Knowlet

Unit 2: Types of Environmental Ethics


Ecofeminism

Ecofeminism explores the connection between the domination of women and the domination of nature. It argues that both are oppressed by patriarchal (male-dominated) systems and a "logic of domination."

[Image of the Ecofeminism symbol (tree and woman intertwined)]

Core Arguments:

  • Conceptual Links: Patriarchal thinking creates hierarchical dualisms:
    • Man / Woman
    • Mind / Body
    • Reason / Emotion
    • Culture / Nature
    In each pair, the first is seen as superior and has the "right" to dominate the second. Women and nature are both put in the "inferior" category (body, emotion, nature).
  • Historical Links: Historically, women have often been closer to nature (e.g., as farmers, foragers, healers), while men have dominated both.
  • The Goal: Ecofeminism argues that we cannot liberate nature without also liberating women, and we cannot liberate women without changing our destructive relationship with nature. The goal is to build an egalitarian society free from all forms of domination.

Deep Ecology

Deep Ecology is a philosophy developed by Norwegian philosopher Arne Naess in the 1970s. It contrasts "Deep" ecology with "Shallow" ecology.

Shallow Ecology Deep Ecology
Human-centered (Anthropocentric). Eco-centered (Ecocentric).
Aims to protect the environment for human benefit (e.g., save resources for our use). Aims to protect the environment for its own sake.
Sees humans as separate from and superior to nature. Sees humans as one part of an interconnected web of life.
Focuses on technical fixes for pollution. Asks deeper questions about our values, lifestyle, and economic system.

Core Principles:

Deep Ecology is based on principles like:

  • All life (human and non-human) has intrinsic value.
  • The richness and diversity of life forms contribute to this value.
  • Humans have no right to reduce this diversity except to satisfy vital needs.
  • A substantial decrease in human population is necessary for non-human life to flourish.
  • This requires radical changes in our economic, political, and ideological systems.

Social Ecology

Social Ecology is a philosophy developed by American thinker Murray Bookchin. It links ecological problems directly to social and political problems.

Core Tenet: The domination of nature by humans stems from the domination of humans by other humans.
[Image of Social Ecology's hierarchical domination model]

Core Arguments:

  • Hierarchy is the Root: Environmental destruction is not caused by "human nature" or "overpopulation," but by the emergence of social hierarchies (e.g., rich over poor, old over young, men over women, city over country).
  • Capitalism as a Key Driver: The modern capitalist system, with its motto "grow or die," is inherently anti-ecological. It must constantly expand, turning nature (and people) into resources to be exploited for profit.
  • The Solution is Social: We cannot solve the environmental crisis through individual "green" consumerism. We must fundamentally change our society.
    • Bookchin's solution was "Municipalism" or "Communalism": replacing the centralized, hierarchical nation-state with a network of decentralized, self-governing, ecological communities.
How to compare them:
  • Ecofeminism: Root cause is Patriarchy.
  • Social Ecology: Root cause is Social Hierarchy (especially capitalism).
  • Deep Ecology: Root cause is Anthropocentrism (human-centered values).

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