CHAPTER 3- Gardner
CHAPTER 3____________
RELIGIOUS
AND MORAL APPROACHES:
CHANGING VALUES,
BELIEFS,
AND WORLDVIEWS
I. Chapter Prologue
II.
Introduction
III.
Do Values, Morals, Beliefs, and Religious Teachings and Practices Affect How Individuals and Cultures Treat Their Environment?
A. Survey-Research in a Single Country (the
United States)
B.
Historical and Intercultural Evidence
IV. Proenvironmental Religious/Moral Movements—Current
Developments and Possible Future
Trends
A. Ecotheology
B. Thomas Berry's Work
C. The Deep Ecology Movement
D.
Ecofeminism
V. Common Threads in Religious/Morally Based
Environmental Movethents
A. Shared Ecological Worldview
B.
Shared Ecocentric Values
C. Plan for the Rest of the Chapter
VI. Issue One: Are Environmental Values and
Beliefs Changing?
A. Strong Public Support for Environmental
Protection
B. Emerging Support for the Ecological Worldview
C.
A Direct Search for Ecocentric Public Values
D. The Emergence of "Post-Materialist"
Values
VII. Issue Two: Will Changes in Values and
Beliefs Persist?
VIII. Issue Three:
How Do Values and Beliefs Influence People's Actions?
A. A Closer Look at How Values (and Beliefs about
the Consequences of Environmental Problems) Influence Actions
B. Factors That Can Limit the Effect of Value and
Belief Changes
IX. Conclusion
34 PART II BEHAVIORAL SOLUTION STRATEGIES
CHAPTER PROLOGUE
In 1854, Chief Seatlh, leader of the
Suquamish tribe in the
northwest United States, gave a speech in reply to President Franklin Pierce's
offer to buy a large tract of Indian-occupied
land and to provide a reservation for Seatlh's
people.
While there is no written record of Seatlh's words, one person present, Dr. Henry Smith, took brief
notes (Seed et al., 1988). Based on
Smith's notes, Ted Perry, a film
scriptwriter, attempted to recreate Seatlh's speech for a 1970 movie.
Perry's re-created speech became somewhat of
a classic and was frequently
reprinted in books and articles on the environment. Though Perry's words must be regarded as fiction and while they may over-romanticize Native
American religious beliefs, they do convey the reverence with which many Native American tribes regarded (and still regard) their environments
(Viola, 1992, quoted in Jones, Jr. and
Sawhill, 1992). We quote some of
Perry's words below:
How can you buy [the land,] . . . or [we] sell the sky. . . ? This idea is strange to us. . . . If we do not
own the freshness of the air and the sparkle of the water, how can you
buy them? . . .
Every part of the
earth is sacred to my people. Every shining pine
needle, every sandy shore, every mist in the dark woods, every clearing,
and humming insect is holy in the memory and experience of my people.
The sap
Reflections in a Lake
(Copyright 1994 Corel
Corporation.)
which courses through
the trees carries the memories of the
red man.
The white man's dead forget the country of their birth when they go to walk among the stars. Our dead never forget this beautiful earth, for it is the mother
of the red man. We are part of the earth and it
is part of us. The perfumed flowers
are our sisters; the deer, the horse, the great eagle,
these are our brothers. The rocky crests,
the grasses in the meadows, the body heat of a pony, and man—all belong to the
same family. . . .
The shining water that moves in the streams and the rivers is not just water but the blood of our ancestors.
If we sell you land, you must remember that it
is sacred, and you must teach
your children that it is sacred and that
each ghostly reflection in the clear water of the lakes
tells of events and memories in the life of my people. The water's murmur is the voice of my father's father.
The rivers are our brothers, they quench our
thirst. The rivers carry our
canoes, and feed our children. If we sell you. . Jthe] land,
you must remember, and teach your children,
that the rivers are our brothers, and yours,
and you must henceforth give the rivers the kindness you would give any brother. . . .
The air is precious to the red man, for all
things share the same breath: the beast, the tree,
the man, they all share the same
breath. The white man does not seem to
notice the air he breathes. Like a man dying for many days,
he is numb to the stench. But if we sell you [the] . . . land, you must remember that the air is precious to us, that the air shares its spirit with all the
life it supports. . . .
[If we sell you the land,] . . . the white
man must treat the beasts of this
land as his briothers. 1 have [heard about]
. . . a thousand rotting buffalo on . . . [a] prairie, left by
the white man who shot them from a passing train.
. . . [How can] the smoking iron horse . . . be more important than the
buffalo that [red men] kill [only enough of]
to stay alive? . . . What is man without beasts? If all the beasts were gone, men would die from a great
loneliness of spirit. . . . [W]hatever happens to the beasts soon happens to the man. . . .
This we know—the earth does not belong to
man, man belongs to the earth. . . . All things
are connected like the blood which unites one family. Whatever befalls the earth befalls the sons of the earth. . . . Man does
not weave the web of life, he is merely a strand
in it. Whatever he does to the
web, he does to himself. (Quoted from Seed, .1. et
al., Thinking like a mountain, pp. 68-73.
1988. New Society Publishers. Reprinted with permission.)
INTRODUCTION
This beautiful and moving speech describes a
pro-environmental
religion that resembles the religions of some Native American tribes. These tribes and religions predate the industrial revolution and the westward wave of
European invaders/settlers across the American continent by centuries, maybe
even millennia. It is therefore ironic that a number of contemporary scholars, theologians, and writers claim that
unless modern Westerners adopt a
religion like the one in the speech, we will fail to solve the environmental
problems that threaten human survival (e.g., Naess,
1989; Devall, 1985; Sessions, 1985; and Ehrenfeld, 1978). In other
words, these people argue that we must set aside our current religious
teachings and practices in favor of the
proenvironmental ones in the speech.
Nothing short of radical change of this type will ensure that Westerners—both individually and collectively—behave in proenvironmental ways. In this chapter, we closely examine this argument
and explore the impacts of religious
and moral teachings and practices on
the origins, and possible solutions, of global and regional environmental problems.
Though the Chief Seatlh
"speech" is brief, it illustrates
the main components of most religions and religious systems. In the case of Seatlh's religion, all of these components act to encourage proenvironmental individual and collective behavior. (The
different components overlap and
intertwine, so it is somewhat
artificial to discuss them separately.) First, a religion upholds certain basic values, that is, things, qualities, and principles it considers
important and worthwhile.
Thus, portions of the speech urge a reverence and respect for nonhuman forms of life and for natural processes. Some specific examples: ". [E]very part of the earth is sacred.
. . . Every shining
pine needle, . . . sandy shore, . . . humming insect . . . is holy. . . . The air is
precious." The speech also
portrays nonhuman forms of life as having as much importance and worth as human life:
"Man does not weave the web of life,
he is merely a strand in it."
36 PART II BEHAVIORAL SOLUTION STRATEGIES
Second, religions include basic beliefs and worldviews
(collections of beliefs about the world and an
overall perspective from which an individual and culture view it). Thus,
the speech stresses the interrelatedness of all forms of life and the human dependence on nonhuman forms. For example: "The
flowers are our sisters; the deer,
the horse, the great eagle, these are our brothers. The rocky crests, the grasses . . . , and man—all belong to the same family.
. . ." And: "All things are connected. . . . Whatever befalls the earth befalls the sons of the
earth." Further, the speech
portrays the Earth as the creator of life
and views humans as strongly connected with it. For example: ". . . [T]his
beautiful earth is the mother of the
red man. We are part of the earth and it is part of
Third, religions include a system of ethics or morals, that is, they specifically
encourage specific individual behaviors and
enjoin other behaviors. Some ethics and morals are implicit in basic
values and beliefs. Other ethics/morals are mentioned explicitly. Thus the
speech urges: ". [Y]ou must give [the rivers] the kindness you
would give . . . [a] brother." And: "[Red men] kill [only enough
buffalo] to stay alive.
. . ."
Fourth, religions generally include ceremonies, rituals,
and other practices that convey and reinforce their
values, beliefs, and behavioral injunctions. Ceremonies and rituals are
not mentioned in the brief speech above, but they play a major role in Native American
religions, the Western Judeo-Christian religious tradition, and most
others.
Fifth,
religions have spiritual
elements, that is, elements involving deities or other
supernatural forces. Spiritual elements arouse our feelings and
emotions and
they appeal to our intuitive sides. Thus, the speech
asserts that the "the air shares its spirit with all the life it
supports. . ." and the speech refers to "ghostly
reflections in the clear water of the lakes [that] tell . . . of events and memories in the life of my people." Note also how moving, beautiful,
and inspiring the speech is overall.
The speech is much more than a simple
intellectual or rational description of the different forms of life in nature and how these forms interact.
Although a number of scholars, theologians, and writers
argue that no resolution of environmental problems is possible without a major shift
in religion and morals in the direction of the speech, there are a few
who make a more radical claim.
These scholars/ writers/theologians argue that not only do current Western
religions lack a proenvironmental orientation, but these religions are actually antienvironmental;
indeed these religious beliefs, values, and practices
are a major and active cause of all contemporary Western environmental problems. Probably
the best-known of the writers who make this
claim is historian Lynn White, Jr. In a provocative, often-quoted, though no longer widely accepted, article
in Science magazine (1967), White
argued that the Judeo-Christian religious tradition is a root cause of all
Western environmental problems. White focused especially on the Genesis portion of the Bible. Consider
the following Genesis quote:
And God said, Let us make man in Our image, after Our likeness, and let them have dominion over the fish of
the sea, and over the fowl of the air, and over the cattle, and over the earth, and over every creeping thing that creepeth upon the earth.
So God created
man in His own image, in the image of
God created He him; male and female created He them.
And God blessed them, and God said unto them,
Be fruitful, and multiply, . . . and subdue
[the earth]; and have dominion
over the fish of the sea, and over the fowl of
the earth, and over every living thing that moveth upon the earth. (Genesis 1:16-28, King James version).
Note how different this well-known biblical passage is
from the speech attributed to Chief Seatlh. The speech depicts humans not
as a special species but as one strand in an overall "web of life." Humans are seen as dependent upon other forms of life and
are urged to protect them. Humans
are an integral part of nature,
rather than being separate from, and superior to, the other forms of life. In contrast, the biblical passage depicts humans as a unique and exalted
species, since only humans were
created in God's image. The passage
also exhorts humans to control and "subdue" the other forms of life. Thus the passage makes a
major
distinction between humans and the rest of nature,
with humans in a primary and dominant role, and
other forms of life in a secondary and subservient role. Finally, the last paragraph ("be
fruitful, and multiply") appears to encourage unlimited growth in
human numbers.
The biblical view, White claimed, permeates Western culture, creating a general
disregard for nonhuman
forms of life and natural processes, a feeling of human invulnerability, and a push toward
limitless growth. "Especially in its Western form," White argued, "Christianity is the most
anthropocentric [i.e., human-centered]
religion the world has seen. . . . [In the biblical story of creation,] God created light and darkness, the heavenly bodies, the earth and
all its plants,
animals, birds, and fishes. Finally God . . . created Adam and . . . Eve. . . . Man named
all the animals, thus establishing
his dominance over them. God planned all of
this explicitly for man's benefit and rule; no item in the physical creation
had any purpose save to serve man's
purposes [p. 1205]."
White's (1967) basic position was shared by
several other scholars
and writers, including historian Arnold Toynbee (1973), biologist Paul Ehrlich (1971), and regional planner Ian McHarg
(1971). However, White's (1967) thesis is no longer very widely accepted. Some have criticized both
White's interpretations of the
Judeo-Christian religious tradition and
his analysis of Western culture and history. A number of scholars and theologians argue that—though Western values, beliefs, and morals are anthropocentric and do legitimate
the exploitation of nature for human
ends (and are, therefore, root causes
of environmental problems)—the
Judeo-Christian religious tradition
is not the main source of these
values, beliefs, and morals. Some of
these scholars and theologians claim
that the "multiply and subdue the earth" portions of Genesis are taken out of context and
misinterpreted (e.g., Shaiko, 1987). Some point out, further, that many other portions of the Old and New Testaments emphasize the concept of
"stewardship," or care, of nature (e.g., Shaiko, 1987; Naess, 1989;
Gelderloos, 1992; and Whitney, 1993). These
scholars and theologians thus argue that the Judeo-Christian tradition is more correctly seen as a major
source of proenvironmental values
and beliefs, rather than of antienvironmental values and beliefs. We
discuss the work of these
"ecotheologians" in more detail later in the chapter.
Other scholars/writers blame the
human-centeredness of
Western culture and the belief in the legitimacy of exploiting nature for human ends not
on our Judeo-Christian
heritage but on elements of ancient Greek philosophy that are, in part, bases
of modern scientific
thought (Callicott, 1983), or on the view of nature as mechanical and inert that emerged
in Western countries at the
beginning of the scientific revolution in the 1600s (Shiva, 1989; Whitney,
1993), or on the development of capitalism
in Western countries beginning in the late 1700s (Whitney, 1993).
Finally, yet other scholars/writers,
including Ophuls
(1977) and Brown (1981), argue that excessive levels of materialism and consumerism in Western countries are main causes of
environmental problems,
and these scholars/writers urge radical decreases in these values. To quote Brown (1981):
None of the political philosophies today embraces the values
essential to a sustainable society. Indeed, as scientist B. Murray noted in an address to theologians, "Capitalism and Marxism have one thing very much in
common: they both presume man's fundamental
needs are material." Murray believes that for
this reason both fall short. Whether
capitalist or socialist, materialism is neither sustainable nor satisfying over
the long term [p. 3501
To
quote Ophuls (1977):
.. Mhe sickness of the earth reflects the
sickness in the soul of modern
industrial man, whose whole life is given
over to gain, to the disease of endless getting and spending that can never satisfy deeper aspirations and must eventually end in cultural, spiritual, and physical
death [p. 2321
To summarize: Many scholars and writers argue that Western morals, beliefs, values, and/or
religious teachings
and practices play a major role in causing global and regio-nal
environmental problems, and that these morals, beliefs, and so forth must be shifted sharply in a proenvironmental direction if
the problems are to be solved.
38 PART II BEHAVIORAL
SOLUTION STRATEGIES
DO VALUES, MORALS, BELIEFS, AND
RELIGIOUS TEACHINGS AND PRACTICES AFFECT HOW INDIVIDUALS AND CULTURES TREAT THEIR ENVIRONMENT?
As our discussion above indicates, the religions/values/morals approach is popular with scholars and theologians as a framework for understanding and potentially solving major environmental problems. The approach also has considerable intuitive
appeal. It is manifestly true that Western culture is anthropocentric and materialistic, regardless of the
historical sources of these
orientations, and it makes sense that such a culture would treat its
environment roughly.
However, much of the evidence we will review
in the rest of this
chapter suggests that the religions/ morals/values framework has only limited power in explaining why major environmental problems occur, and also
suggests that major changes in societal religious beliefs, values, and morals
are not likely to be effective by themselves
in solving environmental problems. We remind the reader, however, of our emphasis in this book on multiple strategies for understanding and solving environmental problems rather than the total
reliance on any single strategy. That a good deal of the evidence to be reviewed below is negative does not detract from the importance of
this solution strategy as one ingredient in a multidimensional strategy for understanding and solving
environmental problems.
We begin, in the 'next section, by reviewing
the results of survey-research studies that
fail to show a consistent relationship
between individual Americans'
religious beliefs and practices and their levels of environmental concern. We move on, in the section
after it, to review the results of cross-cultural studies that fail to
find a relationship between the degree of proenvironmentalism
in a culture's religion, values, and so on, and its success in averting
major environmental problems. We will see
in later sections of the chapter,
however, that values, beliefs, and morals can influence individuals' actions toward the environment, within
limits.
Survey-Research in a
Single Country (the U.S.)
One way to test the idea that Western religious beliefs and practices play a major negative role in
environmental problems is to see
if, within a single country, differences
in people's religious affiliations and beliefs are associated with differences
in their concern or behavior
regarding environmental problems. Some psychologists, sociologists, and
anthropologists have done studies of this
type in the United States. Unfortunately,
these studies have reached contradictory conclusions. A few early survey-research (public opinion) studies
by Eckberg and Blocker (1989), and also Hand and Van Liere (1984) and Shaiko
(1987), concluded that Christians and Jews report
less concern about the environment
and environmental problems than do
non-Christians/non-Jews; further, those individuals who most strongly believe in the Bible and its literal truth report less concern about
the environment and environmental
problems than those whose biblical
beliefs are weaker. These results lend support
to White's (1967) argument. However, in a more recent study, Greeley
(1993) found, in survey-research data
collected in 1988, no relationship between
people's religion or their belief in the literal truth of the Bible and
the level of concern they report about the
environment. On the other hand, the authors of this book analyzed
similar survey data collected in 1993 that
appear to contradict Greeley's findings and support those of Eckberg and Blocker. Finally, Kempton, Boster, and Hartley (1995) provide evidence, though based on a small, nonrepresentative sample of Americans, that religious belief, defined
generally, is positively correlated with expressions of environmental concern. In the next sections we explore these inconsistent findings.
Eckberg and Blocker (1989) interviewed 300 residents of the Tulsa, Oklahoma, metropolitan area via telephone.
They asked each respondent several questions about religious beliefs and affiliation.
One question asked whether the respondent
was Christian or Jewish, or a member
of some other religion (or none
at
all); (a large majority of the respondents were, as it turned out, Christian or Jewish). Another
question asked
the respondent to choose from the following three statements the one statement that most accurately described his/her beliefs about the truth of the Bible: "The Bible is the actual word of God
and it should be taken literally. ..
," or "The Bible is the inspired
word of God, but it was written by men and contains some human errors.," or "The Bible is an ancient
book of history and legends [written by humans].
