ABSTRACT

This book explores alternative ways of understanding our environmental situation by challenging the Western view of nature as purely a resource for humans.

Environmental Consciousness, Nature and the Philosophy of Education asserts that we need to retrieve a thinking that expresses a different relationship with nature: one that celebrates nature's otherness and is attuned to its intrinsic integrity, agency, normativity and worth. Through such receptivity to nature's address we can develop a sense of our own being-in-nature that provides a positive orientation towards the problems we now face. Michael Bonnett argues that this reframing and rethinking of our place in nature has fundamental implications for education as a whole, questioning the idea of human "stewardship" of nature and developing the idea of moral education in a world of alterity and non-rational agents.

Drawing on and revising work published by the author over the last 15 years, this book will be essential reading for students and scholars of environmental studies, environmental education, and the philosophy of education.

chapter 1|20 pages

Normalizing catastrophe

A backdrop to environmental issues

chapter 2|20 pages

A phenomenology of nature

The “occurring” of things in nature

chapter 3|19 pages

Transcendent nature and its enemies

chapter 4|20 pages

Environmental consciousness

Intentionality and ecstasy at the centre of human being

chapter 6|25 pages

Listening to nature

Ecological truth and systemic wisdom

chapter 7|24 pages

Ecologizing education