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Earth and Nature-Based Spirituality (Part I): From Deep Ecology to Radical Environmentalism

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Abstract

Earth and nature-based spirituality is proliferating globally. In Part I of this study, I argue that although participants in countercultural movements often eschew the label religion, these are religious movements, in which these persons find ultimate meaning and transformative power in nature. Focusing on the deep ecology movement, I further argue that (1) experiences of nature spirituality are evoked by practices as diverse as mountaineering, neo-shamanic ritualising and states of consciousness induced by hallucinogens; (2) earthen spiritualities are often contested and may be viewed as inauthentic or dangerous by practitioners of other forms of nature spirituality; and (3) despite significant diversity, a sense of connection and belonging to nature (sometimes personified as a transforming, if not transcendent power) unites these cross-fertilising and sometimes competing spiritualities. Part II examines additional forms of nature-oriented religion, searching further for continuities, discontinuities and ironies among its diverse forms.
Religion (2001) 31, 175–193
doi:10.1006/reli.2000.0256, available online at http://www.idealibrary.com on
Earth and Nature-Based Spirituality (Part I): From
Deep Ecology to Radical Environmentalism
B T
Earth and nature-based spirituality is proliferating globally. In Part I of this study, I
argue that although participants in countercultural movements often eschew the label
religion, these are religious movements, in which these persons find ultimate meaning
and transformative power in nature. Focusing on the deep ecology movement, I
further argue that (1) experiences of nature spirituality are evoked by practices as
diverse as mountaineering, neo-shamanic ritualising and states of consciousness
induced by hallucinogens; (2) earthen spiritualities are often contested and may be
viewed as inauthentic or dangerous by practitioners of other forms of nature
spirituality; and (3) despite significant diversity, a sense of connection and belonging to
nature (sometimes personified as a transforming, if not transcendent power) unites
these cross-fertilising and sometimes competing spiritualities. Part II examines
additional forms of nature-oriented religion, searching further for continuities, discon-
tinuities and ironies among its diverse forms. 2001 Academic Press
Question: ‘What are your spiritual beliefs?’
Answer: ‘Well, I believe in the cosmos. All of us are linked to the cosmos. Look at the
sun. If there is no sun, then we cannot exist. So nature is my god. To me, nature is
sacred. Trees are my temples and forests are my cathedrals’
Mikhail Gorbachev (1997)
Monkeywrenching or ‘ecotage’ is ‘a form of worship toward the earth. It’s really a very
spiritual thing to go out and do . . . Keep a pure heart and mind . . . You are a religious
warrior for the Earth.’
Dave Foreman, co-founder of Earth First!,
discussing the spirituality of direct action resistance
(Shuman and Desseaux 1993)
The closer you get to real matter, rock, air, firewood, boy, the more spiritual the
world is.
from Dharma Bums
Spirituality in Contemporary Parlance
In contemporary parlance people increasingly substitute the term ‘religion’ for
‘spirituality’ when trying to express what moves them most deeply. This usage has
drawn the increasing attention of scholars, who seek to define the various meanings
of spirituality and understand the perceptions and experiences that have led to the
increasing popularity of this term. I seek to illuminate the way ‘spirituality’ is used
and contested among those self-consciously engaged in ‘earth-based’ or ‘nature-based’
spirituality and thereby to understand contemporary earth-based religion.
A number of scholars have recently drawn a distinction between spirituality and
religion. Wade Clark Roof, for example, explains that a common perception today is
that ‘to be religious conveys an institutional connotation [while] to be spiritual . . . is
more personal and empowering and has to do with the deepest motivations in life’
(Roof 1993, pp. 76–7, cf. 76–9, 129–30). Testing Roof’s findings, a recent study
2001 Academic Press
0048–721X/01/020175+ 19 $35.00/0
For more recent publications by Bron Taylor, including
Dark Green Religion: Nature Spirituality and the Planetary Future
see www.brontaylor.com
conrmed that religiousness is increasingly characterized as ‘‘narrow and institutional,’’
and spirituality . . . as ‘‘personal and subjective’’ ’ (Zinnbauer 1997, p. 563).
1
Moreover,
the researchers found that nineteen percent of their sample viewed themselves as
spiritual but not religious.
This distinctionbetween religion as organizedand spirituality as involving ones
deepest moral values and most profound religious experiencesis probably the most
often cited dierence between the terms. But there are additional bundles of ideas that
are more often associated with spirituality than religion. Peter van Ness and Anna King
eloquently address the idea-complexes usually associated with spirituality. Van Ness, for
example, highlights the putative relationship between personal growth and a proper
understanding of ones place in the cosmos:
The spiritual aspect of human existence [has both] an outer and inner complexion.
Facing outward, human existence is spiritual insofar as it intentionally engages reality
as a maximally inclusive whole and makes the cosmos an international object of
thought and feeling. Facing inward, life has a spiritual dimension to the extent that it
is experienced as the project of ones most vital and enduring self, and it is structured
by experiences of sudden transformation and subsequent slow development. An
integration of these inner and outer characteristics is achieved by equating the spiritual
dimension with the existential task of discovering ones truest self in the context of
reality and cosmic totality. (van Ness 1992, pp. 134)
Van Ness provides a superb general characterisation of contemporary spirituality,
focusing especially on its psychological dimensions. Anna King moves the distinction
between religion and spirituality towards greater specicity. She summarises well
the idea of spirituality as it has evolved within the countercultures of many western
societies:
If religionis seen in terms of inherited structures and institutional externals . . .