Eckberg and Blocker also asked each respondent twelve questions about environmental problems. Eight addressed the respondent's level of concern about environmental problems in general: Four
questions dealt with whether this
country should accept pollution for
the good of the economy (e.g., "Pollution control measures have created unfair burdens on industry"); four questions addressed whether
we should protect the environment despite the economic costs of doing so (e.g., "We should maintain
our efforts to control pollution,
even'if this slows down the economy and increases unemployment").
Response alternatives for these questions ran
from "strongly disagree" through "strongly agree." The
remaining questions concerned
environmental problems in the Tulsa area: Two questions concerned air and water
pollution, and two concerned waste
disposal. Response alternatives for these questions ran from "not very serious" through "very
serious."
Eckberg and Blocker began their data analysis by calculating the
correlations between respondents' answers
to the religious questions and answers to the questions about
environmental concern. The left-hand data
column (headed Zero-order correlations) of Table 3-I displays the results. To explain how to interpret the column entries, consider a
specific example: The table shows a
small negative correlation (—.25) between
respondents' degree of biblical literalism and theii level of environmental concern expressed in
answers about "accepting pollution for the good of the economy." In other words, respondents who
expressed a
high level of belief in biblical
literalism were slightly less
likely to
express proenvironmental sentiments
(i.e., were more willing to accept pollution for the sake of the economy) than were respondents who expressed a low level of biblical literalism. Looking at the left-hand column
entries overall, we see small, but in many cases statistically significant, negative correlations between being Judeo-Christian and level of environmental concern as measured via the four different types of concern
questions, and also between strength
of belief in the literal truth of the
Bible and level of environmental concern: Judeo-Christian respondents
tended to show less environmental concern
than non-Judeo-Christians, and
those respondents with the strongest beliefs about the literal truth of the
Bible tended to show the weakest levels
environmental concern.
However, there is a major problem in
interpreting the
results in the left column of Table 3-1: A correlation between two variables (e.g., the inverse relationship between strength of belief in the literal
truth of the Bible and level of
environmental concern) does not necessarily mean that one variable
(literal belief in the Bible) causes
the other (lack of
environmental concern). Instead, some
third variable may be responsible for the
correlation. For example, the people in the Eckberg and Blocker study who believed in the literal truth
of the Bible may have been, on average, somewhat
older than those who did not believe in the literal truth, and age may be the real cause of their lack of environmental concern. Alternatively, believers may have been less educated than nonbelievers, or believers may have belonged to more
strict, fundamentalistic denominations; in turn, education level or denomination may have been the real
cause of lack of
environmental concern.
In anticipation of these problems of
interpretation, Eckberg
and Blocker (1989) asked each respondent several additional questions about his/her age, income, education, specific religious
denomination, and other
relevant variables. Eckberg and Blocker then calculated partial correlations (using what
are known
40 PART II
BEHAVIORAL SOLUTION STRATEGIES
TABLE 3-1
Selected Results of the Eckberg and Blocker (1989) Study
CORRELATIONS BETWEEN RESPONDENTS' BELIEF/NONBELIEF IN THE
LITERAL TRUTH OF THE BIBLE, AND THEIR JUDEO-CHRISTIANITY/NON-JUDEO
CHRISTIANITY ON FOUR MEASURES OF ENVIRONMENTAL CONCERN
|
ZERO-ORDER
CORRELATIONS |
PARTIAL
CORRELATIONS |
Use of the
environment for the economy (4 questions)
|
|
|
Judeo-Christian vs. non J-C
|
-.14'
|
|
Belief in literal truth
of Bible
|
-.25-
|
-.17-
|
Protect the
environment (4 questions)
|
|
|
Judeo-Christian vs. non J-C
|
|
-.14'
|
Belief in literal truth
of Bible
|
-.16-
|
-.13'
|
Concern about Tulsa
air and water (2 questions)
|
|
|
Judeo-Christian vs. non
J-C
|
-.13'
|
|
Belief in literal truth
of Bible
|
-.09
|
-.14'
|
Concern about Tulsa
waste disposal (2 questions)
|
|
|
Judeo-Christian
vs. non J-C
|
-.10
|
|
Belief in literal truth of
Bible
|
-.10
|
-.18"
|
Source: Adapted
from Eckberg, D., and Blocker, J., Varieties of religious involvement. Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion, Volume
28, p. 514. Copyright 1989. Society for the Scientific Study of Religion. Used
with permission.
Legend: 'significant at the .05
level of significance; -significant at the .01 level
of significance; -significant at the .001
level of significance; -This correlation is only
minimal.
as regression analyses). The right-most data column of Table 3-1
displays the results of these analyses. The entries
are the correlations between being Judeo-Christian
and belief in the literal truth of the Bible and environmental concern, independent
of the possible influences
of age of respondent, income, level of education,
gender, conservatism of religious denomination,
and the importance of religion in respondents' lives.
Looking at the pattern of the partial correlations in the right column of the table, note that belief in the
literal truth of the Bible was negatively
correlated (to a modest but
statistically significant extent) with all four
of the measures of environmental concern; also being
Judeo-Christian was negatively correlated with the
"protect the environment" questions on environmental concern. These results, then, do lend support to Lynn White's (1967) hypothesis that Judeo-Christian biblical teachings are responsible for environmental degradation in Western nations: Within Eckberg and Blocker' s sample of 300 Americans
from Oklahoma, those individuals who most strongly
believed in the Bible and its literal truth reported less concern
about the environment and environmental problems than
those whose biblical beliefs were weaker; also,
Christians and Jews showed less concern (at least
by one measure) than non-Christians/ non-Jews.
We should point
out, however, that even though Eckberg and Blocker (1989) used regression
analyses to control for the effects of age, gender,
and so on, there may have been yet
other variables (e.g., respondents'
ethnicity or race) that Eckberg and Blocker failed to
control via the questions they asked and the statistical
analyses they performed. Therefore, their results cannot
prove that belief in the literal truth of the Bible and
being Judeo-Christian actually cause low concern
about the environment. (All correlational research is
limited in this way; a correlation
between two variables—even a partial correlation derived
from regression analyses—never proves that
one vafi-
able has a true causal
effect on the other.) Indeed, as we
discuss below, Greeley (1993) argues that Eckberg and Blocker failed to control for the effects of certain key variables.
Andrew
Greeley (1993), a social scientist and a Roman Catholic priest, took Eckberg and Blocker's (1989) research plan and data analysis a statistical step
further; his results suggest that Eckberg and Blocker
drew the wrong conclusion. Greeley examined
the relationship between religious beliefs and environmental
concern in a representative sample of Americans
who took part in a large (well over a thousand respondents) public opinion
survey in 1988—the annual General Social Survey (GSS)
conducted by the National Opinion Research
Center in Chicago. This survey, which covered a broad
range of topics, contained several different questions
about the respondents' religious beliefs (including one
question on biblical "literalism" identical
to the one used by Eckberg and Blocker, 1989), and also a single question about respondents' levels of environmental concern. That question was: "[Are we as a nation now] . . . spending too much money, too little, or about the right amount . . . on improving and protecting the environment.. . ? [p. 22]" As the left-hand data column of Table 3-2 shows, Greeley found small but statistically significant correlations between religious
affiliation and literal belief in the Bible, and environmental concern: Respondents who were Christian and respondents who believed in the Bible's literal truth were
less concerned about improving and protecting the
environment than were respondents who were non-Christian
and respondents who did not believe in the literal truth of the Bible; (note
that Greeley used the category "Christians," rather
than "Christians and Jews;" however, the
number of Jews in the U.S. population is relatively small,
and inclusion of them in the same category should not
have greatly affected the results). Greeley's "raw," or zero-order,
correlations were, thus, similar to those obtained by
Eckberg and Blocker (1989) in Oklahoma.
However, Greeley argued that the biblical
literalists in his study were more likely to be political conservatives
than political liberals, and that it was political conservatism, not literalism, that accounted for the lower levels of environmental concern found for literalists. Put another way, Greeley argued that there are some biblical literalists who are politically liberal, rather than conservative—Vice-President Albert Gore, for example—and these literalists are as concerned about the environment (and about other liberal
causes) as are nonliteralist liberals. Greeley further postulated that
Christians and biblical literalists were also more likely
to be morally rigid and have harsher religious
mental imagery (e.g., a mental con-
TABLE 3-2 Results from the Greeley
(1993) Study
CORRELATIONS BETWEEN
RESPONDENTS' BELIEF/NONBELIEF IN THE LITERAL TRUTH OF THE BIBLE, AND THEIR CHRISTIANITY/NON-CHRISTIANITY
ON ONE MEASURE OF ENVIRONMENTAL CONCERN
PARTIAL
CORRELATIONS
CORRELATIONS
ZERO-ORDER (STANDARDIZED
CORRELATIONS BETA WEIGHTS)t
Not enough money spent
on the environment
Christian vs. non-Christian —.10' —.02
Belief in literal truth of
Bible —.11* —.04
Source: Adapted
from Greeley, A., Religion and attitudes toward the environment. Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion, Volume 32, pp. 19-28. Copyright 1993. Society for the
Scientific Study of Religion. Used with permission.
Legend: tThese
are standardized beta weights from a regression analysis, and can be
interpreted as partial correlations. significant
at the .05 level or better
42 PART II BEHAVIORAL
SOLUTION STRATEGIES
ception of God as a father, master, judge,
and king, versus
as a mother, spouse, lover, or friend) than were non-Christians and non-literalists.
Therefore, Greeley used
regression analyses to statistically control for the effects of political
liberalism/conservatism, moral rigidity, and religious imagery, and also the effects of such sociodemographic variables as age and
level of education. The right-most
column of Table 3-2 shows the results of his analysis. Note that the
standardized beta weights, which can be
interpreted as partial correlations,
relating Christian/non-Christian and biblical literalism/non literalism to environmental concern were not
statistically
significant. These results therefore contradict those of Eckberg and Blocker
(1989).
Though Greeley's (1993) conclusions were the
opposite of Eckberg
and Blocker's, we believe that Greeley's
results are not definitive for two reasons: First, Greeley used a single and ambiguous measure of environmental concern. A respondent's
judgment about whether the government is spending the right amount of money on improving and protecting
the environment
actually measures both the respondent's environmental concern as well as his or her assessment of the adequacy of government spending.
(In contrast, Eckberg
and Blocker, 1989, used twelve different
questions in an effort to tap their respondents' levels of environmental concern). Second, Greeley may have gone
too far in his attempts to statistically control
for his respondents' religious imagery and moral rigidity. More specifically,
his questions on these dimensions may
actually have included aspects of
biblical literalism. For example, one question on moral rigidity asked
how important was it to the respondent
". .. to follow [his/her] . . . conscience even if it means going
against what the churches or synagogues
say and do. .. ." If this question duplicates or overlaps the biblical literalism question, then
using it to statistically control for moral rigidity could spuriously
mask a real correlation between biblical literalism and environmental concern.
A Look at More Recent GSS Data. As we point out
above, Greeley's analysis suffers from its use of a
single, ambiguous measure of environmental concern.
above, Greeley's analysis suffers from its use of a
single, ambiguous measure of environmental concern.
His analysis would be more convincing if
measures of religious
belief were related to more trustworthy measures of environmental concern. Fortunately, the 1993 General
Social Survey contains both a series of items on religion and a series on environmentalism.
We now describe and
analyze results from the 1993 survey,
which involved approximately 1,600 randomly selected Americans.
Among the environmental items in the survey,
in addition to the one
Greeley used, were a series of items that we have
grouped into three scales
of proenvironmental action and willingness to
support environmental protection
financially. One scale, measuring
consumer behavior, is made up of three items such as "How often do you make a special effort to buy fruits and vegetables grown without pesticides
or chemicals?" The political
behavior scale consists of three items such as "In the last five years,
have you taken part in a protest or
demonstration about an environmental issue?" The third scale
measures willingness to make financial
sacrifices for the environment, and includes three items such as
"How willing would you be to pay much
higher prices in order to protect the environment?"
Table 3-3 presents regression coefficients
that represent
the strength and direction of the relationship between measures of Christianity and
religious belief and behavior and the four
measures of environmentalism. The first two
columns, which report results on the
indicator of environmental concern that Greeley used, show that the 1993 data replicate Greeley's findings. The
two indicators of religion that Greeley reported
(see Table 3-2) have a weak but significant relationship to the
government-spending measure of environmentalism,
but the relationship disappears when
age, education, income, gender, and political liberalism-conservatism are taken into account (boldface/italicized entries)) For other indicators of
environmentalism, however, measures
of Judeo-Christian religious belief do sometimes make a difference, and usually, the effect is negative, as White's (1967)
thesis predicts. The significant relationships between religion and
the political behavior and financial support scales
are almost uniformly in the direction predicted by White's thesis.
TABLE 3-3 Analysis of 1993 GSS Data
REGRESSION COEFFICIENTS REPRESENTING ASSOCIATIONS BETWEEN
INDICATORS OF ENVIRONMENTALISM AND OF RELIGIOUS BELIEF AND
BEHAVIOR
|
SPENDING ON
ENV'T. A
|
POLITICAL BEHAVIOR A
|
FINANCIAL SACRIFICE
A
|
CONSUMER BEHAVIOR
A
|
||||
Christian
|
-.17***
|
-.05
|
-.50***
|
-.30**
|
-.45***
|
-.24*
|
-.36***
|
-.33**
|
Belief in God
|
-.03**
|
-.01
|
-.17***
|
-.07**
|
-.14-
|
-.05
|
-.04
|
-.01
|
RELIGIOSITY
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Frequency of prayer
|
.03*
|
.01
|
.04
|
.02
|
.05
|
-.02
|
-.09***
|
.09***
|
Strength of affiliation
|
-.04
|
-.02
|
.02
|
.04
|
.17**
|
.20"
|
.17-
|
.17***
|
FUNDAMENTALISM
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Biblical literalism
|
-AO*"
|
-.05
|
-.30-
|
-.16*
|
-.29-
|
-.12
|
-.04
|
-.02
|
Fundamentalist
|
-.07***
|
-.05*
|
-.20*-
|
-.09*
|
-.27-
|
-.14"
|
-.12**
|
-.09*
|
SACREDNESS OF NATURE
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Nature sacred in itself
|
.30-
|
.21**
|
.58-
|
.41***
|
.61***
|
.41***
|
.40-*
|
.26"
|
Nature sacred; made by God
|
-.08*
|
-.04
|
-.33-
|
-.16*
|
-.07
|
.16
|
-.02
|
.03
|
Nature import. not sacred
|
-.14***
|
-.12**
|
-.09
|
-.15'
|
-.39-
|
-.48***
|
-.28***
|
.23"
|
Columns A present
regression coefficients uncontrolled for other variables.
Columns B present
them controlled
for age, education, income, gender, and political liberalism. *p <.05; "p <.01; "p <.001
The consumer behavior scale presents a
different pictuie,
however. Although Christians are less likely than non-Christians to change their behavior
specifically
to protect the environment, among Americans of all faiths, those who are stronger in their
religious practices
(frequency of praying and self-reported strength of affiliation) are more likely to engage in such behavior.
This finding seems self-contradictory and
needs further explanation. The data in the table suggest at least one possibility. Adherence to religion
is sometimes understood in terms of
two separate dimensions, religiosity
(typically measured by frequency of praying and self-reported strength of affiliation) and fundamentalism (typically measured by items like the belief that scripture was literally written by God
and other indices of strict religious
ideology-this survey used a measure
that rated each respondent's religious denomination
as fundamentalist, moderate, or liberal).
This distinction makes a bit more sense of the data. The effects of two measures of fundamentalism on proenvironmental behavior are uniformly negative,
as White would have predicted, although the effect may be weaker for consumer behavior than for the other indicators.
The two measures of religiosity have
positive effects on environmentalism-opposite to White's thesis-but these effects are restricted almost entirely to consumer behavior. This pattern
suggests that although strict
adherence to Judeo-Christian religious
ideology (fundamentalism) has antienvironmental implications, particularly for political behavior, something different applies for religiosity
and for personal behavior. One
interpretation is that both religious attendance and proenvironmental
individual behavior are part of a
broader pattern of altruism and good
citizenship among Americans who identify with
44 PART II BEHAVIORAL
SOLUTION STRATEGIES
organized religion. This hypothesis, however, is not strongly supported by the data, and so deserves further testing.
The data clearly suggest, however, that the
relationship between religion and environmentalism
is more complex than White's thesis implies. It
seems to depend not only on beliefs in broad religious
ideology but on other factors associated with religious
adherence—and it may be that religious influences
affect different kinds of proenvironmental behaviors
in different ways. We should emphasize, however, so
as not to lose sight of the main point, that all
the relationships represented in Table 3-3 are rather
weak, suggesting that religious belief by itself has a
limited influence on behavior among present-day
Americans. Furthermore, as we noted above, a significant correlation between two variables (or a significant regression coefficient) never proves causality. Similarly, if biblical literalists tend to be more antienvironmental than nonliteralists,
this does not demonstrate that biblical scripture (or, for that matter, the
teaching of certain religious denominations) is
correctly characterized as being antienvironmental.
One other finding about religion and
environmentalism from the 1993 General Social Survey is worth further mention. Respondents were asked to choose the one of the following statements that most closely represented their personal beliefs:
— Nature is spiritual or sacred in itself.
— Nature is sacred because it is created by God. — Nature is important, but not spiritual or sacred.
The
lower part of Table 3-3 presents the relationships between these beliefs and the indicators of environmentalism—the three lines under the heading Sacredness of nature. The first line under the heading gives the
regression coefficients when the respondents who chose
"Nature is sacred in itself' are compared to subjects who chose the other two alternatives; the entries indicate that respondents who chose "Nature
is sacred in itself' were much more likely to
report proenvironmental concern and action than
those who chose the other alternatives, even when age,
education, income, gender, and political
liberalism were controlled for.
