Reserve
Full Size
Murray Bookchin chose the term social ecology to stress his hypothesis that almost all ecological problems (apart from purely natural disasters) are rooted in human social problems, with these human social problems themselves stemming from political, economic, and cultural modes of power based on hierarchy and domination. The domination of nature by humans, he claimed, arose because of the domination of humans by other humans. These sets of hierarchical social relations – classes, patriarchy, ethnic supremacy – became projected onto the natural world. In other words, the ways the powerful treated the disempowered became reflected in how they, in turn, treated nature.
It was only by reconstructing human society along non-hierarchical, decentralized, cooperative, and directly-democratic lines that he felt society would be able to mend its rift with the natural environment; as we started treating each other better, we would start treating nature better. This perspective, in many respects, anticipates what’s now called intersectionality in social justice movements, enclosed within an ecological sensibility.
From ‘Social Ecology: A Quick Introduction’ by Connor Owens.
Arwork was created in https://artbreeder.com/
Artbreeder app was created by Joel Simon https://www.joelsimon.net/
- MediumImage (GIF)
- File Size41.0 MB
- Dimensions512 x 512
- Contract Address
- Token StandardERC-721
- BlockchainEthereum