spirituality has become a term that rmly engages with the feminine, with green issues,
with ideas of wholeness, creativity, and interdependence, with the interfusion of the
spiritual, the aesthetic and the moral. (King 1996, p. 345)
Spirituality need not be seen as opposing religious traditions. It is often seen as
the inner truth to which they all point. Spirituality can be viewed as a quest to
deepen, renew, or tap into the most profound insights of traditional religions. It is,
moreover, a term that consecrates otherwise secular endeavours such as psychotherapy,
political activism, and ones vocational choices and the corresponding work. As King
puts it,
The term spirituality as currently used, indicates both the unity at the heart of religious
traditions and the transformative inner depth or meaning of those traditions. . . . It
supplies a term which transcends particular religions and it suggests a non-reductionist
understanding of human life. It is more rmly associated than religion with creativity
and imagination, with change, and with relationship. It is less associated in the popular
mind with hierarchies of gender, race or culture. It indicates an engagement with, or
valuing of human experience and expression through art and music, through a
response to nature and to ethical ideals as well as through the great religious traditions.
It can embrace secular therapies and cosmologies as well as concerns with the
environment. Thus it seems to include both sacred and secular, and to enable a
fundamental rethinking of religious boundaries. Its very ambiguity and exibility
suggests a richness and texture which allows traditional religious maps to be redrawn
and minorities to nd a voice [and this also] makes it a more exible concept than
religion and encourages the user to reect and to challenge institutionalized thought.
176 B. Taylor
. . . The search for the spiritualtakes place not only through the renewal or
rediscovery of religious traditions but also . . . through psychotherapy, social concern,
involvement in movements for justice and peace or through careers in science or the
arts. [Thus] the term spirituality reects a search for a more uid and dynamic
understanding of religion which is itself part of a preoccupation to create a more
tolerant pluralist society. (King 1996, p. 346)
The preceding denitions introduce the diverse ideas conjured up in the popular mind
by the term spirituality.These denitions also illuminate many of the meanings and
perceptions about spirituality found among practitioners of earth-based religions at the
grass roots of American religious life. Consequently, they provide a useful template
for examining the continuities and discontinuities, the common themes and various
tensions, among nature-focused individuals and groups in North America.
2
Theoretical Considerations in the Study of Earth-Based Spiritualities
Defining Terms: Religion and Earth-Based Spirituality
In this examination of earth-based (or nature-based) spirituality, my focus is narrower
than that of Catherine Albanese in her Nature Religion in America (1990). Her discussion
includes religions that take nature as a symbolic center,whereas I examine only the
subset of such groups that perceive nature itself to be sacred. This, of course, raises the
question: How are we to understand sacred’—a term that is intertwined with
spirituality within greensubcultures? In turn, this raises a prior question: What counts
as religion? This question is especially dicult in cases where persons speak liberally of
spirituality and the sacred, yet do not believe in superhuman beings or supernatural
realities.
Of course, some would insist that belief in divine beings and supernatural realities are
essential to religion. The HarperCollins Dictionary of Religion recently claimed, for
example, that religion is best dened as a system of beliefs and practices that are relative
to superhuman beings(in Smith 1995, p. 893, my emphasis; cf. Lawson and McCauley
1990, p. 7). The author insisted upon this restrictive denition because it moves away
from dening religion as some special kind of experience or worldviewand excludes
quasi-religious religious movements(in Smith 1995, pp. 8934). But such denitions
are unduly restrictive. They would eliminate as religion some forms of Buddhism (see
Chidester 1996a, p. 254). They would also exclude as religious those who see
themselves as deeply spiritual and who regularly rely on terms like the sacred or its
opposite (delement or desecration) to describe their understanding of the universe. As
we shall soon see, many persons believe that the earth and its living sytems are sacred and
consider the earths destruction to be a deling act.
To help alert us to such religiosity I borrow from David Chidester, who denes
religion as that dimension of human experience engaged with sacred norms(1987,
p. 4). Some will argue that such denitions are circular or vague, but vagueness is an
asset when we try to apprehend the plural forms that religion assumes, and as Chidester
has concluded, A descriptive approach to the study of religion requires a circular
denition of the sacred: Whatever someone holds to be sacred is sacred.He argues that
the task of religious studies is to describe and interpret sacred norms that are actually
held by individuals, communities, and historical traditions(Chidester 1987, p. 4). Such
aexible understanding of religion provides a good starting point for the present
endeavour to understand earth-based religion and spirituality.
3
Earth and Nature-Based Spirituality 177
Earthen Spirituality and Contemporary Environmentalism
Who are the individuals and groups that perceive nature itself to be sacred? Kings
suggestion that scholars look for spirituality not only in small, marginalised religious sects
but also in movements such as Amnesty International [and] Greenpeace(1996, p. 347)
points in the right direction.
4
I begin this analysis of the spirituality of earth-based religions with the radical
environmentalmovement, a movement that numbers in the tens of thousands of
participants in the United States and that has had an inuence signicantly greater than
even these numbers suggest.
5
This movement can aptly be labelled pagan environmen-
talismto convey the countercultural spiritualities, especially those based in mystical
experiences, including pantheistic and animistic perceptions, that motivate most of its
supporters.
6
By examining the forms of spirituality present within radical environmental groups,
we can see the process by which varied earth-based spiritualities and social movements
inuence one other, engaging in reciprocal religious production. This exploration will
illuminate continuities and convergences among diverse earth-based religions. I will also
identify disagreements and fault lines that promise to keep distinct many of the
earth-focused religious groups.
