovereignty are necessary for human survival, freedom, and political life. Moreover, he retained the Western views that constructed “nature” as separate from culture or civilization and Indigenous peoples as savages or primitives—further evidence of the ontological rift. |
| 3 | By “Western,” I mean persons who have internalized the narratives and practices of European and North American anthropologies. There are people and groups in the West, such as Indigenous peoples, whose anthropologies do not produce the ontological rift. |
| 4 | Faber (2023), exploring the work of Alfred North Whitehead, locates the philosophical source of the rift in Plato’s philosophy. He writes that “the platonic divide becomes unmasked as an abstraction from the process of experience and not its condition” (p. 18). Whitehead also said that all Western philosophy is but a footnote to Plato’s work, which suggests that this abstraction, this platonic divide, is evident in Western philosophies and its attendant social imaginaries like the human sciences. |
| 5 | |
| 6 | In terms of philosophers, Newmeyer (2005) addresses the work of Plutarch and his argument about the rights of animals. A couple of centuries later, Neoplatonic scholar Porphyry, writing in the 3rd century, argued it is our moral duty to extend justice to other animals. Centuries later, Jeremy Bentham, Kniess (2018) writes, argued for the welfare of animals. Also, Puryear (2017) explores the 19th century work of Arthur Schopenhauer and his concern for the rights of animals. More recently, philosophers such as Singer (1975, 2023), Linzey (2009), and Nussbaum (2023) have explored the thorny ethical issues regarding human beings’ treatment of other species. In the Christian context, there are, of course, Francis of Assisi and theologians like Teilhard de Chardin (1978) and Wallace (2019) who recognize, respect, and care for the singularities of other-than-human beings. |
| 7 | In the area of science, in the 19th century, Alexander von Humboldt (Wulf 2015) and others (Goodall 2010; Montgomery 2016; Schlanger 2024) made “no concessions to Cartesian-Baconian objectification of nature” (p. 261). |
| 8 | World religious leaders like Pope Francis’ (2015) Laudato Si’ and local or regional leaders have worked to advocate for climate action. For instance, Shore-Goss (2016) has been the Senior Pastor of MCC United Church of Christ in California since 2004. During his pastoral leadership, he and other pastoral leaders have listened to congregants and facilitated the congregation’s discernment about climate change and how to respond (see also, Antal 2018; Spencer and White 2007). I add here Armstrong’s (2023) interesting book wherein she provides scriptural support from various religious traditions (e.g., Jewish, Christian, Islamic, Zen, etc.) for caring relations to other species. I am not arguing that one cannot find these and argue for more just and caring relations to other species. However, the trajectory of the apparatuses of the rift towards instrumental epistemologies vis-à-vis other species (and othered human beings), as many scholars cited in this article have noted, dominates Western ways of being in the world. |
| 9 | |
| 10 | Aristotle believed that animals have souls, yet this was in the context of a hierarchy with human beings at the top. The result was that other-than-human animals (and othered human beings, like barbarians) had less significance. |
| 11 | From a philosophical angle, Kant (1980) believed that human beings have no moral duties to other animals since they are not persons. This legitimates treating other species as a means to human ends. Similarly, John Stuart Mill argued that human beings must conquer “Nature” (Eberhart 2024, pp. 140–41). Domination and objectification or depersonalization are evident in the techno-scientific control of nature and other species, which has been observed by critical theorists such as Adorno and Horkheimer (Rigby 2017, p. 278). While these Western philosophers may have kept Christianity at arm’s length in their philosophizing, they nevertheless grew up with and internalized Christian beliefs regarding human beings and other species. By analogy, Carl Schmitt noted that “concepts of the modern theory of the state are secularized theological concepts” (as quoted in Brown 2015, p. 59). The point here is that Kant’s and Mill’s philosophies are not separate from Abrahamic traditions. |
| 12 | Particle physicist and feminist philosopher Barad (2007) argues that Niels Bohr’s understanding of quantum physics and philosophy offers opportunities to critique Western classical Newtonian physics as well as philosophy. Barad proffers a more complex and systemic understanding of agency, indicating the interrelation between human agency and the agency of other species and matter itself, which parallels Latour’s (2004) views. While I do not have the space to elaborate upon this, Barad’s views offer a way of spanning the rift and including matter and other species in the political realm and zones of care and justice. |
