Political nature : environmentalism and the interpretation of Western thought / John M. Meyer.
2001
JA75.8 .M49 2001eb
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Title
Political nature : environmentalism and the interpretation of Western thought / John M. Meyer.
Author
ISBN
9780262279758 (electronic bk.)
0262279754 (electronic bk.)
0585437068 (electronic bk.)
9780585437064 (electronic bk.)
0262279754 (electronic bk.)
0585437068 (electronic bk.)
9780585437064 (electronic bk.)
Publication Details
Cambridge, Mass. : MIT Press, ©2001.
Language
English
Description
1 online resource (xii, 210 pages)
Call Number
JA75.8 .M49 2001eb
Dewey Decimal Classification
320.5
Summary
Concern over environmental problems is prompting us to reexamine established thinking about society and politics. The challenge is to find a way for the public's concern for the environment to become more integral to social, economic, and political decision making. Two interpretations have dominated Western portrayals of the nature-politics relationship, what John Meyer calls the dualist and the derivative. The dualist account holds that politics--and human culture in general--is completely separate from nature. The derivative account views Western political thought as derived from conceptions of nature, whether Aristotelian teleology, the clocklike mechanism of early modern science, or Darwinian selection. Meyer examines the nature-politics relationship in the writings of two of its most pivotal theorists, Aristotle and Thomas Hobbes, and of contemporary environmentalist thinkers. He concludes that we must overcome the limitations of both the dualist and the derivative interpretations if we are to understand the relationship between nature and politics.Human thought and action, says Meyer, should be considered neither superior nor subservient to the nonhuman natural world, but interdependent with it. In the final chapter, he shows how struggles over toxic waste dumps in poor neighborhoods, land use in the American West, and rainforest protection in the Amazon illustrate this relationship and point toward an environmental politics that recognizes the experience of place as central.
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