The Cultic Milieuand Countercultural Bricolage
In this endeavour to understand the varied phenomena of nature spirituality, an article
by Colin Campbell is helpful. He asserts that a cultic milieuexists as a constant feature
of [western] societyrepresenting the cultural underground, including all deviant
belief-systems and their associated practices [including] unorthodox science, alien and
heretical religion [and] deviant medicine(1972, p. 122). Cultic groups rarely engage in
criticism of each other [and] display a marked tolerance and receptivity towards each
othersbeliefs,Campbell suggests, especially because they share a mystical tradition
emphasiz[ing] that . . . unity with the divine can be attained by a diversity of paths
(1972, pp. 1223). He also claims that mysticism is the most prominent part of the
deviant religious component of the cultic worldand that consequently, cults tend to be
ecumenical, . . . syncretistic, and tolerant in outlook(1972, p. 124). Moreover, he
concludes that the fragmentation of ideas and groups that characterises the cultic milieu
is more than counteracted by the continuing pressure of syncretization(1972, pp. 1223).
7
Campbells theory provides a useful template upon which to overlay diverse,
earth-based spiritualities. His characterisation of a cultic milieufails to recognise the
extent to which ideas and priorities unfolding under the countercultures cultic tent are
in tension and contested,
8
but the cultic milieuidea is illuminating if care is taken to
notice the tensions within it.
Many Americans express anity for nature spirituality, and not only those involved
groups such as Earth First!, the Sierra Club, or Friends of the Earth (see Kempton et al.,
1995;Minteer and Manning 1999).
9
In addition, the syncretistic, tolerant and
pastiche-style spiritualitythat Roof found among baby boomers certainly applies, in
general terms, to the religious processes involved in contemporary nature-based
spiritualities (Roof 1993, p. 245).
To understand contemporary earth-based and nature-based spirituality, we must
explore countercultural syncretism. However, within green countercultures
10
bricolage
(amalgamations of many bits and pieces of diverse cultural systems) is a more apt term
than syncretism (the blending of elements of two traditions). It captures better the
reciprocal and ever-evolving processes of religious production.
11
Whatever the name,
178 B. Taylor
an analysis of the cultural process of stealing back and forth sacred symbols(Chidester
1988, p. 137)
12
is crucial for understanding both the religious and the political
dimensions of contemporary earth-based spiritualities.
Clearly, radical environmental subcultures carry one key marker of the cultic milieu
observed by Campbell: its mysticism (see Taylor 1991,1993,1994,1995). I emphasise
the importance of political bricolage because Campbell nds that the mysticism of the
cultic milieu has led to a depreciation of [and] a general indierence to all secular aairs
except the most personal(1972, p. 125). Perhaps this stance was true twenty-ve years
ago, but when exploring green spiritualities today, it is clear that the mystical is also
political because the earth is sacred. The present task is to illuminate earth-based spirituality
movements, so I will not focus on their political dimensions here. Nevertheless, to assess
fully the worldviews of earth religions, it is critical to analyse fully the ways in which
deviant political ideas and ideologiesespecially leftist, green anarchistand anti-
modernist onesare grafted onto these worldviews in the full bricolage that is
countercultural spirituality.
Earth-Based Spirituality’s Roots—Deep Ecology and Radical
Environmentalism (1955–79)
In America, radical environmentalism and deep ecology are intersecting movements.
They contend that there are many spiritual and philosophical paths to a proper spiritual
perception of the earth as sacred, and towards actions congruent with this belief.
Participants in these movements arrive at moral sentiments in plural ways. Most have
had some kind of mystical experience in nature. The majority of them also draw on
anities with religions originating in the Far East, among Native Americans, with other
nature-oriented religions in America such as neo-paganism and Wicca, or with a variety
of practices most commonly associated with New Agespirituality. Radical environ-
mentalism is a countercultural pond with many tributaries. By examining the views of
some of its earliest proponents and its more recent manifestations, we can move towards
understanding the unity and diversity of earth-based spirituality in the United States.
Deep Ecology and Perennial Mysticism
In 1972 the Norwegian philosopher Arne Naess coined the term deep ecologyto
express the idea that nature has intrinsic value and to criticise anthropocentric, shallow
environmentalism, which he criticised for its instrumental view towards nature.
13
This
catchy term rapidly gained acceptance among a variety of gures and movements that
had been or would soon be advancing their own criticisms of anthropocentric
environmental ethics. Especially enthusiastic were the leaders of the radical environ-
mental organisation Earth First!, which embraced deep ecology immediately upon
hearing about it.
Naess and other promoters of deep ecology argue that there is a cross-cultural,
perennial philosophy’—a metaphysic that recognises the sacrality and interdependence
of all life. They borrow the idea from the 1945 book, The Perennial Philosophy, in which
Aldous Huxley asserts that:
Philosophia Perennisthe phase was coined by Leibniz; but the thingthe meta-
physic that recognizes a divine Reality substantial to the world of things and lives and
minds; the psychology that nds in the soul something similar to, or even identical
with, divine Reality; the ethic that places mansnal end in the knowledge of the
immanent and transcendent Ground of all beingthe thing is immemorial and
Earth and Nature-Based Spirituality 179
universal. Rudiments of the Perennial Philosophy may be found among the traditional
lore of primitive peoples in every region of the world, and in its fully developed forms
it has a place in every one of the higher religions. (Huxley 1945, p. vii)
The existence of this perennial philosophya global religion of primal, ancient lineage,
encompassing diverse, nature-benecent cultures and lifeways, surviving especially
among the worlds remaining indigenous peoples, and still expressed in religions
originating in the Far East and in Jewish, Christian and Muslim mysticismwas an
important assertion in the 1985 book Deep Ecology, edited by Bill Devall and George
Sessions, that helped launch the movement. Although Naess, Devall and Sessions
insisted that persons can arrive at the central convictions of deep ecology apart from any
particular religious orientation, their own deep ecological ethics are clearly based on
spiritual experiences in nature.