| 13 | Rosa (2020) is not restricting the notion of resonance to human beings alone (p. 35) or to living beings, though his focus, as a sociologist, is understandably on human beings. Resonance, in short, is a concept that is applicable to all living beings and the material world. The work of Penrose et al. (2017) on the relation between sentience and the material world is also relevant here. Briefly, they argue that material existence manifests resonance at the quantum level, which indicates that resonance is the basis of animate, sentient semiotic activity. All living beings are semiotic. While resonance applies to material existence, there is a distinction (not separation) between resonance at the quantum level and resonance vis-à-vis semiosis/life. I suggest that the distinction is that living creatures can experience resonance, while inanimate objects cannot. Put differently, resonance at the quantum level of atoms and molecules and then of mitochondria, cells, bacteria, simple organisms, animals, etc., represent increasingly complex (not higher) organizations of resonance. The implication here is that resonance is a foundational feature of material existence and of all living beings. |
| 14 | For Rosa (2019, p. 169), it is difficult to be related resonantly to the world when one is in an antagonistic relation to an abstraction such as “nature.” Rosa identifies this as alienation, and I also view it as representing dissonant relations. |
| 15 | Rosa (2019) appreciates yet disagrees with Honneth’s (1995) theory of recognition, arguing that recognition and resonance are not equivalent. Indeed, he contends that his theory of resonance “surpasses recognition theory in its explanatory potential” (p. 196). The stress is not simply on recognition but on a type of “dynamic event” that manifests “a vibrant responsive relationship” (p. 196). While Rosa is not denying the importance of recognition, his focus is on the relational experience of resonance. I suggest that the idea of parents’ personal recognition that is embedded in anarchic caring attunements to infants’ assertions makes resonance possible. That is, the theories of recognition and resonance come together in these caring interactions. |
| 16 | I do not have time to develop Barad’s (2007) of intra-action, which indicates that agency is not simply tied to human beings or to living creatures. From her analysis of the physics and philosophy of Niels Bohr, as well as her own contribution, Barad proposes that agential realism and intra-action are terms that bring matter and living beings into dynamic resonant (and dissonant) relations. Matter and meaning, and matter and agency, are not separate. |
| 17 | Decades ago, Winnicott (1975) surmised that “birth can easily be felt by the infant” and that they participate through “personal effort” (p. 186). Here, we see the notion of the infant’s pre-representational “belief” that they participate in their own birth, which implies the presence of agency (an aspect of the ego) or self-efficacy. |
| 18 | James’s (1958) exploration of religious experience was concerned almost entirely with Western Christians. In a footnote, James acknowledged “the barrier between men and animals” (p. 222, footnote 24). This is followed by a single report of a man meeting a friendly but dirty dog for the first time. When asked why he allowed this dog to muddy his clothes, the man indicated the fellow-feeling the dog had for him and said that to not accept this would have morally harmed the dog. “We ought both to lighten the condition of animals, whenever we can, and at the same time facilitate in ourselves that union of the world of all spirits, which the sacrifice of Christ has made possible” (p. 223). This is one clear illustration of Christian religious thinking where a person seeks to overcome the rift. Almost every other religious experience in James’s work entailed a desire and experience of resonance with a transcendent God. |
| 19 | We might take a page from Saïd’s (1979, 1994) work wherein he examines Western literature and its distorted representations of “Oriental” persons. That is, we can consider how other-than-human animals are represented in scriptures, which I contend renders them speechless (except Balaam’s ass) and lacking souls. |
| 20 | Stern’s notion of weak dissociation also accompanies Layton’s (2020) notion of the “normative unconscious.” Human beings are deemed to be normative, which is evident in Western social imaginaries that are anthropocentric. Other species, with regard to anthropocentric social imaginaries, fall into the category of nonnormative and are relegated to the unconscious. Closely associated with the normative unconscious is Zeddies’s (2002) idea of the historical unconscious. Zeddies’s notion refers to how some (othered) human beings are excluded from history and its narratives. Both normative and historical unconscious result from rigid narrations that deny the singularities of other species and othered human beings. |
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LaMothe, R.W. The Wounding of the Earth: The Presence of the Ontological Rift and Eco-Dissonant Spiritualities. Religions 2025, 16, 1571. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel16121571
LaMothe RW. The Wounding of the Earth: The Presence of the Ontological Rift and Eco-Dissonant Spiritualities. Religions. 2025; 16(12):1571. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel16121571
Chicago/Turabian StyleLaMothe, Ryan Williams. 2025. "The Wounding of the Earth: The Presence of the Ontological Rift and Eco-Dissonant Spiritualities" Religions 16, no. 12: 1571. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel16121571
APA StyleLaMothe, R. W. (2025). The Wounding of the Earth: The Presence of the Ontological Rift and Eco-Dissonant Spiritualities. Religions, 16(12), 1571. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel16121571