The third
line shows that respondents who chose "Nature is important but not sacred" were
significantly less
likely to report proenvironmental concern and action than those who chose the other alternatives, even when age, and so on, were controlled for.
Finally, the second
line shows that respondents who chose "Nature is sacred because it is created by God" were neither more or less likely to report
proenvironmental concern/action than the other two groups combined.
These results suggest a surprising conclusion:
Individuals whose belief in the sacredness of
nature is based on religious teachings are apparently
less pro-environmentalist than people who do not tie
that belief to God. Thus, it seems that a belief in the sacredness of nature has a significant influence on behavior—both personal and political—but less so when
that belief is derived from the teachings of organized
religion. It is almost as if people who believe
nature is sacred because it is God's creation feel that God will take care of nature, and that they need not. We believe that these findings need to be explored further to see which are reliable and to understand
their meaning.
The above findings contradict the results of a
study that we discuss in the next section, though
that study involved a small and nonrandom sample of
Americans, unlike the GSS 1993 survey on which our
analyses above are based.
Kempton, Boster,
and Hartley (1995). We lastly and very briefly describe a study performed by anthropologists Willett Kempton, James Boster, and Jennifer Hartley (1995). Their goal was to try to understand in depth the values and beliefs that underlie people's concern, or lack of concern, about environmental problems. Kempton et al. queried 142 respondents in four U.S. states and in five categories: members of Earth First! (a radical proenvironmental group), members of the Sierra Club (a more mainstream environmental group), the general public, managers of dry-cleaning businesses, and laid-off sawmill
workers. Kempton et al. assumed that the environmental
group members and some members of the general public would have
proenvironmental sen-
timents,
while dry-cleaning managers and laid-off sawmill
workers would have antienvironmental sentiments.
A key feature of the study was that the researchers asked respondents directly and in
an open-ended way
"why they
thought protecting the environment
was important [to the extent the respondent felt environmental protection was important]."
Kempton et al. found that a majority of people
in all five groups
expressed high levels of environmental concern
(measured in various ways) and that many of them volunteered that this concern
was based on religious and/or spiritual
values. When asked, approximately 75
percent of all respondents (in all of the five groups) agreed or strongly agreed
with the statement: "Because God created the natural world, it is wrong to
abuse it."
Further, those respondents who agreed most strongly with the statement were significantly more likely to have reported that "they
belonged to an organized
religion." Kempton et al. did not report which religions their respondents belonged to, but
to the extent
that the religious respondents were predominantly Christian, these results
would seem to contradict
those of the 1993 GSS that we presented in Table 3-3. Kempton et al.'s sample was very small,
however, and their
respondents were hardly representative of the U.S. population in general (this was the researchers' intention; the goal of their study
was to identify
in a general way the values and beliefs that underlie environmental concern). Further,
Kempton's analysis
did not statistically control for the effects of such potentially confounding variables as
respondents' age, gender, income, and so on. Thus, their results must be viewed as interesting but not
definitive.
We should mention one other result, a
surprising one,
that Kempton et al. report. Almost half of the respondents who indicated that they did not belong to an organized religion and did not even believe in a "spiritual force in the universe" agreed
with the statement "Because God created the natural
world, it is wrong to abuse it." It's as if these respondents had strong spiritual feelings that nature is
sacred, but had no other
way to express these feelings.
A further relevant result: Kempton et al.
found that a number of their
respondents reported a strong spiri tual
experience when they were in natural outdoor environments: Some, respondents who identified themselves as religious, stressed that they felt
the presence of God in such
environments. Some others, respondents
who were not religious in a formal sense, stressed that they felt a spiritual awareness or consciousness when in such environments.
Overall, though Kempton et al.'s samples were small and nonrepresentative, and though they
used simple statistical summaries rather than regression analyses, their data do suggest an important
spiritual dimension
to people's concerns about the environment: Rather than being a source of antienvironmental feelings and attitudes, organized
religions and religious
sentiments in general may be potentially major sources of proenvironmental concern. As we discuss later in the chapter under the
heading "Ecotheology,"
many organized religions in the United States are now in a state of flux. Religious leaders are becoming more environmentally conscious and
are looking for ways in
which religious institutions can encourage proenvironmental concern and action on the part of their congregants. We end our
discussion of
Kempton et al.'s work by mentioning a significant and relevant example they cite: U.S.
Vice-President Albert Gore ". . justifies his personal environmental values based on his own Southern Baptist
faith (1992: 242-248)
[quoted from Kempton et al., in press, Chapter
5, p. 39])."
To summarize our discussion in this section
of the chapter:
There are only a few studies of the relationships in this country between
Judeo-Christian affiliation,
and also belief in the literal truth of the Bible, and people's level of environmental concern, and the results of
these studies, while interesting, are inconsistent.
Historical
and Intercultural Evidence
The survey and interview studies that we
discussed above
found rather weak and inconsistent relationships between religious beliefs and
environmental concern
and behavior. However, keep in mind that all of the subjects in the studies were Americans
and a large
majority came from Judeo-Christian religious
46 PART II BEHAVIORAL SOLUTION STRATEGIES
traditions. As a result, none
of the studies really
addressed the larger
and more important issue of whether
Western religious/moral beliefs and values are largely responsible for the environmental deterioration
found in Western countries, and whether alternative, more proenvironmental values and
beliefs would successfully prevent
or lessen environmental damage. This major
issue is addressed in research, which
we now review, that examines the environmental records of different cultures
throughout the world and at different times
of history—cultures that vary in the
degree to which their religious teachings, morals, values, and so on were pro- or antienvironmental.
To begin with,
several scholars have argued that the
environmental records of many non-Western cultures
are just as bad as those of Western cultures. Thomas Derr (1975, quoted
in Dwivedi and Tiwari, 1987), for example,
argues that the ancient Egyptians, Assyrians,
North Africans, and Aztecs seriously damaged their environments, in some cases to a degree sufficient to destroy
their civilizations.
More powerful
evidence against the idea that pro-environmental values and beliefs can avert environmental degradation is the serious environmental damage that has
occurred in certain cultures throughout
the world that have notably proenvironmental religious teachings. Thus, Cobb
(1972, cited in Hargrove, 1986) and
Derr (1975, op. cit.) both claim that some Native American tribes had a
blemished environmental record, despite
their proenvironmental religious and
moral codes. They also point out that proenvironmental Eastern religions, including Hinduism in India, and Taoism and Buddhism in China, did not prevent enormous environmental damage from occurring in these countries. To take a closer look at
this claim, we devote the next few pages to an in-depth examination of these three Eastern religions and
their associated environmental
records.
India and Hinduism. 0. Dwivedi and B. Tiwari (1987) argue that India's environmental
record is extremely
poor, despite the fact that Hinduism, the dominant religion in India, is the oldest and the most proenvironmental religion in the world.
Hinduism, which predates the birth of
Christ by several thousand
years, holds that humans, other animals,
plants, and even
"lifeless" environmental features like stones and mountains are all part of an underlying unity
because all are suffused with the same spiritual energy. Humans are thus
viewed as an integral part of nature, rather than as being an exalted species destined to control and exploit nonhuman forms of life.
Further, Hinduism
(which has elements of monotheism
and polytheism), is animistic in that specific gods are thought to be
manifested or incarnated in animals and other natural forms (a belief probably derived from prehistoric peoples who
worshiped the forms and forces of nature
that they could not understand, but which they were at the mercy of).
Consider, for example, the following passage
from the Kalika Purana (1927, quoted in Shiva, 1989):
Rivers and mountains have a dual nature. A river is but a form of water, yet it has a distinct body. Mountains appear
a motionless mass, yet their true form is not such.
We cannot know, when looking at a lifeless shell. that it contains a living being. Similarly, within
the apparently inanimate rivers and mountains dwells a hidden consciousness. Rivers and mountains take
the forms they wish (Shiva, p. 39).
Perhaps the best-known animistic feature of Hinduism is cow worship. Cows are thought to be manifestations of a goddess and are therefore
sanctified, protected, and allowed
to roam at will. The key role of cow worship in Hinduism is made clear
in the following words of Mahatma Gandhi:
The central fact of Hinduism is cow protection, cow protection is one of the most wonderful phenomena in human evolution. It takes the human beyond his species. The cow to me means the entire subhuman world. Man, through the cows, is enjoined to realize his identity
with all that lives. . . . (PJrotection of the
cow means protection of the whole
... creation of God. . . . (Clow protection is the gift
of Hinduism to the world. And Hinduism will live as
long as there are Hindu to protect the cows (quoted in
Dwivedi and Tiwari p. 45).
In addition, plants, for example pipal
and banyan trees, just like animals, are
thought to be the dwelling places of
gods and are sacred. Many households worship a pipal branch in a ceremony in the spring. The
scriptures,
further, contain injunctions and penalties for
the cutting of trees and for various acts of polluting the environment.
However, despite the obvious proenvironmentalism of Hindu scripture and practice, the
environmental
record of India is, as mentioned above, a miserable one. Dwivedi and Tiwari note the
. . enormous loss
of natural resources . . . brought on by the cutting of trees. . . , and by the killing of
animals and birds [p. 53]." In addition, heavy pumping of water for irrigation of crops in parts
of India has lowered water tables by as
much as ninety feet in ten years. In some
places the pumping has caused salt water
to invade aquifers and contaminate drinking supplies (Postel, 1990). In addition, overirrigation, overgrazing, and deforestation have seriously damaged large tracts of land in India; approximately
35 percent of potentially productive
land has been degraded due to the resulting water erosion, wind erosion, and salinization (Postel, 1989). In turn, it
appears that deforestation and
desertification have worsened droughts
and floods (ibid.). And so on.
What explains the above discrepancies between the proenvironmental religious precepts of
Hinduism and
India's poor environmental record? Several factors appear to be responsible.2 One, as Dwivedi and Tiwari
(1987) point out, is the invasion and occupation of India by Muslim and Western (British) cultures over a period of 700 years and the
consequent weakening of Hinduism (p.
90). However, as Hinduism dominates
in India today, cultural invasion cannot fully explain the country's current poor environmental record
(p. 91).
A second factor is the philosophy of
development that has been adopted in
India (and many other developing nations) in response to Western ideas—the demands of international markets, and pressure from international lenders whose development loans must be repaid in hard currency. For example, forests
are cleared to replace indigenous
trees with commercially valuable
species that bring in cash for loggers and to repay international debt. Among
the results have been a loss of
firewood and fodder from the noncommercial trees; hardship for
peasants—especially women—who had
provided for their families, espe cially in hard times, by gathering twigs,
fodder, and fruit from the forests; and massive downstream floods due to erosion of soils held in place by the
indigenous vegetation (Shiva, 1989). Because of these impacts on women, the poor, and the environment, Vandana Shiva (1989) refers to India's policy as one of
"maldevelopment."
A third factor is the unrelenting pressures
of population
growth, industrial development, and urbanization. The exponential growth of
human numbers and the
consequent growth in the need to feed, clothe, and shelter them simply overwhelms religious
precepts. To provide one example, India's population, which has doubled since 1950, has "outstripped
the sustainable production levels of . . . [India's] fuelwood and fodder resources; . . . demand for these
resources in the early 1980s exceeded supply by 70% and 23%, respectively [Postel, 1989]." As Dwivedi and Tiwari (1987)
put it: "Members of the public, by themselves, will seldom venture into
this battle to save the environment if
their total attention is always placed on the battle for survival [p. 101]."
China
and Taoism and Buddhism. In prerevolutionary China, the pressures of population and industrial and urban growth also overwhelmed
proenvironmental
religious precepts and contributed to a long
record of environmental degradation. As we will see, however, additional factors help account for China's environmental record, factors that also
operate in India and other
countries that have proenvironmental religious beliefs.
Before the Communist revolution in 1949, there
were three dominant
Chinese religious, philosophical, and/or moral traditions: Taoism, Buddhism,
and Confucianism.
(Elements of these traditions are still present in China today, though they are less visible [Kamachi, 1994].) Both Taoism and Buddhism
contain many
proenvironmental elements. Let's examine the elements in Taoism first. Quoting philosopher PoKeung Ip (1983, pp. 338-339):
(Basically, the concept of "Tao" is] . . . a
totally depersonalized concept
of nature. . (Tao] is . . . intangible,
... simple, all-pervasive, eternal, (and] life sustaining.
. . . [The word] "Te" [refers to] . . . the pc,-
48 PART II BEHAVIORAL
SOLUTION STRATEGIES
tency, the power, of Tao that nourishes [and] sustains beings.. . . Since RI is internalized in all beings in the
universe, Ian are thereby linked and
related].
All beings in the universe, furthermore, are
of equal importance. Thus in Taoism, humans are
neither superior to nor separate from the nonhuman
parts of nature.
Going further, the Taoist doctrine of "Wu
Wei" enjoins humans to act in accordance with,
rather than against, the laws and processes of nature.
Although it is appropriate for people to act to change
nature by, for example, building dams and canals, these
changes must be designed in accord with the way the
hydraulic forces of nature operate, and nature—not
people—is always the final arbiter of the success or
failure of the project (Goodman, 1980). Finally, the Taoist
concept of reversion emphasizes the cyclical, nonlinear characteristics of
many natural processes, as when a living thing
dies, decays, and new life forms from its remains
(Po-Keung Ip, 1983; Goodman, 1980). Thus, natural processes are closed
processes; garbage or other things that are thrown
away by humans never leave natural systems.
The above Taoist principles are very much in
line with the basic principles of modern ecology,
as Goodman (1980) points out. Indeed, when one
first reads the Taoist principles, they seem almost
like summary statements taken from a contemporary
ecology textbook!
Very briefly, Buddhism,
like Taoism, stresses the equality of
different forms of life and emphasizes the intrinsic
value and importance of nonhuman life forms.
"Buddhists are taught to love all living beings and not to restrict their love only to human[s]. . . .
The Buddha's advice is that it is not right . . .
to take .. . the life of any living being since every
living being has a right to exist [independent of its
utility or value to humans] (Dhammananda, 1982)."
Although Taoism and Buddhism contain many proenvironmental elements, the environmental record of prerevolutionary China was not a good one, as we noted above. For example, Yi-Fu Tuan (1970) documents deforestation on a "vast scale" in northern
China and "acute problems of soil
erosion on the loess-covered plateaus [p. 248]."
What then explains the
discrepancy between the proenvironmental teachings of the traditional
Chinese religions of Taoism and Buddhism and the poor
environmental record of prerevolutionary China? Yi-Fu Tuan
identifies population growth as a major factor (as was the case with
India). As the population in China grew, forests were cut down to provide
more land for agriculture, and also wood for construction, and
charcoal to heat homes. When faced with the choice between denuding
forests in violation of religious teachings, on the one hand, and
allowing people to go hungry or to freeze to death, on the
other, there is no doubt as to which choice wins. Urbanization
and the growth of industries (e.g., metal industries) that consumed
wood as fuel also contributed to environmental degradation during certain time
periods.
However, the causes of the
discrepancy were considerably more complicated than the above
paragraph would suggest, and population and urban and
industrial growth were not the only factors operating. Possibly
as important were the many political, economic, and social factors that—besides religious and
moral teachings—determine the behavior of
virtually any culture or country, both
developing countries as well as advanced industrial states. As Yi-Fu Tuan
points out, ". . . China, with her . . . temple
compounds, was also a vast bureaucracy, a civilization, and
an empire [p. 247]. . . . In the play of forces that govern
the world, esthetic and religious ideals rarely have a major
role [p. 244]." The egoistic and imperialistic behavior
of kings, generals, and other leaders with political, military, and/or
economic power can contradict and overwhelm the religious and ethical
teachings of a culture. Similarly, groups that have political,
military,
and economic power are often in a position to override the religious
and moral beliefs of other groups that lack such power. National
governments sometimes do this by extracting resources from
poor or less powerful regions to enrich the rulers and the imperial
center, thereby disrupting what may have been sustainable local
relations between people and their environment.
An example of this
"override" phenomenon is the large-scale deforestation
that is now taking place in the Amazon River basin of Brazil. The efforts
of indigenous tribes to protect their sacred ancestral
homelands, and also
the efforts of nonindigenous rubber tappers to prevent deforestation, have
been swept aside, sometimes violently, by
cattle ranchers and others
who—spurred on by such government policies as providing access roads deep into the forest, granting ownership to anyone who clears a piece of
forest, and providing tax incentives
for farming—have ruthlessly pursued
their own economic agendas by clearing
land and creating large cattle ranches. International lending institutions long supported these policies by funding large-scale development
projects that cleared forest land and made Brazil more dependent on cash crops, such as timber and beef from Amazonia,
to repay international loans (Stern, Young, and Druckman, 1992).
National governments may also disrupt
sustainable local
relations between people and their environment in the name of development, as we have seen
in the case of
India. In postrevolutionary China, the government—in addition to suppressing the traditions
of Taoism, Buddhism, and Confucianism—has sacrificed the environment to
development, for example, by
pursuing a policy of heavy industrialization that relies on burning highly polluting soft coal,
without emission controls (Smil, 1988).
Many of the political, social, and economic forces and processes that we outlined in the last few paragraphs
above play a significant role in any country, and most certainly help explain the poor environmental record of India. Some of these forces
and processes also
operate in advanced industrial nations like the United States today, nations in which
population growth
is much slower than in developing nations. The
strong influence of nonreligious forces and processes in any country is a major reason that religious/ moral/and so on efforts by themselves are
insufficient to solve major environmental problems.