14
Mountain Epiphanies
Naess himself traces his own deep feeling of identication with nature and his caring for
all other life forms to a sense of estrangement from humans, possibly from the death of
his father when he was one-year old, and to profound childhood experiences in nature:
From when I was about four years old until puberty I could stand or sit for hours, days,
weeks, in shallow water on the coast, inspecting and marveling at the overwhelming
diversity and richness of life in the sea. The tiny beautiful forms which nobodycared
for, or were even unable to see, was part of a seemingly innte world, but nevertheless
my world. Feeling apart in many human relationships, I identied with nature. (Naess,
quoted in Fox 1992b,p.69)
But it was especially in the mountains that Naess developed his strongest attachments
with nature. A particular, Norwegian mountain had become
a symbol of a benevolent, equiminded, strong father, or of an ideal human nature . . .
These characteristics were there in spite of the obvious fact that the mountain, with its
slippery stones, icy fog and dangerous precipices, did not protect me or care for me in
any trivial sense. It required me to show respect and take care. The mountain loved me
in a way similar to that of my ten and eleven year old brothers who were eager to
toughen me up. (Naess, quoted in Fox 1992b,p.69)
Naess would eventually name his personal philosophy ecosophy Tafter his mountain
hut. He coined the term ecosophyas shorthand for environmental philosophy. In his
major work Naess wrote about the possibility of identication with mountains:
But what about identication with mountains? The more usual terms are here
personalizing,animism,anthropomorphism. For thousands of years, and in various
cultures, mountains have been venerated for their equanimity, greatness, aloofness, and
majesty. The process of identication is the prerequisite for feeling the lack of greatness.
(Naess 1989, p. 172)
Naess elsewhere wrote approvingly of the animistic spiritualities that he believed are
prevalent among tribal societies,
15
mountain peoples and children who have access to
nature:
Green philosophy or the philosophy of the deep ecology movement is largely an
articulation of the implicit philosophy of 5 year old children who have access to at least
a minimum of animals, plants, and natural places. These children experience animals as
180 B. Taylor
beings like themselves in basic respects. They have joys and sorrows, interests, needs,
loves and hates. Even owers and places are alive to them, thriving or having a bad
time. The personal identity of the small child has environmental factors. They are a
part of himself or herself, the personal, social and natural self being one and indivisible.
Philosophers of the deep ecology movement . . . have never found . . . arguments to
undermine those attitudes implicit in childhood.(Naess 1984, p. 180)
Naess believes that this identication is available to anyone lucky enough or willing
to pursue a life in freenature: There is fortunately a way of life in free nature that is
highly ecient in stimulating the sense of oneness, wholeness and in deepening
identication(Naess 1989, p. 177). But one who wishes to arrive at a proper spiritual
perception must rst get away from the citys artice and distractions because
it takes time for the new milieu to work in depth. It is quite normal that several weeks
must pass before the sensitivity for nature is so developed that it lls the mind. If a great
deal of technique and apparatus are placed between oneself and nature, nature cannot
possibly be reached. (Naess 1989, p. 179)
Naess even expresses appreciation for those who are better than him at promoting such
sensitivity through their writings: It is impossible for me with my dry style to contribute
verbally to this increase of sensitivity.Nevertheless, he concludes, What I sometimes
am able to do is to lead people into the mountains in such a way that their awareness
increases(Naess, quoted in LaChapelle 1992, p. 66).
Not surprisingly, Naessearliest environmental philosophy resonated especially
among mountain climber-intellectuals who had had similar experiences in the worlds
wild mountain regions.
16
Naess himself was an accomplished climber, known for the
rst ascent of Tirich Mir (7,690 meters; 25,230 feet), the highest peak in the Hindu
Kush, in 1950 (see Fox 1992a, p. 46). Born in 1912, Naess continued to hike in the
Himalayas into his 70s. Although he is approaching his ninth decade, he continues to
have great strength and stamina. In a special issue devoted to Naess in The Trumpeter, the
Canadian Journal of Ecosophy, editor Alan Drengson underscored the epistemological
signicance of the mountains for many drawn to deep ecology:
In strange ways so many of our lives run in parallel paths. This is shown in the writings
which gather in this issue. . . . Consider some common themes: turning to wild nature
and the mountains for solace, for wisdom, for strength, for maturation, for spiritual
comradeship, for lessons in devotion and humility; reading books by Spinoza and being
inspired by his grand vision of the unity of all beings as radiant forms of an innitely
divine one, and so coming to appreciate the sacredness of diverse beings while
marveling at eachs (sic) unique inherent value. (Drengson 1992,p.43)
17
Some deep ecology proponents worry that identifying their movement too closely with
religion or spirituality is counterproductive to their political aims. Bill Devall, for
example, once objected when the term mysticismwas applied to deep ecology. Yet he
argued elsewhere that greens must develop a deep ecological consciousnessand
humans-in-nature spiritualityas a basis for environmental action (Devall 1980, p. 302;
1991, p. 256).
