The GEC Universe...I


The GEC Universe...is BIG.

This blog presents reports on domain-scale processes and trends underway in the planetary atmosphere, the hydrosphere (oceans, lakes & rivers), and lithosphere (the world's land base).

Overlay that with the planet's biosphere, the diverse array of living animals and plants interacting with the physical domains, and we are staring at a layered, dynamic, interdependent set of variables describing earth's operating framework.

Lastly, we add the human element, the anthrosphere. Even though we humans are essentially part of the planetary whole, we are also the dominant species and influence to a mighty degree all that goes on in the other domains.

Human Behavior: Overcoming the Person-Planet Split


Overcoming the Person-Planet Split


These writings are all about the growing crisis of global environmental change. Looked at in total it would be normal to feel that the combined task of simultaneously addressing population growth, resource consumption and the attendant secondary drivers of global change, is simply overwhelming. One would be tempted to give up in order to preserve some semblance of sanity.

In fact, there are hopeful signs on the horizon that the human species can survive the pending changes in relatively good condition. These changes are already happening more quickly than anyone anticipated, owing to runaway feedback loops previously discussed, but we may still be able to side step the worst effects of change if we implement a set of strategic actions designed to address the root causes of our global dilemma.
To do so we first need a inventory of areas where investment of energy & resources will do the most good. These are the Action Areas that can allow us to slow the pace of global change, redirect some of the negative trends, or perhaps even halt global change outright if collective human willpower is brought to point.

Following presentation of the integrated Global Change Model in previous posts, Figure 13. summarizes a set of eleven Action Areas that show real promise in combating global change.

Fig. 13. Eleven Action Areas for Combating Global Change
In the weeks to come each of these areas will be the subject of discussion, though in no particular order...

...Beginning here with one of the most important and little understood Action Areas - ecological sociology and eco-psychology, especially related to sustainable human behavior.

Sustainability and Human Behavior

Environmental or ecological sociology address the state of the environment, and how we deal (or refuse to deal) with it. The theoretical starting point is the assumption that environmental issues and social equity issues are necessarily and inextricably intertwined. The second part includes what we can do to mitigate the situation, and to recognize the opportunities in the challenges that confront society as a result.

Ecospychology connects psychology and ecology. The political and practical implications are to show humans ways of healing alienation and to build a sane society as part of a sustainable culture. Theodore Roszak is credited with coining the term in his 1992 book, The Voice of the Earth. This was a call for the development of a field in which psychology would go out of the built environment to examine why people continue to behave in "crazy" ways that damage the natural environment. The idea was to help the environmental movement find new ways to motivate people to action, ways more positive than simple protest alone. Roszak expanded the idea in the 1995 anthology Ecopsychology, co-edited with Mary Gomes and Allen Kanner. This book, with articles by each of the editors and many others who would become prominent voices in the field, is still considered by many to be an excellent primer on ecopsychology. As mentioned by Roszak, there are a variety of other names used to describe this field: Gaia psychology, psychoecology, ecotherapy, environmental psychology, green psychology, global therapy, green therapy, Earth-centered therapy, reearthing, nature-based psychotherapy, shamanic counseling, sylvan therapy.

Paul Shepherd's book Nature and Madness examines human behavior in relation to the natural environment, showing the kinds of psychic disjunctions and troubles that have developed over the generations that humans have been seeking to distance themselves from the world (e.g., the human-nature split). Shepard locates the source of our troubles in the invention of agriculture, an act that gave humans the false idea that nature can be controlled and micromanaged in every detail. He observes that environmental destruction is a "mutilation of personal maturity," a failure of emotional development. He adds that "the only society more frightful than one run by children ... might be one run by childish adults." Shepherd advocates for a meaningful, mature connection with the earth, to cultivate a sense of stewardship and responsibility.

The basic idea of ecopsychology is that while today the human mind is shaped by the modern social world, it is also adapted to the natural world in which it evolved. According to biologist
E.O. Wilson, human beings have an innate latent instinct to emotionally connect to nature, called the biophilic instinct.

In a way, one might think of all this an adult version of nature deficit disorder, psychosis brought on by a diminished or maladaptive relationship between people and the natural world.

Below is a splendid summary of how the science of ecopsycology can realign human beliefs and thus behaviors, leading to a healing of the human-nature split.




What is EcoPsychology?
by Robert Greenway

My 95-year-old father asked me the other day what I was working on. As a tough old military man and dairy manager he is usually impatient with my esoteric university topics. I decided to tell him the truth anyway. "Ecopsychology", I said. He looked at me blankly, didn't say another word while he finished his lunch, then pushed his plate away, looked me straight in the eye, and said, "hmm, eco-psychology you say?" "Yes", I said, "Ecopsychology". "Ecopsychology", he said . . . "that covers everything doesn't it?"