PROENVIRONMENTAL RELIGIOUS/MORAL MOVEMENTS—CURRENT DEVELOPMENTS AND POSSIBLE FUTURE TRENDS
The experiences of India and China warn us of
the
limits of religious and moral controls alone as a way
to solve environmental problems. Nevertheless, we
limits of religious and moral controls alone as a way
to solve environmental problems. Nevertheless, we
believe that a stronger moral consciousness of
the environment will
help, and that religious and moral changes will play a role—most likely an important one—in any successful, permanent solution to
global environmental
problems. With this in mind, we briefly review in this section four current movements in the United States and other advanced
industrial societies
that are trying to raise this sort of moral/religious consciousness. We then, in later sections,
examine these
four movements in terms of their common threads and their prospects for success. The religious/ moral movements are: contemporary Christian
and Jewish ecotheology,
which emphasizes
proenvironmental aspects of
traditional scripture; Catholic theologian
Thomas Berry's proenvironmental religion, which includes elements of Eastern religions and of modern scientific ecology; the deep
ecology movement, led by Arne Naess, Bill Devall, and
George Sessions, a movement that
provides a new worldview and that urges
major changes in Western lifestyles and values; and ecofeminism, which claims that there is an intrinsic moral and practical linkage
between solving environmental
problems in Western cultures and ending gender-role stereotyping and discrimination against women. Note that these four religious/moral movements overlap with each other to some extent and
that they are not mutually exclusive (i.e., people could embrace more than one of the movements at the same time). Note also that the four differ in the
degree to which they are complete
religions: Both ecotheology and
Berry's work involve full-blown religions,
whereas deep ecology and ecofeminism are each moral/ethical/values movements that have some religious elements.
Ecotheology
As we mentioned earlier in this chapter,
many modern theologians argue that the
"multiply and subdue the earth"
quote from the Bible (Genesis), above, is misinterpreted, taken out of
context, and viewed simplistically.
There is little in traditional Judeo-Christian scripture, these theologians argue, that endorses environmental exploitation, and much that supports a stewardship
philosophy, one
that stresses our responsibility to respect
and care for the Earth, its ecological
50 PART II BEHAVIORAL SOLUTION STRATEGIES
systems, and
nonhuman forms of life (Gelderloos, 1992; Whitney, 1993).
There is now considerable change occurring in many Western religions, even religions
traditionally viewed
as very conservative (Gelderloos, 1994). Indeed, a proenvironmental "Statement by Religious Leaders. . ." stressing the concept of
stewardship was endorsed
in 1991 and again in 1992 by a large panel of prominent Catholic, Greek Orthodox, Jewish,
and Protestant religious leaders representing a total of 330,000 different congregations in the United
States (Anderson et al., 1991;
Moehlmann, 1992). Further, a National
Religious Partnership for the Environment has been formed by organizations of Protestant, Catholic, Jewish, and evangelical Christian denominations. These movements tend to confirm Kempton et
al.'s (1995) conclusion that, contrary to White's (1967) thinking, religions in
this country may be a major source of, rather than an obstacle to, proenvironmental sentiments and actions.
Many ecotheologists base their arguments for
the stewardship concept
on a close examination of the wordings
of original biblical and other scriptures, as distinct from the teachings and writings of
more recent religious leaders and movements (Gelderloos, 1992; Whitney, 1993). Thus, Gelderloos (1992)
distinguish es between
Christianity and its Judaic roots on the one hand, and Christendom on the other. The former refers to actual Judeo-Christian Holy
Scripture, the latter to
commentaries, teachings, sermons, encyclicals, and practices of members of religious organizations over the past two millennia.
Gelderloos argues
that the concept of stewardship appears clearly in the Jewish Torah and Old Testament, and
even in some
New Testament scripture, but that Christendom has greatly deviated from these scriptures in
recent centuries.
Gelderloos attributes this deviation to several causes, including the influences of the prominent Christian theologian Saint Augustine several
centuries after the
death of Christ, the Protestant Reformation in the sixteenth century, the mechanistic worldview that emerged in the Western
Enlightenment during the eighteenth
century, and the industrial revolution.
Gelderloos (1992) and others base their claim that the stewardship
ethic is clearly present in the Jewish Torah and the Old Testament (centuries before
the deviation
described above) on several lines of reasoning. For one thing, these
scriptures repeatedly emphasize that God is the creator of ". . . the heavens, .
. . the earth and all that is on it, the seas and all that is in them [Neh 9:6,
quoted on p. 13], and that [God] .. . gave life to everything"; things created
by God, in turn, are sacred and must be protected. In addition, the Book of Genesis
(the book containing the "multiply and subdue" passages) also describes the
role of humankind as the "tillers" and "keepers" of God's creations, with the
relevant Hebrew words clearly implying that humankind is to care for and keep these creations forever.
Similarly, Barr (cited by Whitney, 1993) argues that the Hebrew word appearing
in Genesis and translated as "to have dominion" is more correctly
translated as implying responsible leadership, and the word translated as "to
subdue" specifically refers to the physical act of plowing soil, and not to the domination
and exploitation of animals.
Gelderloos (1992), further, points out that
support for the stewardship concept is found in Jewish rabbinical writings (which are separate from the
Old Testament and
therefore not shared with Christians) as well as the Old Testament itself. Gelderloos cites the
writing of Ehrenfeld and Bentley (1985) on the (Old Testament) Jewish law of bal
tashhit (meaning
"do not destroy"), and also
specific rabbinical injunctions
against ". . . overgrazing of the countryside, the unjustified killing of
animals or feeding them harmful foods, the hunting of animals for sport,
species extinction
and destruction of cultivated plant varieties, pollution of air or water, overconsumption of
anything, and the waste of mineral and other resources [quoted in Gelderloos
1992, p. 16]."
In summary, Gelderloos and other
ecotheologians argue
that Christians and Jews should now return to the stewardship "paradigm" that is
clearly present in the
original Judeo-Christian religious tradition. (Note that Gelderloos uses the word paradigm
to encompass worldviews, ethics, and values, and we will
adopt this usage
for the remainder of the chapter.) To quote
Gelderloos: "Today we
are looking for new paradigms to lead us out of the
most severe planetary crisis we have faced since the end
of glaciation.. .. [Al new look at one of the oldest
paradigms in history, the Judeo-Christian [religious
tradition reveals a clear paradigm] ... of stewardship
or earthkeeping [p. 7]." Given that Judaism and
Christianity have been the main Western religions for
centuries, and given that radical changes in peoples'
religious beliefs are not likely in the time we have
left to avert environmental problems that threaten human
survival, the ecotheology movement, by emphasizing the proenvironmental teachings of the dominant religious tradition, is a promising approach for moving Western values and beliefs in a proenvironmental direction.
We end this discussion of ecotheology with a
moving quote from Psalm 104 from the Old
Testament that has some of the flavor of the passages
ascribed to Chief Seatlh in the Chapter Prologue (as
quoted in Gelderloos [1992], pp. 29-30):
[God] ... makes springs pour water into the ravines: They give water to all the beasts of the field:
the wild donkeys quench their thirst.
The
birds of the air nest by the waters;
they sing among the branches.
[God] . . . waters the mountains .. .
the earth is satisfied by
the fruit of [God's] . . . work. . . .
The
trees of the Lord are well watered,
the
cedars of Lebanon that [God] . . . planted. There
the birds make their nests;
the stork has its home in the pine trees.
The high mountains belong to the wild goats;
the
crags are a refuge of the coneys [small mammals]. The moon marks off the
seasons. . . .
How many are your works, 0 Lord! In wisdom you made them all;
the
earth is full of your creatures. There is the sea, vast and spacious, teeming with creatures beyond number, living things both large and small... .
May
the glory of the Lord endure forever. . . .
The work of ecotheologians, which we discussed in this
section, overlaps with the work of Thomas Berry,
which we describe in the section that follows.
Thomas Berry's Work
Thomas Berry, a Catholic monk and an "historian of cultures," believes that the survival of Western
civilization hinges on its ability to create and
gain adherence to a radical new religion. The new
religion must include, Berry emphasizes, an environmentally sound worldview and cosmology (story of the creation of the universe and the role of humans in it).3 While this religion
does not yet exist in final form, it will, Berry (1988)
proposes, include the following elements: The new
religion will be Earth- rather than human-centered.
It will give us a sense of the Earth's sacredness, and we will respect, revere, and feel gratitude toward our home planet. We will fully understand the interrelatedness and interdependency of all living things. Berry emphasizes that these elements are found in the religious beliefs of some Native American and other
traditional cultures. Berry (1988) writes:
[The] story [will present] the organic unity and creative
power of the planet Earth as they are
expressed in the symbol of the Great
Mother; the evolutionary process through which even
living form achieves its identity and
its proper role in the universal drama as it is expressed in the symbol of the Great Journey: the relatedness
of things in an omnicentered universe as expressed by the mandala: . . . and finally, the symbols of a complex
organism with roots, trunk, branches, and leaves, which indicate the coherence and functional efficacy of
the entire organism, as expressed by the Cosmic Tree and the Tree of Life. [p.34.] (This quote and ones below are from The Dream of the Earth. Copyright 1988 by Thomas Berry. Reprinted with permission of Sierra Club Books.)
Berry's new religion, however, would augment
the spiritual beliefs of native peoples with
cutting-edge, scientific knowledge about the ecology of the
planet and the functioning of the entire universe.
This would make religious beliefs and, thereby, resulting
human actions, consonant with the actual processes and
limits of the natural world, so that human
actions will be eternally sustainable. (Note that many
ecotheologians, e.g., Gelderloos, 1992, also see a need
for inputs from scientific ecology.)
52 PART
II BEHAVIORAL SOLUTION STRATEGIES
Berry suggests an additional reason for
giving modern science a major role in creating a new
religion: He argues that scientists in physics,
astronomy, biology, meteorology, and other disciplines
are now coming to a radically new understanding of the Earth as a living organism, as well as an understanding of the "oneness" of all things in the universe, and
even of an intelligence that is manifest in the
universe's design. Thus, contemporary scientists, Berry
argues, are arriving at the same kind of worldview and
cosmology (or creation story) that native religions,
as well as Eastern religions such as Taoism and Hinduism,
have held to for thousands of years. This worldview
and cosmology is, therefore, one that people can
now accept both emotionally and intellectually. Berry
(1988) writes:
[O]ur sustained [scientific] inquiry into the
inner functioning of the planet
[has] I. . . brought us [to
an] . . . awareness that the entire planet . . . (may be] a single organic reality. . . . [D]esignation of the earth
as "Gala" [referring to the "Gaia
hypothesis" a scientific theory that views the Earth and all its
biological and physical processes as a single integrated organism] is no longer unacceptable in serious [scientific] discussion. . . . Here the ancient mythic insight and our modern scientific perceptions discover their mutual confirmation. . . .
(Furthermore], science is [now] providing
some of our most powerful poetic
references and metaphoric expressions. . . . We are more intimate with every
particle of the universe and with the vast
design of the whole. . . . We experience
an identity with the entire cosmic order within our own
beings. This sense of an emergent universe identical with ourselves gives new
meaning to the Chinese sense of forming one body with all things [as in Taoism]. . . . That some form of intelligent reflection on itself was implicit in the universe
from the beginning is now granted by many
scientists.
The inclusion of new developments in science in the creation of a new environmentally sound religion is ironic. Earlier science and technology, shaped so strongly by the human-centered worldview and values of Western culture, may be seen as responsible for the industrial and postindustrial revolutions that have led to the serious environmental problems the world now faces, including the alteration of global climate and the erosion of the Earth's protective ozone layer (White, 1967; Berry, 1988, p. xii).
One major point of Berry's argument needs
further clarification: Berry is talking not just about
creating environmentally sound rules or codes to guide
human action, based on modern scientific ecology,
but also about creating a full new religion, one that
has, as do all religions, significant subjective,
spiritual, intuitive, and emotional components. Berry sees
the subjective and spiritual components of
religion as necessary for two reasons. First, from a
practical point of view, he argues that the spiritual
components of a religion are much more effective in changing
and regulating human actions than are mere rules
or codes of conduct. Thus, for example, he writes:
Without a fascination with the grandeur of the North American continent, the energy needed for its preservation
will never be developed. Something more than the utilitarian aspect of fresh water
must be evoked if we are ever to have water
with the purity required for our survival.
There must be a mystique of the rain if we are ever to restore the purity of the rainfall [p. 33J.
Secondly, the spiritual, emotional components
of a religion are, Berry argues, necessary to
satisfy basic spiritual and emotional needs that all humans
have, but that have been given short shrift in
Western culture. Berry believes that many Westerners are
emotionally starved and unfulfilled in our
supremely secular and materialistic society—a belief he
shares with several other writers (e.g., Theodore Roszak, 1973). Berry writes:
. . .
(O]ur secular society remains without satisfactory meaning or the social discipline needed for a life
leading to emotional, aesthetic, and
spiritual fulfillment. Because of this lack of satisfaction, many
persons are returning to a religious
fundamentalism. But that, too, can be
seen as inadequate to supply the values for sustaining our needed social discipline [p. 124J.
The kind of new religion that Berry envisions
would fulfill our spiritual and emotional needs,
while at the same time it would guide us into
environmentally sound, permanently sustainable behavior.
The
Deep Ecology Movement
Although it has spiritual and religious elements and some overlap with the work of Thomas Berry, the deep ecology movement mainly involves an overriding philosophy and worldview, and a prescribed lifestyle. The concept of deep ecology and its philosophical foundations derive from the work of Norwegian philosopher Arne Naess (e.g., Naess and Rothenberg, 1989). The concept has been further articulated by sociologist/ecologist Bill Devall, philosopher
George Sessions, and others (e.g., Devall and Sessions,
1985).
Deep ecologists emphasize the major differences
that exist between their basic philosophy,
values, and worldview (i.e. their paradigm) and
the philosophy, values, and worldview currently dominant in
Western countries. Table 3-4 summarizes these
differences.
The dominant Western paradigm (left column) is human-centered and materialistic, and derives, deep ecologists argue, from the basic Judeo-Christian worldview
criticized by White (1967), from traditional
scientific orthodoxies, and also from capitalism (Devall
and Sessions, p. 45). This paradigm, deep ecologists
claim, is responsible for current global ecological
crises, is factually and scientifically incorrect, and is spiritually impoverishing.
The deep-ecological paradigm (right column),
in contrast, is nature-centered and stresses the
intrinsic value
of nonhuman forms of life, rather than their value defined only by their
usefulness to humans. Deep ecologists identify
several sources of their beliefs and values,
including: the new research findings in physics, astronomy, and so forth (discussed
above in connection with Berry's work); modern scientific ecology; Eastern religions, such as Taoism; Native
TABLE
3-4 The Deep Ecology Paradigm Versus the Dominant Western
Paradigm
DOMINANT WESTERN
PARADIGM DEEP
ECOLOGY PARADIGM
Dominance over nature Harmony
with nature
Natural environment as
resource for human use
Material/economic growth for a
growing human
population
Belief in ample resource
reserves
High technological progress and
solutions
Consumerism
NationaVcentralized community
All nature has intrinsic worth;
biospecies equality
Elegantly simple material needs
(material goals serving the larger goal
of self-realization)
Earth "supplies"
limited
Appropriate technology; nondominating
science
Making do with enough/ recycling
Minority tradition/ bioregionalism
Source:
Adapted from Devall, B., and Sessions, G., Deep
ecology: Living as if nature mattered, p. 16.
Copyright 1985. Gibbs Smith, Publisher. Used with permission.
54 PART II BEHAVIORAL SOLUTION STRATEGIES
American religions; contemporary feminism (discussed in the next section, Ecofeminism); certain aspects of Christianity (especially the teachings of
Saint Francis of Assisi); and the
writings of ecologist Aldo Leopold,
authors Theodore Roszak and David Ehrenfeld, and others.
Deep ecologists generally advocate: A
decrease in the
Earth's human population; less human interference with the nonhuman natural environment; a
lifestyle of
"voluntary simplicity" (that is, one that minimizes resource consumption and
environmental pollution
and that avoids superfluous material possessions);
and frequent communion with nature, for example,
by hiking in natural environments—a communion that reconnects people with the Earth, provides spiritual fulfillment, and is the only way,
deep ecologists believe, to truly understand and appreciate the deep ecology worldview (Devall and Sessions, 1985;
Devall, 1988).
The literature of the deep ecology movement draws clear distinctions not only between the
dominant Western
paradigm and the deep-ecological paradigm (as in Table 3-2), but also between
"shallow" and
"deep" levels of ecological consciousness. The literature claims that a great many of the
people who are
truly concerned about environmental problems and are motivated to solve them (this includes
a majority of Americans, according to public
opinion poll results) still do not realize
the degree to which their worldviews and values are frozen at a not
sufficiently radical level. In Table 3-5, adapted from Miller (1990) and Devall and Sessions (1985), we outline three
different levels of environmental
consciousness, going from shallow to
deep.
Deep ecologists urge all Westerners to
progress by reading
the deep ecology literature and communing with nature to the third, or deepest, level of ecological
consciousness and
follow the tenets of their move-
TABLE 3-5 Levels
of Environmental Consciousness
Level One—Shallow
ecology: Concern about pollution and resource depletion: Acute and visible cases of environmental degradation are a cause of serious concern
and action. Different environmental problems are seen as largely unrelated, and are to be corrected on a case-by-case
basis. Natural resources should not be squandered, but should be consumed
efficiently. Nature exists for humans and human use, but it is in our own self-interest that nature be managed wisely.
Level
Two—intermediate-depth" ecology: The spaceship-earth analogy: Nature
exists for human use, but humans are polluting and despoiling it badly.