18
Interestingly, his co-editor of Deep Ecology, George Sessions, once
expressed a similar concern about the spiritualities expressed by Devall and ecopsychol-
ogy theorist Warwick Fox (1991,1996), who believe that deep ecology should help
persons develop an ecological consciousnessand expansive selfthat embraces
outward all life.Sessions feared that these notions might themselves be counterproduc-
tive, fostering a New Age spirituality unduly optimistic about the human species.
Earth and Nature-Based Spirituality 181
Naess himself, however, explicitly endorsed the nature mysticism rubric, calling it a
genuine aspect of Western culture(1989, p. 173). Indeed, if the attraction of many
deep ecologists to Spinozas philosophical pantheism is to be comprehensible, we must
understand the importance of Naesss personication and identicationwith nature to
his version of deep ecology. Despite his worries that New Age religion could misguide
persons, Sessions approves of earthen spirituality and insists that a Spinoza- and/or
Muir-like consciousness is essentialto deep ecology. Interestingly, like Naess and many
of those initially drawn to deep ecology, Sessions was an accomplished mountain
climber who had been drawn to Spinozian pantheism, presumably as a result of religious
experiences gained through mountaineering.
19
Naesss translator, who has become an important environmental philosopher in his
own right, is David Rothenberg. Rothenberg locates the sacred in the mountains,
signing his letters always, the Mountains.Michael Cohen, an English professor and
author of The Pathless Way, describes John Muirs various oceanic and animistic
experiences, including an important one on top of Cathedral Peak in Yosemite National
Park. Writing of his own experiences scaling and perching on this same peak, Cohen
confesses that it is also his sacred mountain. On this peak, he writes,
one feels not so much above the landscape as truly in it. I have been there perhaps
twenty times, once on the contennial of Muirs ascent, when the clouds sailed through
the mountains, riding the west wind. Each day on Cathedral Peak that I remember
seems sacred. The world seems to ow about that granite altar in all its wholeness.
(Cohen 1984, p. 359)
These examples indicate that for Naess, Cohen and many other deep ecologists,
mountains are of central epistemological signicance, perhaps uniquely eective at
evoking a proper spiritual perception of human insignicance and of the goodness and
wholeness of earths wider webs of life.
Desert Epiphanies
Certainly many of the earliest advocates of deep ecology were moutain men, but for the
godfather of the radical environmentalism, the late Edward Abbey, the desert was the
most sacred place. Abbeys writings, including The Monkeywrench Gang, helped launch
the militant front of deep ecology.
20
The austerity of the desert distinguishes it, in
spiritual appeal, from other forms of landscape,Abbey wrote, arguing that the desert
was especially eective, even more than mountains, at overturning human arrogance
(Abbey 1968, pp. 20910).
21
Abbey was very much a pantheist, according to best friend Jack Loeer, who
recalled his saying things like Do not call me an atheist, call me an earth-ist.Abbey
really saw the spirit in all things, Loeer says. Abbey also resonated, as do many deep
ecologists, with Taosim, a religious tradition that is arguably an ancient form of
nature-based spirituality.
22
Loeer recalls Abbey stating, with typical irony, that the
Tao teChing is the best goddamned book ever written.
23
Hallucinogenic Epiphanies
Loeer himself provides a typical, if early, example of radical environmentalist,
earth-based spirituality. Disenchated with the American military industrial society after
viewing atomic bomb blasts as a young soldier, he dropped out of mainstream society.
In 1957, he read Aldous Huxleys book dealing with hallucinogenic experiences, and in
182 B. Taylor
1960 he ate peyote during a Native American Church ceremony to which he was
invited. He gravitated to Northern Californiasbohemian societyand for a time in the
early 1960s worked at Esalen, an inuential centre for the study of Eastern religious
mysticism and the epicentre of the unfolding human potential and humanistic
psychology movement.
24
There, Loeer met a number of the countercultural spiritual
leaders of the time, including Alan Watts, Henry Miller, John Barda, Allan Ginzberg,
Gary Snyder and eventually Huxley himself.
Loeers experience of the decisive impact of hallucinogens on his spirituality and
environmental activism foreshadows that of many younger radical environmentalists
who would follow. When one gets past the peyote-induced nausea, Loeer says, and
can see through those eyes, it sets one up spirituality to understand the sacred quality of
this planet. . . . It puts one in direct contact with another wavelength with the universe
and one immediately intuits that the entire planet is the living organism in which we are
members. Only extended, solo camping provided Loeer with experiences capable of
inducing in him spiritual perceptiveness.
Although peyote, magicmushrooms, and some other drugs have fostered earthen
spirituality for some radical environmentalists, most believe that aids are unnecessary.
Through extended time in undeled wilderness, anyone can learn to discern the earths
sacredness.
For Gary Snyder, it was not only a sacred earth that the observant heart could discern.
It was even possible to hear its sacred voices. Through his poetry and prose, Snyder
expresses an idea that has become increasingly widespread among radical environmen-
talists: the belief that animistic trans-species communication is possible and can even
help foster proper naturehuman relationships. Although he is inspired by cross-cultural
expressions of shamanism as well as animistic and pantheistic religious experiences, as is
Loeer, Snyders primary spiritual home remains Zen Buddhism. Beginning in 1955,
Snyder studied its ancient traditions intensively for twelve years. Today he believes that
Zen expresses deep ecological ethics with unsurpassed philosophical sophistication.
Although he considers himself a deep ecologist, Snyder prefers to call himself a
Buddhist-Animist.
