Timothy Morton has a unique take on ecology that challenges much of the alternative consciousness that floats around on the periphery of environmental circles. He offers a profound take on human possibilities. To Morton, human society and Nature are not two distinct things but rather two different angles on the same thing. We have been “terraforming Earth all along — now we have the chance to face up to this fact and to our coexistence with all beings,” he writes. The destruction of Nature is neither inevitable nor impossible — we have a choice. But we must recognize that the language of sustainability becomes a weapon in the hands of global corporations that would like nothing better than to reproduce themselves in perpetuity. Ecological thought, he writes, must conceive of post-capitalist pleasures: not bourgeois pleasure for the masses, but forms of new, broader, more rational pleasure; not boring, over-stimulating, bourgeois...
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Research Article|
August 01 2011
The Ecological Thought
Kallus, Menachem
Fons Vitae Publisher
, 2011
Rohr, Richard
Jossey-Bass
, 2011
Pinsker, Shachar M.
Stanford University Press
, 2011
SCENES FROM VILLAGE LIFE
Oz, AmosHoughton Mifflin Harcourt
, 2011
Morton, Timothy
Harvard University Press
, 2010
Tikkun (2011) 26 (3): 136.
Article history
Received:
June 29 2011
Citation
The Ecological Thought. Tikkun 1 August 2011; 26 (3): 136. doi: https://doi.org/10.1215/08879982-2011-3020
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