"Well, yes," I admitted. And I felt the frustration I feel when noticing the myriad ways people use the term. Something that means 'everything' usually means, more or less, nothing, in my experience.

Ecopsychology is a context for healing the much-vaunted human-nature split. It is an environmental/philosophic movement without a Jung, Wilber, or Arne Naess (founder-philosopher of 'Deep Ecology', which overlaps considerably with ecopsychology). It is a collection of friends talking about their urgent concerns about disappearing species and other human-caused environmental catastrophes taking place on our planet. It is, here and there, almost an academic discipline; and it is, so far, an unsuccessful attempt to 'merge' the fields of psychology and ecology, where 'psychology' means any one or more of a dozen or so fields (from Freud to Maslow to Skinner to Gestalt to Clinical to Wilber) and where 'ecology' means anything from 'nature' (loving it, in particular) to 'hard' scientific ecology (where energy- all biological processes- is measured flowing through various systems). In fact, most ecopsychologies are either very vague, or simplistic, using a generalized form of pop-psychology summarized as people's 'behavior', and a generalized form of pop-ecology summarized as 'nature', or 'good nature'.

I find this sad, because I think that the human-caused degradation of our environment requires extreme and wise and widespread solutions, and for this we need a strong, coherent, accurate language so we can at least communicate with each other in search of strategies and solutions (more on this below).

Meanwhile, here in more detail are some of the groupings in which you'll find people using the term ecopsychology:

Six Faces of Ecopsychology
(or 'Six Directions in Search of a Center')

I. Ecopsychology as Umbrella/Container for Discussions About Nature

This is the most common use of the term, and its meanings are diverse, to say the least. Somehow, the term 'ecopsychology' frees people to talk very personally about their concerns over environmental issues, or their angers or fears or grief over specific human-caused problems, or just about anything even remotely connected to natural processes (examples recently gleaned from an Internet ecopsychology group: discussions of recycling, burial practices, education, politics, economics, corporate responsibility, endangered species, ebonics, and so on). There are no boundaries in this realm, although it is commonly assumed, more or less, that any human activity means 'psychology', and anything having to do with 'nature' is ecology, which, together, cover just about everything. Most discussions in this realm are covered more rigorously in other fields. Thus, this category has all the characteristics of a popular fad, a bandwagon, although obviously a need is being fulfilled; perhaps a 'mythic container' is being created, a stimulus for much-needed development of personal and social narrative recasting the human nature relationship.



II. Ecopsychology as Basis for Healing, for a 'New' Therapy

This is also a common (and one of the most coherent) uses of the term.

There are at least two (overlapping) camps within this category:
(A) The psychological problems resulting from Western-Industrial Culture's alleged increasing distance from Nature (or 'natural processes'). Paul Shepherd's work (Nature and Madness) is paradigmatic.

(B) The use of nature (some kind of immersion in nature) for healing what is believed to be 'the human-nature disjunction' (the idea that re-immersion in nature will somehow offset the pathogenic effects of a culture increasingly isolated from- or dominant over- natural processes).

The many forms of wild-erness healing are paradigmatic, although psychotherapists discuss the movement of a therapeutic session from inside the office to out on the patio or a walk in the garden or park as 'ecopsychology'.




III. Calls for an Ecopsychology


For many, expressions of the need for an ecopsychology are synonymous with ecopsychology-as-field. Although as pointed out above, ideas about the human-nature relationship have been around for decades, or centuries (whether couched in philosophical speculations or pragmatic need), the 1990's call for an ecopsychology is at once a call for a container, for a field, for a discipline, for principles, most of all, for something to do to 'save the earth' from human-caused destruction to the very processes upon which humans and all life depends. Theodore Roszak's The Voice of the Earth is paradigmatic; some of James Hillman's writings are calling for a revision of psychology that would acknowledge the existence of a natural context for all psychological processes, all life!; and, as mentioned above, Paul Shepherd's Nature and Madness (and all his other writings) have for a long time been calling for psychology to become aware of the disjunctive effects of our culture's accelerating distancing with natural processes.

For a variety of reasons (such as recent generations' mistrust of philosophy; of 'words that dominate'; of rationality, objectivity, logic; the relief of physical activity as opposed to thinking; the obvious needs for- and benefits of- 'actions'; the increasingly obvious contradictions between what environmental theorists do and what they say ; the conviction that 'experience' (usually meaning experience prior to cultural mediation) is more 'correct' or 'spiritual' or should have primacy over all subsequent psychological processes) - all this and more brings into the burgeoning ecopsychology 'field' calls for 'less talk and more walk'. Thus, for many, 'ecopsychology' means the vision quest, the wilderness excursion, the full-moon ritual, the blockade of a logging road, yoga, or the meditation practice. At a more linguistic level, such actions - and particularly those that involve 'bridges' between culture and nature (such as, say, gardening, sexuality, child-raising, food finding and preparation, shelter, etc.) - are seen not so much as synonymous with ecopsychology, but an essential experiential source of psychological language (i.e., from experience-to-language rather than from philosophy-to-language).




