Lynn White (Science, 1967)

“The Historical Roots of Our Ecologic Crisis”


BASIC DIAGNOSIS: "Orthodox Christian arrogance toward nature" is a (the?) root cause of environmental problems.

1.       Our treatment of nature a function of our philosophical/religious world views

          a.       What people do about their ecology depends on what they think about themselves in relation to things around them. Human ecology is deeply conditioned by beliefs about our nature and destiny--that is, by religion.

2.        Joining of science and technology to master nature rooted in arrogant Christian attitude toward nature

3.       Can’t understand the growth of Western science/technology’s ruthless exploitation of nature without seeing their origin in distinctive Christian attitudes toward nature

4.       "Christianity bears a huge burden of guilt"


FEATURES OF CHRISTIANITY RESPONSIBLE

5.       God made the world for man to exploit (“dominion” means dominate)

          a.       Planned it for man’s benefit

          b.       God wants us to rule/exploit the earth (gave us “dominion,” we are its master and should be fruitful and multiply and subdue the earth,)

          c.       "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."

          d.       “Christian axiom that nature has no reason for existence save to serve man”

6.       Man (and only man) made in God’s image

          a.       Humans are the only being on earth with a soul or spirit

          b.       Like God, we transcend nature

          c.       Dualism of man and nature: Man is not a part of nature, but separate from it

                    i.        This is a significant reason we don’t take environmental problems seriously; we don’t see ourselves as part of nature

7.       Rejects animism (spirit in everything) and paganism (worship of earth)

          a.       Rejects idea of spirts in natural entities that must be placated if used

                    i.        The old inhibitions towards exploiting nature now gone

          b.       Allows us to exploit nature with indifference (as no spirit in nature)

8.       Connection of Christianity and Science/Technology

          a.       Christian linear view of time (rather than cyclical with no beginning) allowed for our implicit faith in perpetual progress

          b.       Christian action oriented view of salvation (instead of contemplative attitude) encouraged technology

          c.       Christian natural theology led to science as reading God’s mind to understand how nature worked

          d.       Technology is partly to be explained as a realization of the Christian dogma of man’s transcendence of and rightful mastery over, nature


CONCLUSION

9.       Christianity is the most anthropocentric religion the world has ever seen

          a.       Anthropocentrism: The view that only humans are morally significant in their own right

10.      Christianity’s dogma of man’s transcendence and rightful mastery over nature is what allowed for modern science and technology

          a.       And for our environmentally harmful use of science and technology


SOLUTION

11.     Not more science and technology:

          a.       Can’t avoid an ecological backlash by more application of the science and technology (so tainted with Christian arrogance) that got us here in the first place

12.     Because the cause is philosophical/religious, so must be the solution

          a.       Since the roots of our trouble are so largely religious, the remedy must also be essentially religious, whether we call it that or not. We must rethink and refeel our nature and destiny.”

13.     Proposes Saint Francis of Assisi as a patron saint for environmentalists

          a.       Humility for man as a species

          b.       Pan-psychism (animals and plants? have souls)

          c.       Equality of all beings (deposes man from monarchy over all creatures)

          d.       Each being praises the creator in its own way (as do humans)