We must more fully understand the high degree of human dependence
on nature, the finite ability of nature to absorb pollution and yield
resources, the interrelatedness of all life forms, and the
complexity of global ecosystems. With advanced scientific knowledge and
management (for example, sophisticated computer models of
ecosystems), and with the proper laws, regulations, and other existing
societal institutions, we should be able to manage the planet wisely so that
humans will continue to prosper materially into the foreseeable
future.
Level Three—Deep ecology: Bioequality: Morally
speaking, humans are not more important than nonhuman life forms and are not
fundamentally different from or separate from them; all forms of life have a
basic right to exist. Humans and human science and technology will never
be able to fully understand and manage global ecosystems;
to assume so is merely human arrogance. Nature can't be bent to the ways of
humans. Pursuit of material comforts is intrinsically unrewarding; a
lifestyle of voluntary simplicity is rewarding. We must replace our Western worldview
with that of Eastern and native religions, and develop a spiritual/religious
bond with the Earth and all its creatures, including fellow humans of all
cultures and countries.
ment. Nothing short
of this, they argue, can save our species and planet.
Ecofeminism
Because there are several different versions
of ecofeminism and a
diversity of ecofeminist beliefs (Cuomo, 1992), it is difficult to briefly
characterize the
ecofeminism movement. However, most ecofeminists are concerned both about solving global and regional environmental problems and about eliminating sexism, that is, eliminating
discrimination against women and gender-based stereotyping of social roles. Ecofeminists argue forcefully that there is an underlying linkage between
major environmental problems and
sexism, and that both problems can only be solved together. Both
problems, they argue, reflect the Western
male paradigm, one that stresses dichotomy, hierarchy, discrimination, domination, and exploitation (Shiva, 1989; Salleh, 1992; Cuomo, 1992). Thus,
the Western view of nature,
historically developed by men, sees
nonhuman forms of life as separate from and inferior to human life, and Westerners have exploited and
subjugated nonhuman life for centuries; similarly, the Western view sees
women as inferior to men, and Western men
have subjugated and exploited women
for centuries. (Some ecofeminists argue that the linkage in the Western male
paradigm between women and nature derives from the paradigm's view of nature as
feminine; in other words, women are identified with and symbolic of nature [see Ortner, 19741.)
Further, ecofeminists argue, both the subjugation
of nature and the subjugation of women are strongly linked together in male-centered Western religions and religious institutions, in Western
science, and in everyday Western life.
Concerning Western religions, we have already
reviewed the claims of White (1967) that
the Judeo-Christian tradition is
human-centered and demeaning to
nonhuman forms of life. Though many scholars and theologians have
questioned these claims (as we discussed
above), it is difficult to deny that Western religions are patriarchal and
male-centered. Judaic and Christian
scripture both portray God as male, and emphasizes the male progenitors of the human species more than
the female progenitors. In Christianity, the child
of God, Christ, is a male, and he has greater importance than Mary, the mother of Christ (or than any other female figure). In most organized Jewish and Christian religious institutions and
traditions, furthermore, women have
until recently played a less important
role than men, both in participating in services and rituals, and in serving as priests, ministers, or rabbis. Western science is, similarly, male-centered, ecofeminists argue (Shiva, 1989). Francis Bacon and the other (male) founders imbued science with the distinctly male hierarchical and
patriarchal worldview and values, a
worldview and values that justify the
exploitation of nature and that at least implicitly justify sexism and the exploitation of women. Finally, it is apparent that just as deep
ecology is not yet widely accepted in
Western nations, there is residual
sexism in most Western nations (this is not to deny the considerable progress
made in the last two to three decades).
Going further, some ecofeminists argue that
the differences between
the male paradigm (one that stresses dichotomy,
hierarchy, discrimination, domination, and
exploitation, as we discussed above) and the female paradigm (which we discuss in more detail below) are mainly culturally rather than
genetically determined and can be
traced back to the gender-based
division of labor found in a nomadic hunting and gathering society, the main form of human living arrangement
for the first 30,000 years of our species' 40,000 or so years of life on this
planet (Maria Mies, 1986, [cited by Shiva]
and Shiva, 1989). Men generally hunted
animals, whereas women, besides bearing and
nurturing new human life, gathered foods such as berries, nuts, and tubers. Shiva argues that the role of hunter intrinsically involves the use of tools that
destroy life rather than produce life, a basically exploitative, dominant stance toward nonhuman nature, and
a life-or-death power over other
living things—in other words, the
basic male paradigm that still appears to dominate today.
In contrast, Shiva argues, the female role as
food gatherers led women in Stone Age
cultures to a different, female, paradigm,
one that stresses: the interconnectedness
and interrelatedness of all life forms;
56 PART II BEHAVIORAL SOLUTION STRATEGIES
the sanctity of all forms of life; the
diversity and complexity
of life forms and natural processes (which cannot
be understood by examining small, individual parts);
and nature as productive, creative, and bountiful (Shiva, 1989). Shiva (1989) also argues that, in Stone Age hunter/gatherer cultures, women's gathering
activities actually generated as much as 80 percent of the food consumed. Furthermore, women who live today in developing countries, Shiva points out,
still have a disproportionately large
role in food production, both as
gatherers and in small-scale farming activities.
Some ecofeminists and others further claim
that although the male
paradigm has predominated in Western
society for tens of thousands of years, there was a brief period (650013.c. to 3500 B.c.)
during which
certain cultures in Europe followed feminine principles (Gimbutas, 1974; Berry, 1988).
These cultures were, according to at
least some archaeologists, egalitarian,
democratic, and peaceful. However, according
to these accounts, the cultures were swept aside by an invasion of Aryan peoples, the male-centered forebears
of contemporary Western cultures (Berry,
1988, pp. 139-140). These archaeologists argue that a key element in the replacement of feminine-oriented cultures by masculine-oriented cultures
was the replacement of the Earth Mother, worshiped by the
feminine cultures, with the Heavenly
Father conception found today in Judeo-Christianity.
The masculine-oriented cultures, by
these accounts, were apparently
responsible for 5,000 uninterrupted years of warfare, brutality, and
environmental destruction. As
political philosopher Herbert Marcuse (1974, [quoted in Shiva, 1989]) wrote,
"Inasmuch as the male principle has been the ruling mental and
physical force [in Western civilization and
has produced such negative
consequences], a free society would be the 'definite negation' of this principle—it would be a female
society."
The ecofeminist solution to global
environmental problems
and to sexism, then, is for Western society to readopt the feminine worldview and religious/ moral codes that some ecofeminists claim existed in European cultures between 6500 and 3500 B.c.
Again, ecofeminists stress that since environmental problems and sexism have the same underlying cause—the male paradigm—they can only be solved together
and through a fundamental and radical
change from the male to the female
paradigm. Note, finally, that the female paradigm Shiva describes is highly
similar to the basic worldview and
perspective of modern ecology (as we
discuss in greater detail later in the chapter). In fact, the contemporary ecological theory that views the Earth as a single, living, and
self-regulating organism is called by
its proponents the "Gaia Hypothesis,"
Gaia being the name of the (female) Earth goddess in ancient Greek mythology.
COMMON THREADS IN RELIGIOUS/MORALLY BASED ENVIRONMENTAL MOVEMENTS
Each of the four proenvironmental movements
or positions
we just discussed—ecotheology, the teachings of Thomas Berry, deep ecology, and
ecofeminismhas an explicitly religious/moral/ethical base, and each claims to be a departure from a dominant
Western paradigm its
proponents hold responsible for environmental degradation. What do these environmental movements have in common, aside from what
they oppose? We con tend
that the four movements share two
key components: 1) A worldview (or system
of beliefs) consonant with contemporary
scientific ecology, and 2) an ecocentric
value orientation. These key components overlap and are tightly intertwined. We now discuss the components one at a time.
Shared Ecological Worldview
All four religious movements share to varying
degrees the basic
worldview or belief system that many ecologists and environmental scientists
have been advocating for the last few
decades. A look at any recent text on human
ecology, environmental sciences, or environmental studies reveals a set
of interrelated beliefs about: the relationship
between humans and the rest of
nature, the workings of global and regional ecosystems, the disruptive impact that human activity is now having on those systems, the potential for catastrophic consequences, and the changes in
human activity needed to avert those
consequences. The ecological
worldview advocates harmony with nature,
emphasizes
the finiteness of natural resources, the limited resilience of ecological
processes, and the necessity
of controlling human population and material
growth.
Table 3-6 contains a more detailed statement
of the major
beliefs that comprise the worldview of scientific ecology, as we understand it, based
mainly on a close
examination of the best-selling undergraduate text in environmental studies/science, G. T. Miller's
Living
in the Environment, 1994. Again, we
maintain that all four movements—ecotheology,
Berry's religion, deep ecology, and ecofeminism—share many of the beliefs in this table. Items in the table
aren't necessarily listed in order
of importance, nor is the list intended
as exhaustive. A look back at the discussion earlier in the chapter will verify that the four movements embrace some
or many aspects of the ecological
worldview. For example, compare Table 3-6 with the right-hand column of Table
3-4 on the deep ecology movement.
TABLE 3-6 The Worldview of Modern Scientific Ecology
1. There are complex, multiple interactions and linkages
between the different forms of plant and animal life on the
planet. The forms of life are highly interconnected and interdependent.
2.
Because
of
these complex interconnections and interdependencies it is difficult to change
one thing in a natural or environmental system (e.g., to
increase or decrease the population of a species) without creating other
changes, often ones that are remote and unanticipated. This principle is
sometimes summarized by the saying "You can't do just one
thing."
3a Human
survival is highly dependent on services provided by nonhuman forms of life and
by global and regional ecological processes.
3b There
are limits to the resiliency of the ecological processes upon which human life
and activity depend (for example, the oxygen cycle, and global
climatic processes).
4. The
Earth's supply of natural resources upon which human activity (especially
technologically advanced human activity) depend are finite and
exhaustible.
5.
The global impacts of human activity (affected
by the size of the human population, the nature of the technologies
humans use, and the intensity with which they use them) have recently begun to
disrupt key ecological processes, disrupt the "balance of nature,"
deplete natural resources, and cause the extinction of plant
and animal species at unprecedented rates.
6a Growth
in human population and industrial activity, and hence in resource use and
pollution generation, cannot continue indefinitely.
6b
Exponential human population growth must be
slowed and stopped, along with the growth of human industrial
activity. Permanently sustainable levels of population, resource use, and
pollution generation must be reached.
7.
Natural/environmental systems and processes
are closed or circular ones (e.g., the waste materials and dead
bodies of a species become the food and sustenance for others), not linear
ones. There is no "away" to which human garbage or
pollution can truly be thrown.
8.
Global and regional environmental systems are
highly complex, and humans may never be able to fully comprehend
them. Human efforts to "manage" nature—even aided with such
technology as computer models—could well lead to catastrophic failure.
9.
"Upstream" solutions to
environmental problems (for example, limiting the material introduced into the
solid-waste stream to begin with) are generally more beneficial
than "downstream" solutions (for example, trying to clean
up a pollutant after it has been widely distributed). A summary of this
principle is "An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of care." [We
further discuss this and related principles in Chapter 10.]
10.
The ecological integrity and diversity of the
Earth's life-support systems must be maintained.
11. There is some evidence that
the Earth, its biota, its atmosphere, and so on can be conceived of as a
single, complex, integrated organism (i.e., the
"Gaia hypothesis").
58 PART II BEHAVIORAL SOLUTION STRATEGIES
Consider how different the ecological
worldview, described in Table 3-6, is from the Western
world-view (compare items in Table 3-6 with items in the left-hand column of Table 3-4 titled "Dominant Western Paradigm"). The Western worldview holds that
there is an essentially unlimited supply of natural resources and that science and technology have essentially unlimited powers. Similarly, it assumes that continual material growth and growth in human numbers are both possible and desirable. The Western and the ecological worldviews are, thus, in many ways polar opposites.
To repeat and summarize, we contend that all
four of the cutting-edge environmental movements described earlier in the chapter share a rejection of the Western worldview and embrace, to varying degrees, the contrasting ecological worldview in Table 3-6.
Before we leave the topic, however, we should briefly qualify our discussion of the ecological world-view. All worldviews, including this one, are sets of beliefs that
provide cultures and individuals with general
perspectives or vantage points. Woridviews are not
God-given truths. Thus, it can be argued that no worldview is valid in an absolute sense, including this one. On the other hand, the ecological worldview is a conceptual framework accepted by most ecologists and environmental scientists. The framework is implicitly if not explicitly endorsed by national and international scientific panels that have voiced warnings about global and regional environmental problems. For example, a group of over 1,000 scientists, including dozens who received Nobel prizes, signed a "World Scientists' Warning to Humanity," issued
by the Union of Concerned Scientists (1992) that
basically accepts the framework of Table 3-6. This
degree of scientific agreement at least suggests
that the Western worldview is flawed and that the
ecological worldview must be given serious consideration.
Shared Ecocentric Values
All four proenvironmental movements share not only
a highly similar set of beliefs, or a worldview, but also
a single major value and ethical orientation. We can
a highly similar set of beliefs, or a worldview, but also
a single major value and ethical orientation. We can
best describe this orientation in relation to
Carolyn Merchant's (1992) analysis of the values and ethical bases that underlie human views on the environment. Merchant argues that controversies about human-environment
relations center on three different values/ ethics.
One, which she calls the egocentric ethic, judges acts against the
standard that the pursuit of self-interest is to be
placed above other values. People who
uphold this ethic tend to oppose environmental policies
that would lead individuals to take actions against
their desires. A second ethic, that Merchant calls homocentric, holds
the good of the human species above other values.
People who uphold this ethic support environmental
policies that constrain individual choice if the effect
is to promote a greater good for a greater number or to
advance humanistic ideals such as equality or
justice. They oppose environmental policies that promote
the well-being of nonhuman species if the policies cause human beings as a
species to make sacrifices or if they create
injustice. The third ethic, termed ecocentric, judges
acts according to their effects on the biosphere. People who
uphold this ethic favor environmental policies benefitting
ecosystems even if human beings must sacrifice.
Of course, few people hold any of these
values/ ethical positions in the extreme. Even the
most egocentric agree that there are limits to
selfishness set by the good of society, and even the most
ecocentric would not place unlimited burdens on human beings to achieve small benefits for other species. Nevertheless, it is useful to distinguish these three ethical positions because doing so makes clear the moral basis of the
positions of environmental movement groups and their
opponents.
The four radical proenvironmental movements
we discuss in this chapter all share an
ecocentric value/ ethical orientation. Their proponents consider
environmental quality to have intrinsic value and
believe on ethical grounds that people should protect
the environment even at some cost to themselves and
their societies. Their positions can be contrasted
with those of environmentalist organizations that do not
challenge the human-centered basis of ordinary
ethics. These environmental groups may organize people
to reduce pesticide residues in food on the
grounds that
they are carcinogenic, to oppose nuclear power because of the risk of
accidents that can cause human illnesses and fatalities, and to control toxic waste disposal because of the
threats air and water pollution pose to human health or to aesthetic or recreational values. These arguments are
all homocentric, in Merchant's terms, and in that way contrast sharply with the positions of the
ecotheologians, Thomas Berry, the deep ecologists, and the ecofeminists, as well as with the teachings
of Native American religions and Hindu, Buddhist, and Taoist scripture. Homocentric and ecocentric
environmentalists often take the same positions on policy issues, but on different value and ethical
bases.
Plan for the Rest of the Chapter
We devote the remainder of
this chapter to exploring
the potential for these radical religious/ethically based
proenvironmental movements to succeed. In Mer-
the potential for these radical religious/ethically based
proenvironmental movements to succeed. In Mer-
FIGURE
3-1 Religious/Ethical/Moral Traditions/Movements
That Share an Ecocentric
Value Orientation
chant's
terms, the goal of the movements is to put human-environmental relations on a more
ecocentric ethical basis. In addition, the movements aim to disseminate and
make dominant the contemporary ecological worldview, as we discussed earlier.
These changes
are major and represent dramatic shifts in Western values and beliefs. To judge whether
or not these environmental movements—and the religious/ moral/ethical strategy—are
likely to succeed, we must
consider three important and related issues. First,
we
need to examine more closely the values and worldview that now underlie public support
for environmental protection and the potential that exists for making that support more
ecocentric and more based on the ecological worldview. In the next section of the chapter, we carefully
review relevant public opinion data on these issues. We'll see evidence that people's basic values and beliefs in
Western and other nations have already begun to shift in the direction that radical
ecologists
want them to shift. Second, we need to consider whether or not the
value and belief shifts are likely
to persist and become permanent. Third, we need to
assess the probable effects of value and belief shifts on people's actual behavior, such as their taking energy-saving actions in their homes and cars,
purchasing proenvironmental goods
and services, participating in recycling programs, choosing to limit
the size of their families, supporting
proenvironmental government policies,
voting for proenvironmental political candidates, and so on (there are
analogous changes in the actions of
government policy makers). Major
shifts in values, morals, and beliefs must translate into such changes in people's behavior if the shifts are to
have a significant positive impact on global
and regional environmental problems.
ISSUE ONE: ARE
ENVIRONMENTAL VALUES AND BELIEFS CHANGING?
Explicit in the arguments of ecotheologians,
deep ecologists, ecofeminists, and other
radical environmentalists are the
claims that Westerners are now primarily homocentric or egocentric in
their value orientations and primarily
adherent to the Western worldview. But
what do we really know about the
60 PART II
BEHAVIORAL SOLUTION STRATEGIES
values
and beliefs of the general public in Western countries? Are the
ecologists' claims about the nonecocentricity of people's values
and about their worldviews backed by empirical data? As it
turns out, there are extensive public-opinion data
concerning environmental values and beliefs, and we
devote this section of the chapter to a review of these
data. The data, indeed, confirm that an ecocentric
orientation, is
not now common among the Western general public.