25
Perhaps Snyders most lasting inuence has been his eectiveness in promoting the
increasingly popular green social philosophy known as bioregionalism’—an anarchistic,
decentralist ideology that envisions participatory democracywithin political units
redrawn along the contours of diering ecosystem types. Although bioregionalism is
now having inuence far beyond the counterculture,
26
it remains an earth-based
spirituality based on various pagan perceptions and ritual forms, whose participants
sometimes trace their awakenings to hallucinogenic experiences.
27
Like their more politically militant kin in Earth First!, bioregionalists are animated by
earth-based spiritual perceptions of the sacredness of earth and of the possibility of
communication with the myriad of earthly life forms. Its proponents believe that when
political loyalties are regional, it will be possible for people to listen to and revere
the land.
28
The Epistemology of Earthen SpiritualityLearning to Listen to the Land
The central epistemological premise shared by these early architects of radical environ-
mentalism is that people can learn to listen to the landand discern its sacred voices.
This belief is expressed in many waysfor example, on bumper stickers distributed by
environmental balladeer Walkin Jim Stoltz, who travels the land weaving his songs into
Earth and Nature-Based Spirituality 183
photo presentations of undeled wilderness areas, calling for their defence. The
pantheistic and animistic spiritualities found among these earliest proponents of radical
environmentalism parallel those of the most prominent environmentalists since the time
of Emerson and Thoreau, including Bob Marshall and Aldo Leopold (see Taylor 1995;
Cohen 1984;Fox 1981). The basic experiences that foster earth-based spirituality
among environmentalists, and especially among the most radical ones, have changed
little. Yet the sources upon which such activists draw inspiration have proliferated, and
their willingness to engage in public expression of such spirituality has increased since
the formation of Earth First! in 1980.
Throughout the 1960s earth-based spiritualities grew. This growth was facilitated by
the drug culture, increasing EuroAmerican participation in the Native American
Church, and by a host of other forms of ritualising such as sweat lodge ceremonies and
other newly invented ritual practices unfolding within the neo-pagan communities. I
turn now to focus on the reciprocal inuences between deep ecology environmentalism
(in both its politically militant Earth First! form and its more lifestyle-oriented
bioregional forms), and a number of earth-based religions during the last two decades of
the twentieth century. I will pay special attention to perceptions related to spirituality
and religion. I will show that nature-based spirituality (or woo woo, in the musing
parlance of the movement): (1) can mean many things but, in one form or another, it
animates participants in these movements; (2) is a contested category, with certain
expressions of it lampooned within the movement; and (3) despite ambivalence
and criticism, it evinces signicant tolerance and reciprocal inuence among various
earth-based spiritual beliefs and practices.
29
The Contested Nature of Earth-Based Spirituality
Woo, Woo, Rainbows, and a Crystal Free Rendezvous
Although the nature-based spirituality of radical environmentalism is apparent in books
and journals, it is in the eld that its diversity and contested nature become clear. At the
national Earth First! Rendezvous in 1991, tensions emerged between radical environ-
mentalists and several individuals from the Rainbow Family, largely over the question
of the authenticity of their spirituality.
Approximately 500 activists attend a typical Earth First! wilderness rendezvous. By
radical environmental standards the Rainbow Family is huge, drawing thousands to
its annual love-instyle summer festival, usually held at remote, forested sites. Perhaps
best known for their ‘flower childlifestyles, liberal drug use, and an ethos stressing
community and love, Rainbows purport to live closely to the earth. In the 1980s a
signicant number began adding the Earth First! Rendezvous to their summer
vagabonding. A number of Earth First! activists who thought that the Rainbows
countercultural style was counterproductive and their spirituality self-absorbed did not
welcome them. Some of them felt that the rainbow emphasis on peace and love, to
the neglect of the rage and the survival instinct, was severing persons from their true
animal selves.
Many in the rainbow family are deeply inuenced by New Age spirituality, a
nature-based spirituality that tends to envision a peaceful evolution towards human
harmony with the earth and cosmos. Participants sometimes symbolise this connection
with the earth by wearing crystals, because of their powers to heal person and planet.
Many Earth First! members, however, view crystal (and gold) wearing as sacrilege
because these items depend on the miningof Mother Earth. A campre chant begun
184 B. Taylor
in the late 1980s—‘Crystal free by 93!’—expressed disgust with such spirituality and a
desire to purge the movement of it. These chants are but one piece of movement
rhetoric that ridicules forms of earth-based spirituality considered inconsistent with a
reverence for the earth. Such slogans also convey a widespread belief about spirituality
within Earth First!, that an authentic spirituality leads to environmental action. Put
bluntly by one of Earth First!s most woo woomusicians—‘If youre not doing
everything you can to save Mother Earth, you aint shit!’—and neither is your
spirituality.
Ambivalence Towards Pagan Spirituality and New Age Optimism
Ambivalence towards some forms of nature-based spirituality and ritualising permeates
the radical environmental movement. Some early tensions focused on the decision to
ax pagan names, based on the Celtic calendar, to the masthead of the Earth First!
journal. This choice initially raised little controversy but it signaled a general openness
to the countercultural spirituality of the hippies and other participants in the back to the
landmovement who gravitated towards Earth First! in the early 1980s.
