Elements of a First-Person Ecology: Historical Roots, Recognition and Ecospirituality
Abstract
:1. Introduction: The Knowledge–Action Gap in the Anthropocene
2. The Dualisms of Modernity and First-Person Ecology
2.1. Ancient Knowledge, Modern Knowledge and Its Criticism
2.2. First-Person Ecology
2.2.1. Arne Næss and Deep Ecology
2.2.2. Aldo Leopold and Land Ethic
3. Recognition: The Experience of Nature from an Epistemic Perspective
3.1. The Concept of Recognition in Axel Honneth’s Critical Theory and Its Limits
3.2. A Non-Anthropocentric Stance of Recognition: Love as a Form of Adequate Recognition
3.3. Recognition and a First-Person Ecology
3.3.1. Letting Go, Letting Be and Self-Realization
3.3.2. Recognition and the Knowledge–Action Gap
4. Ecospirituality: The Experience of Nature from a Phenomenological Perspective16
4.1. The Ecospiritual Phenomena
4.2. Ecospirituality as First-Person Ecology: Unveiling Four Key Characteristics
4.2.1. The Affective Dimension of the Ecospiritual Experience of Nature
Dear Mother Earth,18
Every time I step upon the Earth, I will train myself to see that I am walking on you, my Mother. Every time I place my feet on the Earth I have a chance to be in touch with you and with all your wonders. With every step I can touch the fact that you aren’t just beneath me, dear Mother, but you are also within me. Each mindful and gentle step can nourish me, heal me, and bring me into contact with myself and with you in the present moment.
Walking in mindfulness I can express my love, respect, and care for you, our precious Earth.[53] (p. 108)
4.2.2. The Decentered Dimension of the Ecospiritual Experience of Nature
Walking in this spirit I can experience awakening. I can awaken to the fact that I am alive, and that life is a precious miracle. I can awaken to the fact that I am never alone and can never die. You are always there within me and around me at every step, nourishing me, embracing me, and carrying me far into the future.[53] (p. 109)
4.2.3. The Transformative Dimension of the Ecospiritual Experience of Nature
I will touch the truth that mind and body are not two separate entities. I will train myself to look deeply to see your true nature: you are my loving mother, a living being, a great being—an immense, beautiful, and precious wonder. You are not only matter, you are also mind, you are also consciousness. Just as the beautiful pine or tender grain of corn possess an innate sense of knowing, so, too, do you. Within you, dear Mother Earth, there are the elements of Earth, water, air and fire; and there is also time, space, and consciousness.[53] (p. 109)
I shall walk with my own body and mind united in oneness. I know I can walk in such a way that every step is a pleasure, every step is nourishing, and every step is healing–not only for my body and mind, but also for you, dear Mother Earth. […] At every step I can take refuge in you. At every step I can enjoy your beauties, your delicate veil of atmosphere and the miracle of gravity.[53] (p. 110)
4.2.4. The Predisposition to Action in the Ecospiritual Experience of Nature
Dear Mother, you wish that we live with more awareness and gratitude, and we can do this by generating the energies of mindfulness, peace, stability, and compassion in our daily lives. Therefore, I make the promise today to return your love and fulfill this wish by investing every step I take on you with love and tenderness. I am walking not merely on matter, but on spirit.[53] (p. 110)
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
1 | The distinction between the first and second qualities goes back to The Essayist, published by Galileo in 1623. It was subsequently taken up in the rationalism of René Descartes and Gottfried W. Leibniz, as well as in the empiricism of John Locke. It has had considerable influence on the modern concept of scientific knowledge. |
2 | Scientific objectivity does not necessarily mean here a reality independent from the knowing subject. It means, above all, epistemic objectivity, i.e., intersubjectivity. Epistemic objectivity is a necessary condition for scientific objectivity, but ontological objectivity is not. |
3 | See Clive Hamilton et al. on the Anthropocene [13]., in particular ch. 3 ‘Human destiny in the Anthropocene’ (Clive Hamilton) and ch. 4 ‘The Anthropocene and the convergence of histories’ (Dipesh Chakrabarty) |
4 | Knowledge of nature-by-itself is only possible based on certain conditions that a phenomenological analysis makes it possible to formulate clearly: on the one hand, the forms of our lived body (the sentient or living body, for example); on the other hand, the various modes—correlative to the lived body—of participation in nature. Ultimately, however, knowledge of nature-by-itself presupposes a radical de-objectification of the self and of nature-as-an-object–a de-objectification exemplified in the confrontation with our own death. For a systemic account of this process, see [21]. Such a radical decentering of the self can be found, for example, in Thich Nhat Hanh’s ecospiritual approach (see Section 4.2.2). |
5 | More recently, Harmut Rosa’s resonance theory [22] represents an attempt to ground a critical theory in which nature is a sphere in which resonance can be experienced. |
6 | As neutral as possible: love can and has taken many forms (the Greeks distinguished, for example, between philia, storge, agape, eros, etc.). In speaking of love, we mean an attitude or disposition that connotes a form of caring. Therefore, love, thus understood, is a form of the affective dimension of the experience of nature (see also Section 4.2.1). |
7 | Relational behaviors: emotions are dispositions for actions. Therefore, love is conducive to (caring) action. It follows that love is not only a form of the affective dimension of the experience of nature, but it also predisposes to action (see also Section 4.2.4). |