However, the data do show surprisingly strong, widespread,
and increasing environmental concern in Western and in many
developing countries as well. There is also some evidence that this
concern is linked to deep, underlying values and beliefs,
suggesting the initial emergence of a more ecocentric
orientation and of the contemporary ecological worldview, and
possibly of an equally fundamental shift in
general societal values. These trends may reflect in part the
influence that liberal and radical environmental movements have already had on the values and beliefs of the public and of policy makers.
Strong Public Support
for
Environmental Protection
Environmental Protection
Opinion polls show that public
proenvironmental sentiments in the United States are very
strong—stronger, indeed, than they have ever been
(Mitchell, 1990; Dunlap, 1991). Recall from Chapter 1 that public concern about environmental problems and support for proenvironmental measures first increased in
the late 1960s and early 1970s, and
then decreased during the mid- and
late 1970s, though it was still considerable (Dunlap, 1991). In the
1980s, public environmental concern and
support once again increased, leading
up to the very high levels of environmental concern and support in recent polls. Evidence of the strength of public proenvironmental sentiments in
the United States is shown in Table
3-7. The table, adapted from Dunlap
(1991), displays people's responses to questions asked in four different
public opinion polls taken in 1990.
Each poll involved a different
random sample of several hundred Americans;
the data should be accurate within plus or minus
four
percentage points. Note that despite differences in
question wordings from poll to poll, all the surveys show
strong proenvironmental public sentiment. Figure 3-2 shows
graphically the increase in public environmental concern
in this country through the 1980s. It displays results from CBS/New York
Times surveys that repeated a single
question—the last question presented
in Table 3-7—at seven different times between 1981 and 1990. The wording of the question is as follows: "Protecting the environment is so
important that requirements and standards cannot be too high, and continuing environmental improvements must be made at all costs." The increase in
proenvironmental sentiment during this period, reflected in agreement with this strongly proenvironmental
statement, is especially impressive
given that President Reagan, in
office between 1981 and 1989, propounded
the view that government environmental regulations were excessive. Despite the
president's antienvironmental stance, the general public's support for environmental protection measures
increased steadily. This increase
continued into the early 1990s.
The evidence of strong and growing support for
environmental protection among the U.S. public is matched
by evidence from other countries that indicates widespread
environmental concern worldwide. Dunlap, Gallup, and
Gallup (1993) reported results of a huge
survey-research project involving approximately 1,000
respondents in each of twenty-two countries. The
countries ranged widely in level of wealth and economic development and in
geographic location. In twenty of the countries, a majority of the respondents gave environmental protection first
priority when asked to rank the importance of environmental protection relative to economic growth. In
sixteen of the countries, a majority
even indicated a willingness to pay
higher prices for goods and services if necessary to achieve environmental protection. In addition,
"[p]eople in the poorer, developing countries . . . clearly recognize[d]
the impact of population growth on their
environment and . . . [did] not place all
of the blame for global environmental problems on richer nations. Likewise, residents of wealthy
nations . . . [did] not attribute the
world's environmental
TABLE 3-7 Public Opinion Poll Results: Proenvironmental Sentiment in the
U.S. General Public, 1990. (Figures shown
indicate the percentage of people polled who held the corresponding view.)
National Opinion Research Center Poll:
The U.S. is spending on
improving and protecting the environment:
a.
too little 71%
b.
too much 4%
Cambridge Poll:
[Should
we] sacrifice environmental quality or sacrifice economic growth?:
a. sacrifice
econ. growth 64%
b. sacrifice
environ. qual. 15%
Cambridge Poll:
Amount of environmental
protection by government:
a.
too little 62%
b.
too much 16%
NYTimes/CBS
Poll:
Environmental improvements must be made
regardless of the cost:
a.
agree 74%
b.
disagree 21%
Source: Dunlap,
R. Trends in public opinion toward environmental issues: 1965-90. Society
and Natural Resources, Volume 4. Copyright 1991.
Taylor & Francis, Inc., Washington, D.C. Reproduced with permission.
All rights reserved.
problems
primarily to overpopulation [in poorer countries]
[p. 2]."
Of course,
people's responses to public opinion poll
questions and their true values and beliefs are not necessarily the same. Further, people's values and beliefs do not necessarily consistently affect their actual behavior, a fact that behavioral and social scientists have long emphasized (and which we discuss in detail in Chapter 4). Although for these reasons it is possible to infer too much from public opinion data, there are still several reasons to be impressed by the extent of public expressions of environmental con- cern. First, it is striking and unusual that proenvironmental public sentiments in the United States have remained quite strong over the last twenty-five years and are now stronger than ever before. This pattern of long and relatively consistent public support is very different from
the pattern found for a variety of other social issues, which
typically occupy the public's attention for only a few years or even months.
Second,
environmental concern is widespread and cuts
across traditional sociodemographic lines. Although environmental support is positively related to respondents' youth and their levels of education and income, and although differences between men and women
are sometimes reported, the effects of these variables
on strength of support are very modest (Arcury
and Christianson, 1990; Hines, Hungerford, and
Tomera, 1987; Jones and Dunlap, 1992). In other words,
environmental concern is found among all social
strata, races, education levels, and so on. Moreover, at the international level (as we noted above), high levels of environmental concern are found not only in wealthy countries but also in developing countries and countries of the former Socialist bloc (Dunlap, Gallup, and Gallup, 1993). The claim that is
March
1989
(Alaskan oil spill)
1989
(Alaskan oil spill)
FIGURE 3-2 Public Views of Environmental Protection "Regardless of Cost"
1981-1989
From national telephone
surveys conducted by the New York Times/CBS News,
and the New York Times.
Source: From
Mitchell, R. Public opinion and the green lobby.
In Vig, N., and Kraft, M. (Eds.), Environmental Policy in the 1990s. Copyright
1990. Washington, D.C.: CO Press. Reproduced
with permission.
sometimes made—that environmental concern is a
luxury of the rich and well educated—seems to be untrue both within the U.S. population and at
the international level.
Third, research data suggest that
proenvironmental public
sentiments are strong enough to affect such actual behaviors as voting for proenvironmental political candidates and purchasing
proenvironmental goods
and services, as we discuss in detail later in the chapter. In sum,
environmental concern appears to be widespread, relevant to action, and gaining in strength.
Emerging Support for the Ecological Worldview
In addition to the high levels of public support
for environmental
protection, there is now evidence suggesting the emergence and increasing acceptance of the contemporary ecological worldview (Table 3-6). Only a few relevant studies have been done in this country,
most of them by sociologist Riley Dunlap. In the
mid-1970s, Dunlap (1978), his colleagues, and others (Dunlap and Van Liere, 1978, 1984; Lovrich et al., 1987; Arcury and Christianson, 1990; Dunlap et
al., 1992) proposed the concept of a "new
environmental paradigm" (NEP), a paradigm, they argued, emerging
in Western countries. Note that Dunlap et al.'s NEP while mainly a worldview, is also to a lesser extent a value orientation.
Table 3-8 shows the
main tenets of Dunlap and Van
Liere's (1978) NEP as represented by the twelve items in their survey instrument. Dunlap and
Van Liere chose the
statements in the table based mainly on a review of literature published in the
mid-1970s by ecologists, environmental scientists, and others concerned about environmental problems.
Dunlap and
colleagues asked their research subjects to rate, on i questionnaire form, the degree to which they agreed or disagreed with each of the twelve
statements.
Note that some of the twelve statements are worded so that a respondent's disagreement with
the statement signifies belief
in the NEP; this wording is used to detect
if a respondent did not really read the statements and only agreed or disagreed with them uniformly.
The first ten
items in the table assess respondents' beliefs about the relationship between
humanity and nature—how
it is and how it ought to be. These items duplicate
several aspects of the ecological worldview that
we discussed earlier (Table 3-6). The final two items of the NEP scale focus on the value of nonhuman versus human life. Although Dunlap et al. did
their initial research before Merchant (1992) published her three-part classification of ethics/values, disagreement with these final two items is quite
consistent with Merchant's ecocentric value orientation. Dunlap and colleagues' NEP scale is like the
pro-
TABLE 3-8 Dunlap
and Colleagues' New Environmental Paradigm Scale (Subjects Rated Their Level of Agreement with Each Statement)
WORLDVIEW
We are
approaching the limit of the number of people the Earth can support.
The
balance of nature is very delicate and easily upset.
Mankind was created to
rule over the rest of nature.
When
humans interfere with nature it often produces disastrous consequences.
To maintain a healthy economy we will have
to develop a "steady-state" economy in which industrial growth is controlled.
Humans
must live in harmony with nature in order to survive.
The Earth
is like a spaceship with only limited room and resources.
Humans
need not adapt to the natural environment, because they can remake it to suit
their needs.
There are
limits to growth beyond which our industrialized society cannot expand.
Mankind ig severely abusing the environment.
VALUES
Humans
have the right to modify the natural environment to suit their needs. Plants and animals exist primarily to be used
by humans.
Source: Adapted
from Dunlap, R., and Van Liere, K. The "New Environmental Paradigm." Journal
of Environmental Education, Volume 9, p. 13. Copyright
1978. Heldref Publications. Used with permission.
grams of the proenvironmental movements
we discussed earlier in the chapter, in that it
embraces both the ecological worldview and ecocentric values.
In several research studies, Dunlap and his
colleagues found high levels of public agreement with items of the NEP. Thus, Dunlap and Van Liere
(1978) found
that an average of 74.5 percent of 806 randomly selected residents of the state of Washington
"agreed" or
"strongly agreed" with the twelve NEP items (items scored in a proenvironmental direction
to compensate
for differences in item wordings). Further, Dunlap and Van Liere found that approximately 25 percent of the respondents adhered
"coherently" to the
twelve .NEP items. That is, 25 percent of the respondents responded to the scale in a highly consistent proenvironmental way. They "strongly
agreed" with most, if not all, of
the proenvironmental statements,
suggesting a coherent ecological worldview (and an ecocentric value orientation), and not merely a tendency to support environmental protection measures on a piecemeal, case-by-case basis.
In subsequent research, Lovrich, Taurutani,
and Pierce (1987) found
significant numbers of "coher ent" new-environmental-paradigm
supporters in Japan as
well as the United States. Further, research data suggest that public acceptance of the new environmental paradigm has been increasing. In
1990, Dunlap and his colleagues
(Dunlap et al., 1992) presented eight of
the original NEP items to a representative
sample of residents of the state of Washington and compared the results with those from the similar sample,
noted above, surveyed in 1976. Overall, the 1976
respondents endorsed each of the eight items at an average level of 71 percent—a high level of acceptance. By 1990, acceptance had increased somewhat
further, to an average of 78 percent
endorsement. This evidence suggests
that it is not only support for environmental policies that has been
increasing but also support for the ecological worldview (and also ecocentric
values).
A Direct Search for Ecocentric Public Values
In related and more recent research, Paul Stern and
colleagues surveyed a representative sample of resi-
colleagues surveyed a representative sample of resi-
64 PART II BEHAVIORAL SOLUTION STRATEGIES
dents of Fairfax County, Virginia, a large
suburban area of Washington, D.C., in
a direct attempt to detect the emergence in
the public of a ecocentric value orientation (Stern, Dietz, Guagnano, and Kalof,
1994; Stern and Dietz, 1994). Their
data failed to confirm a coherent
ecocentric orientation distinct from a homocentric one (in their terms, a "social-altruistic" one). However, the Stern et al. data revealed
surprisingly strong public support for
several of the individual value items that comprise the ecocentric
ethical position.
In their research, Stern et al. first
compiled a list of specific values—including both homocentric and ecocentric values—from the work of Schwartz
(1992). The
list is sum marized in Table 3-9. Note in the leftmost column of Table 3-9 the cluster or group
of values that
Schwartz calls self-transcendent values. In Merchant's (1992) terms, these values include some that appear to be ecocentric (unity with nature, protecting the
environment, and a world of beauty) and others
that appear homocentric (a world at peace, equality, social justice, and
helpfulness). Egocentric values are to be found in the two other value clusters
that Schwartz calls self-enhancement and
openness to change.
Stern et al. added two environmental value
items to Schwartz's
self-transcendent values to see if lengthening the list would make it easier to statistically identify in their respondents' value systems a
coherent ecocentric value cluster separate from a homocentric cluster. Stern et al. presented each respondent with the list of value items and asked him/her to
rate the importance of each item on a
scale, along with other items about environmental beliefs and actions. Stern et al. found that most of their respondents strongly endorsed many of the homocentric value items and many respondents strongly endorsed several of the individual ecocentric value items. However, so far, Stern et al. have failed to find
convincing evidence that a separate
coherent ecocentric set of values is
emerging in their representative U.S. population. As Table 3-9 indicates, homocentric and ecocentric
values, though they are distinct in the literature
of the environmental movement, could not be disentangled in this cross-section
of citizens. That is, individuals who endorsed the ecocentric items
tended
TABLE 3-9 Four
Classes of Values
SELF-TRANSCENDENCE SELF-ENHANCEMENT OPENNESS
TO CHANGE TRADITIONAL•
Unity with nature Protecting the
environment Preventing
pollutionb Respecting the Earthb
A world at peace Equality
Social justice
Being helpful
A world of beauty
|
Authority Social
power Wealth
Influence
|
An exciting life A varied life
Curiosity
Enjoying life
|
Honoring
parents and elders Honesty
Obedience Self-discipline Family security
Cleanliness Politeness
Social
order
|
Source:
Stern, Dietz, Guagnano, and Kalof, 1994. The
values are listed in order of the strength of relationship between individual items in a cluster and a scale that represents
the entire cluster as a single factor.
aSchwartz's (1992) term is "conservation," in
the sense of wanting to conserve existing institutions. Stern et al. (1994)
used the term tradition, because in the literature on
environmentalism, the term conservation has a very different
meaning. Traditionalists are not necessarily conservationists.
bThese items were added to those originally used by
Schwartz (1992).
also
to endorse the other items in the self-transcendence cluster, all of which are homocentric.
(It is possible,
though Stern et al. have not yet examined the possibility, that a separate ecocentric value
orientation is emerging in certain
subgroups, such as environmental activists
or youth.)
The Stern et al. data thus show that the
ideological struggle
concerning proenvironmental values is not nearly
over. At this point, the homocentric and ecocentric
ethics seem to be combined in many people's minds, rather than competing. Stern et al. believe the progress of radical ecologists' efforts to change
the ethical basis of environmental concern can be gauged by monitoring
changes in the structure of human values
in particular populations. If, for instance, the increasing environmentalism of younger cohorts of
the population reflects a value shift
toward ecocentric values, that may be
an early indicator of a change in the typical value structure in the society.
If radical ecologists can succeed in socializing youth in a new value structure, the result might be significant
for the future of mass environmental
concern and possibly for action.
The Emergence of "Post-Materialist"
Values
The political scientist Ronald Inglehart, in his book Culture
Shift in Advanced Industrial Society (1990), argues that a
profound shift of basic values has been occurring
in Western countries over the past two decades, a shift that is broader and more general than one toward ecocentrism. This shift, Inglehart suggests, may play a role in increasing public environmental concern and support for proenvironmental policies.
Based on an extensive analysis of data from public
opinion surveys in as many as twenty-five different countries between 1970 and 1988, Inglehart concludes
that the public has become less interested in the
pursuit of money and material objects ("Materialist" values) and more interested in pursuing
non-monetary goals
("Post-Materialist" values), such as esthetically pleasing surroundings (including environmental protection), self-expression (for
example, more say in how things are
decided in workplaces), and self-esteem. Inglehart argues that although this
trend had its origin in the decades of
economic prosperity
after World War II, the trend toward post-materialism has not weakened during major economic recessions in the mid-1970s and early 1980s.
One significant facet of Inglehart's (1990)
work concerns the
values of young people. He writes: "Everyone has heard that youth . . . [in the late 1980s turned] conservative, and that they . . .
[were] mainly interested
in preparing for lucrative careers so that they ... [could] become Yuppies and devote their lives to conspicuous consumption."
Inglehart's data, however,
do not support this perception. Although more
students went into business careers in the 1980s than before, Inglehart sees that trend as a rational response to
job availability. His general conclusion is this:
". [T]he overwhelming bulk of the evidence indi cates that the basic values of . . . youth [in the late 1980s
were] not more
materialistic than those of their counterparts a decade or two earlier. Nor ... [were] they
politically conservative in any basic sense [p. 12]."
Inglehart's data indicate that materialists in
Western countries
outnumbered postmaterialists by approximately four to one in the early 1970s, but by 1988 the ratio was about four to three. He
predicted that
because materialists are older than postmaterialists, by 2000 they will be about equal in
numbers. Inglehart
concluded that even by 1990, the post-materialists represented a large group of potential votes for proenvironmental political parties.
He noted that in
eleven European countries, an average of 47 percent of the adult population expressed a willingness
to vote for "ecologist" political parties, such as the West German "Greens."
Despite this finding on people's
willingness to vote for ecologist political
parties, the impacts of post-materialist values on public concern about
the environment remain uncertain. The
results of several research studies
that attempted specifically to identify these impacts are so far equivocal.
Inglehart presented some additional
evidence to support a link between environmentalism
and postmaterialist values (Ingle-hart,
1992), but other preliminary studies have failed to support this relationship (Dunlap et al., 1993; Brechin and
Kempton, 1994).
66 PART 11 BEHAVIORAL SOLUTION STRATEGIES
Looking broadly, then, at the above research
on postmaterialist values and the research on the new environmental paradigm and on ecocentric
values, we conclude that increased
public support for environmentalism is due at least in part to increasing
acceptance of new beliefs about
human-environmental relations, such
as Dunlap's NEP. However, we cannot tell with certainty whether
environmentalism also reflects a
shift in basic human values, such as increasing postmaterialism or ecocentric (biocentric-altruistic) values, because not enough studies have been done.
