The Roots of Modern EnvironmentalismOriginally published in 1984, The Roots of Modern Environmentalism provides a historical, philosophical and ideological background to environmentalism. Topics covered include, the roots of technological environmentalism, the medieval cosmology and Bacon’s philosophy, the non-scientific roots of ecological environmentalism, such as Romanticism and its scientific roots in the theories of Malthus and Darwin. The Marxist perspective on Nature is also discussed. The concluding chapter is a criticism of education which challenges its usefulness as an agent of socio-economic change. This book will be of interest to academics and students of environmentalism and geography. |
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... Romantic Conception of Nature + 3.4 The Country and the City + 3.5 The Romantic Legacy in Modern Ecocentrism+ CHAPTER 4: THE SCIENTIFIC ROOTS OF ECOLOGICAL ENVIRONMENTALISM 4.1 Malthus and Neo-Malthusians 4.2 Darwin, the Web of Life and ...
... Romantic Conception of Nature + 3.4 The Country and the City + 3.5 The Romantic Legacy in Modern Ecocentrism+ CHAPTER 4: THE SCIENTIFIC ROOTS OF ECOLOGICAL ENVIRONMENTALISM 4.1 Malthus and Neo-Malthusians 4.2 Darwin, the Web of Life and ...
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... romantic (Chapter 3) and scientific roots – the latter based particularly on Malthus and Darwin (Chapter 4). But out of this attempt to understand environmentalism's roots comes the paradox referred to earlier, of how science gives us ...
... romantic (Chapter 3) and scientific roots – the latter based particularly on Malthus and Darwin (Chapter 4). But out of this attempt to understand environmentalism's roots comes the paradox referred to earlier, of how science gives us ...
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... romantic and wilderness movements of the 19th and early–20th centuries (Erisman (1973), London (1969)). Nash (1974, Chapter 13) writes of: the emergence in the 1960s of a widespread tendency to question established American values and ...
... romantic and wilderness movements of the 19th and early–20th centuries (Erisman (1973), London (1969)). Nash (1974, Chapter 13) writes of: the emergence in the 1960s of a widespread tendency to question established American values and ...
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... romantics, saw it as destroying morality and social order, human health and values, and nature. The moral and aesthetic revulsion against the city led to legislation to improve the urban environment, to the garden city movement, and to ...
... romantics, saw it as destroying morality and social order, human health and values, and nature. The moral and aesthetic revulsion against the city led to legislation to improve the urban environment, to the garden city movement, and to ...
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Contents
THE ROOTS OF TECHNOLOGICAL | |
THE NONSCIENTIFIC ROOTS OF ECOLOGICAL | |
THE SCIENTIFIC ROOTS OF ECOLOGICAL | |
SCIENCE AND OBJECTIVITY | |
ENVIRONMENTALISM | |
THE POLITICAL ROOTS OF ECOLOGICAL | |
CONCLUSION IS EDUCATION THE GREATEST | |
REFERENCES | |
GLOSSARY OF TERMS | |
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Common terms and phrases
19th century Albury Albury and Schwartz animals argue become behaviour Bookchin bourgeoisie capitalism capitalist Capra Cartesian dualism Chapter classical science concept consciousness cultural filter Darwin Descartes determinism deterministic dominant dualism earth ecocentric ecofascism ecological economic ecosystems ecotopia emphasises energy environment environmental environmentalists essentially existence facts fundamental Garrett Hardin Glacken God’s groups historical human ideas ideology increase industrial influence interests knowledge labour lifeboat ethic limits Limits to Growth Malthus man-nature relationship man’s Marx Marxist material mathematical matter means mechanistic medieval mode of production modern movement neo-Malthusians nuclear power O’Riordan objective observation organic organisation paradigm particular perspective phenomenology philosophy physical political pollution population growth position principles problems progress reality recognise relation revolution romantic romanticism Sandbach says scientific laws scientific revolution scientists social Social Darwinism socialist society specific surplus value systems view technocentric theory universal values