Title: Environmental Perspectives
1Environmental Perspectives
- Medieval Thought
- Early Modern Developments
- The Puritans Encounter Wilderness in America
2 I. Medieval Themes
- Nature as a hierarchy emanating from God, God
(the One) at the top and physical matter at the
bottom. - The unique central place of human beings.
- Nature as worthy of study as a reflection of God
and Gods glory and wisdom.
3Some claim Christianity encouraged ecological
exploitation
- By desacrilizing nature (by rejecting the pagan
worldview in which nature is full of spirits). - By encouraging the domination of nature (through
its interpretation of the Bibles claim for human
dominion, etc.). - By degrading the value of nature and matter (by
pointing to a salvation of the soul away from the
body and the earth).
4The Medieval Great Chain of Being
- Significantly influenced by Neo-Platonism.
- All beings could be arranged in a hierarchical
structure. - Within this hierarchy, each kind of being has its
proper place. - The structure is static and unchanging. One
should learn to accept ones place.
5(No Transcript)
6The Central Place of Humankind
- Example Thomas Aquinas
- Humans are rational, while animals are not. This
gives humans a kind of freedom. - Humans can treat animals in any way that is good
for humans. - If the Bible says that animals should not be
treated cruelly, it is to prevent cruelty to
humans or to prevent indirect harm to humans. - See the readings from Thomas Aquinas.
7A more positive medieval themeNature as a
pointer to God
- In spite of the rather low view of animals,
nature in general was seen as worthy of study as
a place of signs and truths from God. - A growing use of the image of Nature as a book,
parallel to the Bible, through which humans learn
about God and other things. The Two Books (Bible
and Nature)
8Some positive views of animals in the medieval
period.
- St Francis of Assisi. (1181-1226) Canticle of
Brother Sun, Sister Moon. - St. Basil the Great (329-373) Prayer for a
Deeper Sense of Fellowship with All Living
Things - O God, grant us a deeper sense of fellowship with
all living things, our little brothers and
sisters to whom in common with us you have given
this earth as home. We recall with regret that in
the past we have acted high-handedly and cruelly
in exercising our domain over them. Thus, the
voice of the earth which should have risen to you
in song has turned into a groan of travail. May
we realize that all these creatures also live for
themselves and for you - not for us alone. They
too love the goodness of life, as we do, and
serve you better in their way than we do in ours.
Amen. Saint Basil of Caesarea, Bishop, Doctor
9- II. Viewing Nature
- Early Modern Developments
10Developments in the 15th and 16th Centuries
- Copernicus (1473-1543) suggests a helio-centric
model of the universe. - Francis Bacon (1561-1626) lifts up science as the
new method by which man could gain power and
recapture dominion. - A growing emphasis on studying the Book of Nature
- The Protestant Reformation
- Questioned the authority of the church
- Emphasized individual thought and faith.
1117th and 18th Centuries A New Scientific Model
- A growing emphasis on gaining knowledge (and
power) through observation of Nature (F. Bacon). - A stronger argument for the helio-centric view of
the universe (Galileo). - A reduction of reality to physical relationships
that can be described mathematically. - A shift from viewing the universe as an organism
to viewing it as a machine.
12Example Rene Descartes (1590-1650)
- Applied the mechanistic model to animals.
- All physical things, including plants and animals
are machines and operate according to mechanistic
laws. - Non-human animals are machines, and like robots,
dont really think or really feel pain the way we
do. - Humans are machines with souls. This makes them
rational, enables them to think, feel pain,
reflect, etc.
1317th Century MaterialismJulian de LeMettrie
(1709-1751)
- Even humans are purely physical machines.
- There is no soul beyond the workings of the
physical body understood in mechanistic terms.
14Example Immanuel Kant (1724-1804)
- Wanted to find a rational (non-religious) basis
for ethics. - Saw human rationality as the key. Humans should
be treated with respect because they are
rational. - Other animals, however, are not rational, and we
do not have direct obligations to them. (Similar
to Thomas Aquinas)
15- III. The Puritans Encounter Wilderness in
America
16Group Reflection
- Imagine that you had just spent several months
aboard a small sailing ship crossing the Atlantic
Ocean. How would you feel? - Now imagine that you walked ashore, and past the
beach, you saw what looked like endless woods,
no houses, no stores, no obvious food. Again, how
would you feel? - No imagine it was early Winter, and you were cold
and hungry. How would you feel about this new
land? - What would you feel after the cold and sicknesses
of the Winter killed half you group. - Would nature seem like a friend?
17Three early developments that shaped American
consciousness of nature.
- The early Puritan experience.
- The agrarian ideal of the early colonists (Thomas
Jefferson). - The transcendentalist movement.
18Ideas of Nature in the New World (Europeans in
North America)
- The Puritans
- Left Europe in search of a new world in which to
establish a society based on Gods law. - New world as a wilderness to be conquered, wild
and evil. (Literally and spiritually.) - Understood Gods call as to tame and subdue this
wilderness, make it habitable. - Example William Bradford (1590-1657) on the
Pilgrims first experience of Cape Cod
(Plymouth, MA)
19Changes in ways of viewing nature
- Ancient World
- Nature is alive with gods,
- Or Nature is Gods living creation.
- Respect for nature as full of gods, or as Gods
creation, Gods possession.
- Medieval World
- Nature is a hierarchy from God at the top, earth
at the bottom. - Tendency to focus on the non-physical realm.
Physical realm sometimes seem as source of
temptation.
Modern World Nature is a purely physical
machine. Human reason is the key to
understanding. Nature is valuable as a
collection of resources to be used by humans.