Postmaterialism is increasing, but its connection to environmentalism has not yet been demonstrated,
and data on Schwartz's value
clusters have not been collected for a long enough time to tell whether
a value shift is occurring.
ISSUE TWO: WILL CHANGES IN VALUES AND BELIEFS PERSIST?
If, as Inglehart and Dunlap claim, the
developed countries (at least) are experiencing
a shift toward post-materialist values and
an initial emergence of a new ecological paradigm for understanding human-environmental relationships (and assuming that
postmaterialist values do have a
significant positive impact on people's
environmental concern), will these value and belief changes be permanent? The permanence of shifts in basic
values or in basic orientations towards the
natural environment depends, of course, on what is causing the, shifts.
One theory implicit in some of the work of both Inglehart and
Dunlap, is rooted in the satisfaction of human
needs. The argument has its roots in the work of the psychologist Abraham Maslow (1954), who postulated that human beings have a hierarchy of needs beginning with so-called basic needs, such as
the needs for food, air, and
protection from danger, and moving up through "higher" needs, such as
respect from others, social position, self-esteem, and self-expression. According to the theory, higher
needs are not expressed unless the
basic needs are supplied to an
adequate level. Since postmaterialist values and concern with the
environment both represent higher needs, they
can be expected to be significant in people's consciousness only as
lower, material needs are satisfied. It follows from this line of reasoning
that as people's basic material needs are
met, they begin to express
postmaterialist values. This is why postmaterialism first appeared as a
major social phenomenon during the period of
Western prosperity after World War
II. If this analysis is correct, postmaterialist values are likely to
continue to be expressed as long as individuals
expect to have their material needs adequately
met. Thus, barring economic collapse in the West, postmaterialism can be
expected to last a long time. Moreover,
economic development in other countries
can be expected to lead to increasing post-materialism there as well, and thus to increased concern about
environmental quality.
This theory is
plausible but hard to test without letting
several decades pass. We should note, though, that
the widespread environmental concern now being expressed in developing
countries suggests that material satisfaction is not always necessary for
environmental problems to be taken
seriously.
A second theory is
that the value shift toward envirournentalismtasibeen influenced by scientific information demonstrating the interconnectedness
of all life and by graphic
representations, including photographs from
space, of the finiteness of the planet Earth.
Dunlap's new ecological paradigm is in large part a set of beliefs that have been supported by decades of ecological science, and it may be that
science has played an important part
in changing people's understanding
of the world, which in turn has led to a change in values (again, it is hard to disentwine ecocentric values and a scientific-ecology world-view). If this theory is correct—and it is also
very difficult to test—the new ways of
thinking are likely to become more
prevalent as older people with older beliefs are replaced in the
population with new generations raised with
the new scientific understanding. Under
this theory, the change is also likely to be very long-lasting.
A third theory is that value changes occur not in whole populations but in cohorts, groups of people
of similar age who share common
formative experiences. Under this
theory, postmaterialism is historically
rooted in the experience of a generation that saw privation (the Great Depression of the 1930s) replaced by prosperity. The children of the Depression
3 RELIGIOUS AND
MORAL APPROACHES: CHANGING VALUES. BELIEFS. AND WORLDVIEWS 67
were materialist because of their
experience, and the children
of the postwar period were postmaterialist because of their experience. Similarly, the children of Earth Day adopted the beliefs (and values) of
the new ecological paradigm, while
their forebears, who were not raised with
the environmental movement, did not. Under
this theory, the future of ecocentric values and ecological thinking is much more uncertain. As events bring new issues to the forefront of public
concern, people may shift their
priorities between values—materialist versus postmaterialist, ecocentric
versus homocentric or egocentric, and so forth. In fact, much of the debate over environmental policy can be seen
as an effort to bring one set of
values or another to the fore. When
the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
accepted the language of risk analysis in its policy thinking during the 1980s, it signaled a subtle
change of values. Environmental protection seemed to put ecocentric values
first, whereas risk management implies that the environment needs to suffer some
insult, and the question is how to
balance it against other risks,
particularly risks to economic growth. The results of such political and
ideological debates express a
society's values at a particular time, and it may be that individuals raised in a period of such
debate have their values shaped for a
lifetime by the winning paradigm. If
this is how environmental values and thinking
changes, the proenvironmental developments of the late 1960s and the
1970s may be reversible.
Not enough is known to tell which of
these theories is most accurate, but one
thing is common to all of them. It is
that values, and basic ways of thinking about human-environment relations, are hard to change in adults. Shifts in the dominant values or ways of thinking in a society are therefore slow,
generational prpcesses, so that whatever effects they have on behavior will be long-lasting.
ISSUE THREE: HOW DO VALUES AND BELIEFS INFLUENCE
PEOPLE'S ACTIONS?
In prior sections, we described four Western, radical proenvironmental religious/ethical movements,
reviewed survey data
on people's values and beliefs toward
the environment and changes over time in
these values and beliefs, and discussed the
likelihood of such changes becoming
permanent. However, we have not yet discussed
the effects of people's values and beliefs on their actions. As we noted
earlier, if proenvironmental shifts
in people's values and world-view
don't translate to changes in their behavior (e.g., taking energy conservation
actions, voting for proenvironmental
political candidates, and so on), then shifts in values and beliefs will
have relatively little impact. We now,
therefore, take an in-depth look at the
links between people's values and beliefs and their willingness to
support environmental protection policies
or to take proenvironmental actions. Our focus will be primarily on the impacts of values.
To understand the
value and ethical basis of environmental concern and action, we need first to step back and consider the full range of human values (i.e., not just environmentally relevant
ones). An ongoing international
research project, organized by the social psychologist Shalom Schwartz at Hebrew University in Jerusalem, is examining just this question (Schwartz, 1992), (see Table 3-9). The
project is searching
for universals in the structure of human values
by asking respondents in many different countries
to rate the importance to them of a list of fifty-six different values,
including almost all those in Table 39. It
has found that although the importance of particular values varies from one national population to another, the relationships between the values are
quite constant. For example, people
who value wealth highly tend also to
value power and influence highly, regardless
of the country they live in. People who value variety in their lives tend also to value excitement and
enjoyment. People who value honesty also tend to value obedience,
cleanliness, and family security. And people who value social justice also
tend to value equality, beauty, and
protecting the environment. Schwartz
found that in every country studied, the
fifty-six values fell into almost exactly the same clusters. Table 3-9
lists the clusters and some of the values in each.
As we noted earlier, several of the
self-transcendent
values in the left-most column of Table 3-9 are clearly relevant to protection of the
environment: These
are the ecocentric values (e.g., protecting the environment, a world of beauty); the other
self-
68 PART
II BEHAVIORAL SOLUTION STRATEGIES
transcendent values are homocentric (e.g.,
world at peace,
social justice). Egocentric values appear in two other value clusters, self-enhancement and
openness to
change. (The relationship between Inglehart's post-materialist values that we discussed earlier
in the chapter and the broad value clusters identified by Schwartz has not yet
been systematically investigated.
It seems on the surface, however, that Inglehart is claiming a shift away from traditional and
self-enhancement values to self-transcendent
values and openness to change, which seem to
be postmaterialist.)
In recent research, which we partially
described earlier in the chapter, Stern and colleagues have begun to look for direct evidence of links
between value clusters and individuals'
willingness to take political action for environmental protection (Stern, Dietz, and Kalof, 1993; Stern, Dietz, Guagnano, and Kalof, 1994; Stern and Dietz, 1994). Recall that Stern
et al. compiled an enhanced list of
values from the Schwartz (1992) work
and presented the list, along with
other questions about environmental beliefs and actions, to their sample of Fairfax County, Virginia, residents. As we already noted, Stern et al. failed
to find convincing evidence that a
separate ecocentric set of values is
emerging in the population of their study.
The results indicated that homocentric (social-altruistic) and ecocentric (biospheric) values could not be
disentangled in their sample of citizens. However,
while the Stern et al. results failed to show a distinction between ecocentric
and homocentric sets of values, the
results did clearly suggest an influence of values on behavior. The cluster of self-transcendent values (Stern et al. termed it
"biospheric-altruistic") was
strongly predictive of people's self-reported willingness to take politically significant actions
such as boycotting the, products of
a company that pollutes, signing a petition
for tougher environmental laws, and refusing
to invest in or work for a polluting company. The self-enhancement value cluster, which consists of egocentric
values, also predicted willingness to take action,
but in a negative direction—people with strong self-enhancement values were less supportive of proenvironmental actions. The other two value clusters
were unrelated to action. Thus, the values or ethics that writers like Merchant
link to environmen tal concern on
theoretical grounds in fact predict support for environmental protection; other human values, though also universal, are generally
unrelated to environmentalism.
A
Closer Look at How Values (and Beliefs about the Consequences of Environmental Problems)
Influence Actions
Stern et al. take the position that people's
values are likely
to be especially strong determinants of their proenvironmental actions because
people often need to react to environmental conditions or problems on the basis
of very limited knowledge or experience. People are continually faced
with environmental issues
appearing in the media that are newly discovered or reinterpreted by
scientists, and they must find ways to determine whether to take these issues seriously enough to do something about them. Stern et
al. reason that
values provide a basis for those choices. People consider what they know about an environmental condition or problem and ask themselves
whether that
condition or problem is likely to have harmful
consequences for anything they value. If it is, and if they can do something to
prevent the harm, they are inclined to take
action. In fact, they may feel a sense
of moral obligation to take action. (We discuss the role of moral obligation in more detail in Chapters 4 and 6.)
In the Stern et al.
formulation, then, the keys to people's response to
any environmental problem are people's
values as well as their specific beliefs about the
consequences of environmental problems to the things they value (note
that a person's beliefs about harmful
consequences are just one part of his/her set of environmentally
relevant beliefs or worldview.) As we already described, Stern et al. found
that respondents' values were significantly correlated with their actual political behaviors. Stern et al. further
found that respondents' beliefs
about the adverse effects of environmental
conditions also affected their willingness
to act. Effects on nonhuman species and the biosphere made the most difference, but effects on oneself also mattered, and in one of the studies
(Stern et al., 1993), effects on people in general also motivated action. These beliefs, however, were in turn
affected
by values. A striking finding was that people with strong biospheric-altruistic values were
more likely than others
to believe environmental changes had adverse effects on all kinds of valued objects: nonhuman species, other human beings, and oneself.
Stern et al. interpreted their results as indicating that values_c_an__affect proenvironmental
action both directly and indirectly,
through beliefs about consequences. Values
may affect these beliefs by simply motivating
people to pay attention to information about
how environmental conditions affect things they value, or they may shape the beliefs directly by leading people to believe what they want to
believe. For instance, individuals who hold strong traditional or
self-enhancement values, which environmentalists often claim will need to be sacrificed to preserve the environment, may deny that human activities are harmful to nature because such a denial allows them
to believe they need not give up what
they value; similarly, individuals who value the biosphere for its own sake may believe with minimal evidence any claim that a human activity is threatening a
natural system. The Stern et al. data
so far do not make clear whether one
or the other, or both, mechanisms are operating to influence
environmental beliefs. The data do show,
however, that basic values are relevant both to individuals' beliefs about the consequences of environmental problems and to their actions.
What do these studies of environmental
values and action
have to say about the prospects for social change through movements like deep ecology and ecofeminism? The studies demonstrate that basic values can have far-reaching implications for individuals'
willingness to support proenvironmental actions. This means that the ideological debates about homocentric
versus ecocentric ethics, "deep" versus "shallow" ecology, and the like, which center on
whether nonhuman aspects of the environment should be valued in their own right, are potentially important.
Factors That Can Limit the Effect of Value and Belief Changes
As we have just discussed, changes in
people's values
can have significant effects on their willingness to
support proenvironmental policies and to take proen-
can have significant effects on their willingness to
support proenvironmental policies and to take proen-
vironmental actions. However, when
environmentally related public morals,
values, and beliefs change, the effect on the environment may be sharply
limited by several factors. Assume, for
example, that as of tomorrow
morning, all citizens of the United States considered it their moral
duty to conserve energy and reduce pollution
by reducing gasoline consumption. When morning came, a great many of
them still would be living in suburban areas
with separated single-family houses, and still would be dependent on
automobile transportation. These structural
conditions would greatly limit what
individuals could do for the environment
by acting on their new values and beliefs.
Markets would further constrain their options. Anyone who wanted to
trade in the family automobile for one that
could drive 70 miles on a gallon of gas would not be able to do so because,
though such cars can be built, they
are not now on the market. These sorts
of structural and market factors are difficult to reverse. Moreover,
they change very slowly, and the unorganized
actions of individuals can do very little to change them.
There are other barriers to action that may be easier to remove. Many people, for instance, do not know which
of their daily actions are most responsible for energy use or toxic waste production. Without this information, they are unlikely to act effectively
on their values and beliefs, but with
it, they might change.
CONCLUSION
We
have argued
in this chapter that Western culture is strongly human-centered, considers nonhuman forms of life
as having importance only in direct proportion to their usefulness to humans, and embraces a
non-ecological set of beliefs about the
environment. These basic Western values and
beliefs have several possible
origins, though the Judeo-Christian religious tradition is probably not primarily responsible. Regardless of their source, however, these values
and beliefs cannot be helping Western
countries solve major environmental
problems that ultimately threaten
human survival.
While it seems quite plausible that changes in
Western values and
worldview—changes that have
70 PART II BEHAVIORAL
SOLUTION STRATEGIES
already begun—are necessary to lessen or
avert environmental
problems, a look at cultures that have strongly proenvironmental religions and belief systems suggests that even radical changes are
not likely to do
the job by themselves. The influences of religious and moral beliefs and institutions are often severely limited by the influences of political and economic forces and also the force of population growth. Furthermore, basic values and beliefs
usually change slowly—in entire populations, it may take a generation (or more) for major changes to be achieved. In addition, value and belief change
does not lead in any straightforward
way to behavior change and
environmental improvement: Structural conditions and other barriers often keep
values and beliefs from being
enacted as behavior, and when this occurs,
it will require changes in the structure of society and in people's funds of knowledge for changed values and beliefs to be carried into
action. In the following chapters, we
discuss ways of eliminating barriers
to action by changing attitudes, providing information, changing incentive
structures, and creating new institutions.
But even though proenvironmental shifts in
moral/ religious/value/belief
systems can bring about little change
in behavior and environmental improvement by themselves, this sort of change can still be a critical
part of the
solution to the problems of the commons. We will see in subsequent chapters, and especially
Chapter 7, that the four main solution
approaches (of which the religious/moral
approach is one) can reinforce each other, creating more effect in combination
than the sum of their individual influences. Further, removing the barriers that often block proenvironmental individual action, as discussed in this and subsequent chapters, often requires action by
governments, which, in turn, may
require an aroused and concerned
public that actively promotes the necessary changes in government policy. Public concern and political action, in turn, may require that the
public embrace proenvironmental values and an ecological worldview. Thus, change in values and worldviews may be an important stimulus for public concern, arousal, and political action; similar changes on
the part of government policy makers
may be critical as well.
Finally, we have reviewed in this chapter four new and "radical" religious/moral/ethical
movements that all share an ecocentric value orientation and a world-view consonant with contemporary ecology. These movements—ecotheology,
Thomas Berry's religion, deep ecology, and
ecofeminism—share major elements
with Asian religions, and the religions of some Native American tribes.
If these new movements, or parts of them,
are widely adopted in Western cultures, they may have a positive
influence in averting global and regional
environmental problems, as well as in helping to satisfy our spiritual needs.
NOTES
1. Note that our analysis differs from
Greeley's in three ways: First, the items on "moral
rigidity" were not in the GSS 1993 survey, and hence we could not use
them in our regression analyses. Second, the
"religious imagery" questions were in the 1993 survey, but they did
not significantly correlate with our four environmentalism
indicators, and we therefore omitted them from the analysis.
Third, the regression analysis results shown in B
columns of Table 33 controlled for age, education, income,
gender, and political liberalism; Greeley failed to control
for income and gender in his regression analyses; however,
we found that the inclusion or exclusion of these two
variables made very
little difference in results.
2. In
addition to the factors described below, some argue that
Hinduism's otherworldly orientation and emphasis may
lead to the neglect of real-world problems.
3. Berry
and others want to retain many elements of our basic
Judeo-Christian heritage, such as the Ten Commandments,
that proscribe murder, and so on.
4. This
claim must be qualified. In Bacon's day, more than now,
nature was a source of danger and threat, poorly understood,
and much feared. Disease was rampant and nature was a prime
killer of people. It is not surprising that humans wanted to
understand and master nature.
PENDAHULUAN
Pidato yang indah dan bergerak ini menjelaskan agama pro -
lingkungan yang menyerupai agama dari beberapa suku asli Amerika . Ini suku dan
agama mendahului revolusi industri dan gelombang ke arah barat dari Eropa
penjajah / pemukim di seluruh benua Amerika oleh berabad-abad , bahkan mungkin
ribuan tahun . Oleh karena itu ironis bahwa sejumlah ulama kontemporer , teolog
, dan penulis mengklaim bahwa kecuali barat modern mengadopsi agama seperti yang
ada di pidato , kita akan gagal untuk memecahkan masalah lingkungan yang
mengancam kelangsungan hidup manusia ( misalnya , Naess , 1989; Devall , 1985;
Sessions , 1985 , dan Ehrenfeld , 1978) . Dengan kata lain, orang-orang ini
berpendapat bahwa kita harus menyisihkan ajaran agama kami saat ini dan praktek
yang mendukung yang proenvironmental dalam pidato . Tidak pendek dari perubahan
radikal jenis ini akan memastikan bahwa orang Barat - baik secara individu
maupun kolektif - berperilaku dalam cara proenvironmental . Dalam bab ini ,
kita meneliti argumen ini dan mengeksplorasi dampak dari ajaran agama dan moral
dan praktek tentang asal-usul , dan solusi yang mungkin , masalah lingkungan
global dan regional .