The rapid inux of hippies and their often overtly pagan style towards concerned two
Earth First! co-founders. Howie Wolke, who criticised the pagan masthead names, did
not consider himself to be pagan and viewed the names and the countercultural style to
be politically counterproductive. He sent critical letters to Earth First!. Dave Foreman
responded, stressing the importance of spiritual pluralism and toleration but also
promoting Earth Religion(see Foreman 1982d:2) and boldly declaring his own
paganism: I hold my personal religious views towards Mother Earth just as strongly and
sincerely as any Christian.Moreover, he described himself as a howling-at-the-moon
pantheist(1982c:2). Shortly thereafter, he wrote, Deep Ecology is the most important
philosophical current of our timeand promised to make Earth First! a forum for
expressions of earth religion in whatever guise.Then, in a dig at Wolke, he asserted
that even those in the movement who are uncomfortable with overt or public
expressions of spirituality, even those who consider themselves to be atheists, are
motivated by their own forms of earthen spirituality: All of us are religious, even
atheists like Howie Wolke who deies grizzly bears and hopes to become one
(Foreman 1982a:2).
In a 1994 interview, I checked Foremans perceptions with Wolke. Wolke conrmed
that he and everyone deeply involved in wildlands conservation does so for deeply
spiritual reasons, feeling the wonderful vibesin nature that arouse a perception of the
intrinsic value of all life.
30
Wolke went on to explain to me his eorts to stie the countercultural style and
public expression of pagan spirituality by movement activists (see Wolke 1989),
lamenting how he was labelled a hippie haterand anti-pagan. He explained that he is
happy if pagan ritualising is helpful to persons and inspires activists, but he does not
equate paganism or woo wooritualising with spirituality:
I think it is a mistake to link woo woo and spiritual feelings together. To me, every
time I give a talk Im publicly expressing deep spiritual feelings for wild places, I dont
have to . . . create a ritual [or provide] a Council of All Beings to do that. I can do that
with ordinary words and gestures . . . and slides.
In Wolkes view, and in the minds of many other road showperformers, music and
photographs of pristine and desecrated wilderness landscapes are a form of evangelical
outreach for the gospel of earth as a sacred place (see Taylor 1995). Wolke uses
Earth and Nature-Based Spirituality 185
whatever means I can to reach out to the non-converted, non-choir. If Im going to
reach people at the Hamilton Rotary Club, Im not going to do it in a countercultural
way.
Although Foreman was responsible for the pagan names on the masthead, and for
much discussion of pagan spirituality in Earth First!, he grew uncomfortable with the
organised, overt and most countercultural manifestations of paganism. These he
increasingly encountered as Earth First!sinuence and campaigns spread into the
Northwestern United States. Writing under the pseudonym Chim Blea, by 1983,
Foreman began criticising the preoccupation with spiritual enlightenment as detrimental
to eective environmental action. He was articulating the activism testto spiritual
authenticity that I would discover in the movement some seven years later.
Despite such criticism, Foreman stressed the earth-based nature of his own spirituality:
I go alone into the wildnerness in quest of visions. I sit in high windy places and listen
to the powers of the earth. At the same time he urged activists to resist delusions of
self-importance that can make such quests more important than activism (see Blea
1983a). Soon Foreman directly challenged what he viewed as the optimistic naïvetéof
the spiritually inclined Northern Californians, some of whom called themselves
ecotopians:
Ecotopia is not just around the bend. . . . We are rapidly devastating natural diversity
and the basic life functions of Earth. There is not enough time to peacefully transform
industrial, overpopulated human civilization into [one at] peace with the rest of nature.
(Blea 1983b:13)
Foreman continued his argument, expressing opinions widely if simplistically viewed as
misanthropic. For example, he wrote that the collapse of human civilisation oers the
best hope that the rest of the biosphere and the living planet will recover from its
dreadful bout with humanpox(Blea 1983a:13). This metaphorhumans as a disease
plaguing the earthhas been expressed by many radical greens. On the face of it, the
metaphor and the view it expresses seem inherently misanthropic. But the term is
usually directed at industrial and corporate elites, not at ordinary folk or some presumed
essentialhuman nature. Radical environmentalists do believe that some humans are
able to live on earth without destroying ecosystems. There would be little basis for
activism, were this impossible. This does not mean that radical greens are optimistic. On
the contrary, they share an expectation of imminent ecological and societal collapse.
Ironically, they usually take hope from this scenario, viewing a collapse as prerequisite
to the reharmonising of life on earth. But overall, their pessimism provides an important
contrast between the earth-oriented world views of radical greens and those of the more
cosmically-oriented New Age. New Age groups are generally more hopeful that a
salutary change of human consciousness can peacefully, and without cataclysm, yield
environmentally sustainable lifeways.
This fault-line between more and less apocalyptic visions can be seen in Foremans
argument urging forthright environmentalist resistance restrained only by what is
strategically and tactically most eective. This view naturally leans far more towards
monkeywrenching in the dark than to noble Gandhian direct action or political
lobbying(Blea 1983b:17). Foreman concludes this essay by contrasting his own
spirituality with other-wordly ones: Im not trying to win a place for myself in heaven.
Im already there(Blea 1983b:17).
Despite his signicant ambivalence about the anthropocentrism and optimism he
found among many pagans, Foreman continued to endorse pagan beliefs and ritualising.
186 B. Taylor
In a remarkable passage describing his own religious pilgrimage, Foreman writes that
after rejecting Christianity and Eastern religions because of their:
anti-Earthly metaphysics, through my twenties and early thirties I was an atheistuntil
I sensed something out there. Out there in the wilderness. So, I became a pagan, a
pantheist, a witch, if you will. I oered prayers to the moon, performed secret rituals
in the wildwood, did spells. I placated the spirits of that which I ate or used (remember,
your rewood is alive, too). For almost ten years, Ive followed my individualistic
shamanism (no, organized paganism smacks a little too much of a Tolkien discussion
group, or of a rudimentary great religionfor one like me who never quite ts in).