8 | We can draw a parallel here with Elisa Aaltola’s notion of ‘attentive love’. Attentive love is a way of relating to others, it allows us to perceive what others are like in themselves beyond pre-fixed definitions [30] (p. 194). Note that this definition of attentive love is quite similar to the definition of antecedent recognition: an elementary intersubjective interaction that does not yet involve representations or specific values of the individual. |
9 | The practice of letting go is reminiscent of many ecospiritual practices (see Section 4). In fact, Aaltola [30] explicitly refers to Zen Buddhist philosophy as a source of what she calls ‘un-selfing’ (see Section 4.2.2 and Section 4.2.3 and note 11). |
10 | Aaltola applies her reasoning to animal ethics, but it can be generalized to all natural beings, and to nature itself. |
11 | Bryan Bannon [31] uses the term ‘letting be’ in a similar way to Aaltola’s [30] ‘letting go’. For Bannon, letting be requires that ‘we abandon representations of beings in order to free the being from the limitations imposed by the representation’ [31] (p. 47). Note that this practice is present in many ecospiritual practices (Section 4). |
12 | Aaltola, following Murdoch, calls this ‘un-selfing’, that is, ‘acknowledging that others may be utterly dissimilar from the definitions we have created, and from recognizing that we ourselves may be quite distinct from our inflated self-image’ [30] (p. 197). Above, we called this ‘decentering of the self’, which, as we have seen, is a dimension of the experience of nature (Section 4.2.2). |
13 | It is important to distinguish between this idea of self-realization or autonomy based on recognition and Arne Næss’ concept of self-realization. For Næss, self-realization means that the subject, based on an experience of identification with nature, participates in a metaphysical reality, an ecological self, that is, a broader understanding of the self beyond the individuated, self-interested self, so that the subject’s self-realization is actually the self-realization of nature in the form of an ecological self. Self-realization or autonomy based on a recognizing attitude of nature is quite different. Here, nature is understood as a condition of individual self-realization. To be sure, it is a constitutive condition of identity formation, but one that does not imply, at least at this stage, the identification of the self with an ecological self. This is a point that we cannot go into here (some aspects are developed in Section 4). What is important here is that, as a large body of (eco)psychological research has shown (see, among others, the work of Susan Clayton), nature plays an important role in the (social) formation of personal identity. It is in this sense, and to stay close to Honneth’s theory of recognition, that we can understand nature as a constitutive condition of self-realization. Self-realization as the self-realization of an ecological self requires a different consideration. This is an important distinction that our study brings to light. |
14 | These include the sphere of love (intersubjective relations constituted by an emotional attachment), the sphere of rights (relations of respect for the autonomy and dignity of persons) and the sphere of solidarity (relationships within a community based on shared values). See Honneth [34]. |
15 | Honneth’s theory of recognition supposes, as we can guess from what we have said before, this separation between cognition and recognition. |
16 | We see ecospirituality as a socio-cultural phenomenon and not a means to construct a theological argument. It is important to clarify this point: considering such ‘religious’ phenomena does not imply, for us or any reader, any affiliation with a particular faith tradition. No act of faith is necessary to appreciate the contribution of these phenomena in illustrating the kind of experiences that broadly define a first-person ecology. |
17 | In the deep ecology/ecofeminist debate around the ecological self, we draw on ecofeminist critics of Arne Næss’s seminal conception of the ecological self, and we argue for a self that can recognize its participation in natural otherness as part of its own experience. |
18 | We acknowledge the ecofeminist critique that the feminization of nature may have contributed to its exploitation, and we recognize the importance of handling terminologies like "Mother Earth" with caution, if not reconsidering their usage entirely (see [55]). However, the aim of this article is not to engage extensively in these debates, as one does not need to fully endorse Thich Nhat Hanh’s text or agree with all his ecospiritual assertions to explore the type of experience that characterizes a first-person ecology. Particularly, as we will soon discuss, kinship is not the central focus here; rather, we will emphasize the affective engagement and emotions of gratitude and respect that may arise from such a metaphor. |
19 | Other traditions may converge with a first-person ecology, such as the human ecology tradition, especially in its philosophical dimension. |
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Arcos, E.; Delorme, D.; Hess, G. Elements of a First-Person Ecology: Historical Roots, Recognition and Ecospirituality. Philosophies 2024, 9, 91. https://doi.org/10.3390/philosophies9040091
Arcos E, Delorme D, Hess G. Elements of a First-Person Ecology: Historical Roots, Recognition and Ecospirituality. Philosophies. 2024; 9(4):91. https://doi.org/10.3390/philosophies9040091
Chicago/Turabian StyleArcos, Esteban, Damien Delorme, and Gérald Hess. 2024. "Elements of a First-Person Ecology: Historical Roots, Recognition and Ecospirituality" Philosophies 9, no. 4: 91. https://doi.org/10.3390/philosophies9040091
APA StyleArcos, E., Delorme, D., & Hess, G. (2024). Elements of a First-Person Ecology: Historical Roots, Recognition and Ecospirituality. Philosophies, 9(4), 91. https://doi.org/10.3390/philosophies9040091