IV. Ecopsychology as Experiential

For a variety of reasons -- such as recent generations' mistrust of philosophy; of 'words that dominate'; of rationality, objectivity, logic; the relief of physical activity as opposed to thinking; the obvious needs for- and benefits of- 'actions'; the increasingly obvious contradictions between what environmental theorists do and what they say; the conviction that 'experience' (usually meaning experience prior to cultural mediation) is more 'correct' or 'spiritual' or should have primacy over all subsequent psychological processes -- all this and more brings into the burgeoning ecopsychology 'field' calls for 'less talk and more walk'. Thus, for many, 'ecopsychology' means the vision quest, the wilderness excursion, the full-moon ritual, naked walks on the beach or alone in the desert, sex in the primeval forest, the blockade of a logging road, yoga at sunset or the practice of prayer at dawn. At a more linguistic level, such actions -- and particularly those that involve 'bridges' between culture and nature (such as, say, gardening, sexuality, child-raising, food finding and preparation, shelter, etc.) -- are seen not so much as synonymous with ecopsychology, but an essential experiential source of psychological language (i.e., from experience-to-language rather than from philosophy-to-language). In physical terms they represent a bonding with wild nature that no other experiences can provide.



V. Spiritual Practice as Ecopsycyology

This of course overlaps with category IV, above, but warrants separate attention, for the reason that, though 'spiritual' here means primarily experiential, it also includes the theoretical, as for example, Ken Wilber's massive intellectual work (in particular the first book in his huge trilogy: Sex, Ecology & Spirituality). The underlying assumption here, crucial to many in the environmental movement, is that nature is spirit (i.e. 'Source', where a return to 'right relationship' with nature implies a right relationship with Spirit, and that without this depth (or height!) all efforts at healing the human-nature relationship will fall short. Of course the debate rages whether Spirit has fully descended into earth, or whether earth-consciousness is evolving towards a higher 'spirit' (or whether both are true). Whatever, many now working within an ecopsychology umbrella strive for that feeling or 'groove' of oneness with nature, and assume this to be an essential spiritual approach to healing the human-nature relationship. Many others are turning to the works of Ken Wilber as a trans-personal psychology base for the 'psychology' part of ecopsychology; or to Buddhist psychology (or other religions) as a way of including spirit or 'mystery' in the attempts to overcome the dualism currently inherent in western cultural views of the human-nature relationship.



VI. 'Core' Ecopsychology as Language

Without discounting any of the above categories of emergent ecopsychology, this category -- very sparse, and without much attention indeed – attempts to 'ground' an ecopsychology in language (the 'logos' of both psychology and ecology) that is philosophically coherent and consistent. The assumption here is, like other disciplines, without a core language, or at least a core set of questions, something as vast as 'ecopsychology' will fly off in all directions and will become, essentially, meaningless, however stimulating or productive of an occasional insight it may be.


Assumptions tend to be:
  • that the human-nature relationship is psychologically based,
  • that psychology (as emergent in culture) is capable of being skewed (and that this is the case in Western culture),
  • that no existing psychology has a complete handle on the situation (and thus a 'new' psychology must emerge),
  • that the human cognitive penchant for extreme dualism is as close as we can presently come to an expression of the cause of the human-nature disjunction;
  • that language needn't be dualistic (though it often engenders dualism), and that, perhaps, 'the question of consciousness' is at the heart of all these core questions.
The work of Warwick Fox (Transpersonal Ecology) is an attempt at a core language, using an analysis of 'deep ecology' and 'transpersonal psychology' to formulate a model of a healthy human-nature relationship. Ken Wilber's work attempts the same, although his rather vicious attacks on deep ecology and earlier forms of ecopsychology for not being transpersonal enough (or rather, for not being couched explicitly in Wilber's latest transpersonal models) makes his work somewhat problematical. At present, the only true ecopsychology text is by Deborah Winter (Ecological Psychology: Healing the Split Between Planet and Self), which is an excellent basic text that combs through a variety of psychologies and philosophies in search of an ecopsychological language that would be practical and stimulating for changing behaviors re the human-nature relationship. There are of course many shorter papers coming out dealing with definitions and ecopsychological ideas, and a number of books in the works that will, hopefully, help to focus this 'field' in a coherent language.