Meskipun Kepala Seatlh " pidato " singkat , itu
mengilustrasikan komponen utama dari sebagian besar agama dan sistem keagamaan
. Dalam hal agama Seatlh itu , semua komponen ini bertindak untuk mendorong
individu proenviron - mental dan perilaku kolektif . ( Komponen dif -beda
tumpang tindih dan jalin , sehingga agak buatan untuk membahas mereka secara
terpisah . ) Pertama , agama menjunjung tinggi nilai-nilai dasar tertentu ,
yaitu , hal-hal , kualitas , dan prinsip-prinsip yang dianggap penting dan
berharga . Dengan demikian , bagian-bagian dari pidato mendesak penghormatan
dan penghargaan terhadap bentuk-bentuk non-manusia hidup dan untuk proses alami
. Beberapa contoh spesifik : . " [ E ] sangat bagian dari bumi adalah suci
.... Setiap jarum bersinar pinus , ... pantai berpasir , ... bersenandung serangga
... kudus .... Udara sangat berharga . " Pidato juga menggambarkan
bentuk-bentuk non-manusia hidup sebagai memiliki banyak kepentingan dan layak
sebagai kehidupan manusia : " Manusia tidak menenun jaring kehidupan , ia
hanyalah seutas benang di dalamnya . "
Kedua , agama mencakup keyakinan dasar dan pandangan dunia
( koleksi keyakinan tentang dunia dan perspektif keseluruhan dari mana seorang
individu dan budaya melihatnya) . Dengan demikian , pidato menekankan
keterkaitan semua bentuk kehidupan dan ketergantungan manusia pada bentuk bukan
manusia . Sebagai contoh: " Bunganya saudari kita , rusa , kuda , elang
besar , ini adalah saudara-saudara kita di puncak berbatu , rumput ... , dan
manusia semua milik keluarga yang sama .... ". Dan : " Semua hal yang
terhubung .... Apapun yang menimpa bumi menimpa anak-anak bumi . "
Selanjutnya , pidato menggambarkan bumi sebagai pencipta hidup dan pandangan
manusia sebagai sangat berhubungan dengan itu . Sebagai contoh: " ... [ T
] bumi yang cantik adalah ibu dari orang kulit merah Kami adalah bagian dari
bumi dan itu adalah bagian dari .
Ketiga , agama termasuk sistem etika atau moral , yaitu ,
mereka secara khusus mendorong perilaku individu tertentu dan melarang perilaku
lainnya . Beberapa etika dan moral yang tersirat dalam nilai-nilai dasar dan
keyakinan . Lainnya etika / moral yang disebutkan secara eksplisit . Dengan
demikian pidato mendesak : " [ Y ] ou harus memberikan [ sungai ] kebaikan
Anda akan memberikan ... [ a] saudara . . " Dan : " [ laki-laki Red ]
membunuh [ hanya cukup kerbau ] untuk tetap hidup .... "
Keempat , agama umumnya termasuk upacara , ritual , dan
praktek-praktek lain yang menyampaikan dan memperkuat nilai-nilai mereka ,
kepercayaan , dan perilaku perintah . Upacara dan ritual yang tidak disebutkan
dalam pidato singkat di atas , tetapi mereka memainkan peran utama dalam
agama-agama asli Amerika , tradisi keagamaan Barat Yahudi-Kristen , dan
kebanyakan orang lain .
Kelima , agama memiliki elemen spiritual , yaitu ,
unsur-unsur yang melibatkan dewa atau kekuatan gaib . Elemen spiritual
menggugah perasaan dan emosi kita dan mereka menarik bagi sisi intuitif kita .
Dengan demikian , pidato menegaskan bahwa " udara berbagi semangat dengan
semua kehidupan mendukung ... " dan pidato mengacu pada " refleksi
hantu di air jernih danau [ yang ] mengatakan ... peristiwa dan kenangan dalam
kehidupan umat-Ku . " Perhatikan juga bagaimana bergerak , indah, dan
inspirasi pidato secara keseluruhan . Pidato jauh lebih dari deskripsi
intelektual atau rasional sederhana dari berbagai bentuk kehidupan di alam dan
bagaimana bentuk-bentuk ini berinteraksi .
Meskipun sejumlah ulama , teolog , dan penulis berpendapat
bahwa tidak ada penyelesaian masalah lingkungan yang mungkin tanpa perubahan
besar dalam agama dan moral ke arah pidato , ada beberapa yang mengajukan klaim
yang lebih radikal . Ini ulama / penulis / teolog berpendapat bahwa tidak hanya
agama-agama Barat saat ini tidak memiliki orientasi proenvironmental , tetapi
agama-agama ini sebenarnya antienvironmental ; memang ini keyakinan agama ,
nilai-nilai , dan praktik merupakan penyebab utama dan aktif dari semua masalah
lingkungan kontemporer Barat . Mungkin yang paling terkenal dari para penulis
yang membuat klaim ini adalah sejarawan Lynn Putih, Jr Dalam provokatif , yang
sering dikutip , meski tak lagi diterima secara luas , artikel di majalah
Science ( 1967 ) , White berpendapat bahwa tradisi keagamaan Yahudi-Kristen
adalah akar penyebab semua masalah lingkungan Barat. Putih difokuskan terutama
pada bagian Genesis dari Alkitab . Pertimbangkan hal berikut Kejadian quote :
Dan Tuhan berkata , Baiklah Kita menjadikan manusia menurut
gambar dan rupa kita , dan membiarkan mereka memiliki kekuasaan atas ikan di
laut , dan selama unggas di udara , dan atas ternak dan atas bumi , dan atas
setiap merayap melata di muka bumi .
Maka Allah menciptakan manusia menurut gambar-Nya , menurut
gambar Allah diciptakan-Nya dia ; laki-laki dan perempuan diciptakan-Nya mereka
.
Dan Tuhan memberkati mereka , dan Allah berkata kepada
mereka , Jadilah berbuah , dan berkembang biak , . . . dan menundukkan [ bumi ]
; dan memiliki kekuasaan atas ikan di laut , dan selama unggas dari bumi , dan
atas segala sesuatu yang hidup yang merayap di bumi . ( Kejadian 1:16-28 , Raja
James versi ) .
Perhatikan betapa berbedanya bagian Alkitab ini yang
terkenal adalah dari pidato dikaitkan dengan Kepala Seatlh . Pidato
menggambarkan manusia bukan sebagai spesies khusus tetapi sebagai salah satu
rangkaian dalam keseluruhan " jaring kehidupan . " Manusia dilihat
sebagai tergantung pada bentuk-bentuk lain dari kehidupan dan didesak untuk
melindungi mereka . Manusia merupakan bagian integral dari alam , bukannya
terpisah dari , dan unggul , bentuk-bentuk kehidupan lainnya. Sebaliknya ,
bagian Alkitab menggambarkan manusia sebagai spesies unik dan mulia , karena
hanya manusia diciptakan menurut gambar Allah . Bagian ini juga mendesak
manusia untuk mengendalikan dan " sub - karena " bentuk-bentuk
kehidupan lainnya . Dengan demikian bagian ini membuat perbedaan utama antara
manusia dan seluruh alam , dengan manusia dalam peran utama dan dominan , dan
bentuk-bentuk kehidupan dalam peran sekunder dan tunduk . Akhirnya , paragraf
terakhir ( " berbuah , dan berkembang biak " ) muncul untuk mendorong
pertumbuhan tak terbatas dalam jumlah manusia .
Pandangan Alkitab , White mengklaim , menembus budaya Barat
, menciptakan mengabaikan umum untuk bentuk-bentuk kehidupan non-manusia dan
proses alam , perasaan kekebalan manusia , dan dorongan terhadap pertumbuhan
terbatas . " Terutama dalam bentuk Baratnya , " Putih berpendapat ,
"Kekristenan adalah yang paling antroposentris [yaitu , berpusat pada
manusia ] agama dunia telah melihat .... [ Dalam kisah Alkitab tentang
penciptaan , ] Allah menciptakan terang dan gelap , surgawi tubuh , bumi dan
semua tanaman nya , hewan , burung , dan ikan . Akhirnya Allah ... menciptakan
Adam dan Hawa ... .... Pria bernama semua binatang , sehingga membentuk
dominasinya atas mereka . Allah merencanakan semua ini eksplisit untuk kepentingan
manusia dan aturan , tidak ada item dalam penciptaan fisik memiliki tujuan
apapun simpan untuk melayani keperluan manusia [ p 1205 . ] " .
( 1967 ) posisi dasar White dibagi oleh beberapa ulama lain
dan penulis , sejarawan Arnold Toynbee termasuk ( 1973 ) , ahli biologi Paul
Ehrlich ( 1971 ) , dan perencana regional Ian McHarg ( 1971 ) . Namun, ( 1967)
tesis Putih tidak lagi sangat diterima secara luas . Beberapa telah mengkritik
kedua interpretasi White dari agama tradisi - tion Yudeo-Kristen dan analisis
tentang budaya Barat dan sejarah . Sejumlah ulama dan teolog berpendapat bahwa
walaupun - nilai Barat , keyakinan , dan moral adalah - thropocentric dan
melakukan sah eksploitasi alam untuk tujuan manusia ( dan , oleh karena itu ,
akar penyebab masalah lingkungan ) - tradisi keagamaan Yahudi-Kristen bukanlah
sumber utama dari nilai-nilai , keyakinan , dan moral . Beberapa ulama dan
teolog menyatakan bahwa " berkembang biak dan menundukkan bumi "
bagian dari Genesis yang diambil di luar konteks dan disalahtafsirkan (
misalnya , Shaiko , 1987) . Beberapa titik keluar , lebih lanjut, bahwa banyak
bagian lain dari Perjanjian Lama dan Baru menekankan konsep " pelayanan
", atau perawatan , alam ( misalnya , Shaiko , 1987; Naess , 1989;
Gelderloos , 1992; dan Whitney , 1993) . Ini ulama dan teolog demikian
berpendapat bahwa tradisi Yahudi- Kristen lebih tepat dilihat sebagai sumber
utama nilai-nilai dan keyakinan proenvironmental , bukan nilai-nilai dan
keyakinan antienvironmental . Kami membahas karya ini " ecotheologians
" secara lebih rinci nanti dalam bab ini .
Lain ulama / penulis menyalahkan berpusat pada manusia -
ness budaya Barat dan kepercayaan pada legitimasi mengeksploitasi alam untuk
manusia berakhir bukan pada warisan Yudeo - Kristen kita tetapi pada unsur-unsur
filsafat Yunani kuno yang , sebagian, basis ilmiah modern berpikir ( Callicott
, 1983) , atau pada pandangan alam sebagai mekanik dan lembam yang muncul di
negara-negara Barat pada awal revolusi ilmiah tahun 1600-an ( Shiva , 1989;
Whitney , 1993) , atau perkembangan kapitalisme di Barat negara dimulai pada
akhir 1700-an ( Whitney , 1993) .
Akhirnya , namun ulama lain / penulis , termasuk Ophuls (
1977 ) dan Brown ( 1981 ) , berpendapat bahwa tingkat yang berlebihan
materialisme dan konsumerisme di negara-negara Barat adalah penyebab utama dari
masalah lingkungan , dan ini ulama / penulis mendesak radikal de - lipatan
dalam nilai-nilai ini . Mengutip Brown ( 1981) :
Tak satu pun dari filsafat politik saat ini mencakup
nilai-nilai penting untuk masyarakat yang berkelanjutan . Memang , sebagai
ilmuwan B. Murray dicatat dalam sebuah alamat ke teolog , " Kapitalisme
dan Marxisme memiliki satu hal yang sangat banyak kesamaan : keduanya
menganggap kebutuhan pokok manusia yang material. " Murray yakin bahwa
untuk alasan ini keduanya jatuh pendek . Apakah kapitalis atau sosialis ,
materialisme bukanlah berkelanjutan atau memuaskan dalam jangka panjang [ p .
3501
Mengutip Ophuls ( 1977) :
Mhe .. penyakit bumi mencerminkan penyakit dalam jiwa
manusia industri modern , yang seluruh hidupnya diserahkan untuk mendapatkan ,
untuk penyakit yang tak ada habisnya mendapatkan dan pengeluaran yang tidak
pernah dapat memenuhi aspirasi yang lebih dalam dan akhirnya harus berakhir
dengan budaya , spiritual , dan kematian jasmani [ p . 2321
Untuk meringkas : Banyak sarjana dan penulis berpendapat
bahwa moral Barat , keyakinan, nilai , dan / atau ajaran dan praktik keagamaan
memainkan peran utama dalam menyebabkan masalah lingkungan global dan regio -
nal , dan bahwa moral ini , keyakinan , dan sebagainya harus bergeser tajam ke
arah proenvironmental jika masalah-masalah yang harus dipecahkan .
Conclution
Kami berpendapat dalam bab ini bahwa budaya Barat sangat
berpusat pada manusia , menganggap bentuk non hidup manusia sebagai memiliki
kepentingan hanya dalam proporsi langsung kegunaannya bagi manusia , dan
mencakup satu set non - ekologi keyakinan tentang lingkungan. Nilai-nilai dasar
dan keyakinan Barat memiliki beberapa asal-usul mungkin, meskipun tradisi
keagamaan Yahudi-Kristen mungkin tidak terutama bertanggung jawab . Terlepas
dari sumber mereka, bagaimanapun , nilai-nilai dan keyakinan tidak dapat
membantu negara-negara Barat memecahkan masalah lingkungan utama yang pada
akhirnya mengancam kelangsungan hidup manusia .
Meskipun tampaknya cukup masuk akal bahwa perubahan dalam
nilai-nilai Barat dan pandangan - perubahan yang sudah mulai - diperlukan untuk
mengurangi atau mencegah masalah lingkungan, melihat budaya yang memiliki agama
sangat proenvironmental dan sistem kepercayaan menunjukkan bahwa bahkan
perubahan radikal tidak mungkin untuk melakukan pekerjaan sendiri . Pengaruh
keyakinan dan lembaga agama dan moral seringkali sangat dibatasi oleh pengaruh
kekuatan politik dan ekonomi serta kekuatan pertumbuhan penduduk . Selain itu ,
nilai-nilai dasar dan keyakinan biasanya berubah perlahan -in seluruh populasi
, mungkin diperlukan waktu satu generasi ( atau lebih ) untuk perubahan utama
yang harus dicapai . Selain itu, nilai dan keyakinan perubahan tidak memimpin dengan
cara mudah untuk perubahan perilaku dan perbaikan lingkungan : kondisi
struktural dan hambatan lain sering menjaga nilai-nilai dan keyakinan dari yang
berlaku sebagai perilaku , dan ketika hal ini terjadi , itu akan memerlukan
perubahan dalam struktur masyarakat dan dana masyarakat pengetahuan untuk
mengubah nilai-nilai dan keyakinan yang akan dilakukan ke dalam tindakan .
Dalam bab-bab berikut, kita membahas cara-cara menghilangkan hambatan untuk
bertindak dengan mengubah sikap , memberikan informasi , mengubah struktur
insentif , dan menciptakan lembaga-lembaga baru .
Tapi meskipun pergeseran proenvironmental dalam sistem
moral yang / agama / nilai / berkeyakinan dapat membawa sedikit perubahan dalam
perilaku dan perbaikan lingkungan sendiri , semacam perubahan ini masih bisa
menjadi bagian penting dari solusi untuk masalah-masalah bersama. Kita akan
melihat dalam bab-bab berikutnya , dan terutama Bab 7 , bahwa empat pendekatan
solusi utama ( dari mana pendekatan agama / moral adalah salah satu ) bisa
mengendalikan - memaksa satu sama lain , menciptakan efek yang lebih dalam
kombinasi daripada jumlah pengaruh masing-masing . Selanjutnya , menghilangkan
hambatan yang sering menghalangi aksi individu proenviron - mental, seperti
yang dibahas dalam hal ini dan bab-bab berikutnya , sering memerlukan tindakan
oleh pemerintah-pemerintah , yang , pada gilirannya , mungkin memerlukan publik
terangsang dan khawatir bahwa secara aktif mempromosikan perubahan yang
diperlukan dalam pemerintahan kebijakan . Perhatian publik dan aksi politik ,
pada gilirannya , mungkin mengharuskan masyarakat merangkul nilai-nilai
proenvironmental dan pandangan dunia ekologis . Dengan demikian , perubahan
nilai-nilai dan pandangan dunia mungkin merupakan stimulus penting bagi perhatian
publik , gairah , dan aksi politik ; perubahan serupa pada bagian dari pembuat
kebijakan pemerintah mungkin penting juga.
Akhirnya , kami telah ditinjau dalam bab empat "
radikal " agama gerakan / moral yang / etika baru dan bahwa semua bagian
orientasi nilai ecocentric dan pandangan dunia konsonan dengan ekologi
kontemporer . Ini gerakan - ecotheology , agama Thomas Berry , ekologi yang
mendalam , dan ecofeminism - saham utama elemen dengan agama-agama Asia , dan
agama-agama dari beberapa suku asli Amerika . Jika gerakan-gerakan baru , atau
bagian dari mereka , secara luas diadopsi dalam budaya Barat , mereka mungkin
memiliki pengaruh positif dalam mencegah masalah-masalah lingkungan global dan
regional , serta membantu untuk memenuhi kebutuhan rohani kita .
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