19 Facts About Deep ecology

1.

Deep ecology is an environmental philosophy that promotes the inherent worth of all living beings regardless of their instrumental utility to human needs, and the restructuring of modern human societies in accordance with such ideas.

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2.

Deep ecology argues that the natural world is a complex of relationships in which the existence of organisms is dependent on the existence of others within ecosystems.

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3.

Deep ecology is often framed in terms of the idea of a much broader sociality; it recognizes diverse communities of life on Earth that are composed not only through biotic factors but, where applicable, through ethical relations, that is, the valuing of other beings as more than just resources.

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4.

The movement does not subscribe to anthropocentric environmentalism, since deep ecology is grounded in a different set of philosophical assumptions.

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5.

Deep ecology takes a holistic view of the world humans live in and seeks to apply to life the understanding that the separate parts of the ecosystem function as a whole.

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6.

Deep ecology proposes an embracing of ecological ideas and environmental ethics.

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7.

Deep ecology ecologists hold that the survival of any part is dependent upon the well-being of the whole, and criticise the narrative of human supremacy, which they say has not been a feature of most cultures throughout human evolution.

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8.

Proponents of deep ecology oppose the narrative that man is separate from nature, is in charge of nature, or is the steward of nature, or that nature exists as a resource to be freely exploited.

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9.

Deep ecology ecologists believe that the damage to natural systems sustained since the industrial revolution now threatens social collapse and possible extinction of humans, and are striving to bring about the kind of ideological, economic and technological changes Naess mentioned.

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10.

Deep ecology eschews traditional left wing-right wing politics, but is viewed as radical in its opposition to capitalism, and its advocacy of an ecological paradigm.

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11.

Key event in the development of deep ecology was the "Rights of Non-Human Nature" conference held at a college in Claremont, California in 1974 [which] drew many of those who would become the intellectual architects of deep ecology.

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12.

Deep ecology is an eco-philosophy derived from intuitive ethical principles.

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13.

Deep ecology ecologists reject any mechanical or computer model of nature, and see the earth as a living organism, which should be treated and understood accordingly.

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14.

Deep ecology did not, he said, 'exclude the possibility that Christian theological principles are true in a certain sense.

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15.

Deep ecology ecologists are criticised for insisting they can somehow understand the thoughts and interests of non-humans such as plants or protists, which they claim thus proves that non-human lifeforms have intelligence.

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16.

Bookchin's second major criticism is that deep ecology fails to link environmental crises with authoritarianism and hierarchy.

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17.

Deep ecology suggests that deep ecologists fail to recognise the potential for humans to solve environmental issues.

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18.

Deep ecology ecologists believe that since ecological problems are created by industrial civilization, the only solution is the deconstruction of the culture itself.

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19.

Deep ecology ecologists have indicated that the concept of technics being 'natural' and therefore 'morally neutral' is a delusion of industrial civilization: there can be nothing 'neutral' about nuclear weapons, for instance, whose sole purpose is large scale destruction.

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