(Blea 1987,p.23)
Foreman was uncomfortable with group ritualising, and wondered whether spirituality
and ritual might be a fatal [human] aw, leading to abstractions and intellectualising that
distracts us from just being the animals we are.Still, he thinks that people need ritual
to bind them to the earth. Ritual is that which attempts, albeit imperfectly, to
reconnect us,he concludes, Maybe Ill talk to the moon tonight(Blea 1987, p. 237).
Because Foreman was the most charismatic gure in the rst decade of Earth First!,
his embrace of paganism is revealing and suggests patterns found among many of his
compatriots. He searched through the plural milieu of countercultural earth-based
spiritualities looking for those that might cohere with his own religious experiences in
nature. Foreman was personally averse to organised religion and ambivalent about
collective pagan ritualising. He at least theoretically endorsed the importance of ritual.
He expressed anity with some forms of earthern spirituality while criticising those
forms that he considered naïvely optimistic about humans or that the judged unlikely to
produce venerating acts of ecological resistance. Perhaps most important, Foreman
expressed the common radical environmental perception that earth-based spirituality is
about ones felt connections with, embeddedness in, and belonging to, this living and sacred earth.
Indeed, on occasions too numerous to mention, in print and during roadshows,
Foreman has argued that Earth First! is about two things: resacralisingour perceptions
of earth and self defense.Why self defence? Because when we defend the earth, we are
the earth, recently emerged into consciousness, defending herself.
31
Despite personal
ambivalence about much of the earth-based spirituality that he encountered in the
1980s, Foreman, and the movement he helped organise, expressed and retained an
earth-based spirituality with both pantheistic and animistic characteristics that can best
be understood as pagan.
32
The second part of this study, From Earth First! and Bioregionalism to Scientic
Paganism and the New Age,will appear in the next issue of Religion. It broadens the
portrait of contemporary earth and nature-based spiritualities, analysing trends and
tendencies that can be discerned among them, and examines the prospects for such
religious forms in the coming years. Specically, it illuminates the crucial role that a
sense of belonging and connection plays in diverse forms of contemporary, nature-based
spirituality.
Notes
1 As in Roof sndings, these individuals are less likely to engage in traditional forms of worship
. . . less likely to hold . . . Christian beliefs, more likely to be independent from others, more
likely to engage in group experiences related to spiritual growth, more likely to be agnostic,
more likely to characterize religiousness and spirituality as dierent and nonoverlapping
Earth and Nature-Based Spirituality 187
concepts, more likely to hold nontraditional ‘‘new age’’ beliefs, and more likely to have had
mystical experiences(Zinnbauer 1997, p. 561). Huston Smith similarly asserts that religion is
institutionalized spiritualityand anti-authoritarianism is a partof the increasing preference for
spirituality over religion (Smith 1997, p. 42). Daniel Helmianiak states that, for most people,
religion implies a social and political organization with structures, rules, ocials, dues [while]
spirituality refers only to the sense of the transcendent, which organized religions carry and are
supposed to foster(Helmianiak 1996, p. 33).
2 Helminiak has found six ways that the term spirituality is presently used: (1) as the human
spiritual nature as such, (2) as concern for transcendence [and the belief in and commitment to]
something in life that goes beyond the here and now, (3) as a lived realityrelated to social or
individual growth, (4) as an academic disciplineboth therapeutic and theoretical, (5) as
spiritualism [involving] communication with human . . . or . . . nonhuman spiritual entities, and
(6) as parapsychology [namely] involvement with extraordinary human powers that result in
psychic . . . phenomena like clairvoyance, telekinesis, precognition, and out-of-body experi-
ences(1996, p. 32). The second, third, fth, and sixth of these uses are most commonly found
within contemporary nature religions.
3 Chidester adds that what people hold to be sacred tends to have two important characteristics:
ultimate meaning and transcendent power . . . Religion is not simply a concern with the
meaning of human life, but it is also an engagement with the transcendent powers, forces, and
processes that human beings have perceived to impinge on their lives(Chidester 1987,p.4).
For a provocative recent discussion of what should count as religion, see Chidester 1996a.
Although some working denition of religion is required for its study, so is a recognition that
the term religion has been a contested categoryand that therefore a single, incontestable
denition of religion cannot simply be established by academic at(Chidester 1996b, p. 254).
Chidesters recent work urges caution, documenting as it does how the term religion has been
dened as a strategic instrumentoften in violent power struggles and that we can only expect
those struggles to continue(Chidester 1996b, p. 254; cf. xiii).
4 More research is needed to explore the spirituality of participants in groups like the wild ones
native plant society and the Nature Conservancy, in addition to more politically-oriented
environmental organisations.
5 Although radical greens cannot plausibly claim full credit, recent ethnographic and survey data
reveal that the American public endorses many radical environmental beliefs, including the
convictions that the natural world has intrinsic value and is sacred (or at least should be treated with
reverence by virtue of its having been created by God), and that indigenous people are the
original ecologists. See Kempton, Boster and Hartley 1995, esp. Appendix C, for the
respondent acceptance of intrinsic valueaxiology (survey items 16, 50, 80, and 124); and for
spirituality-related responses, see items 69 and 124, and the discussion pp. 8994. These data
show that Earth First! activists endorse some radical environmental ideas in only slightly greater
proportions than do the public at large or Sierra Club activists. Even blue-collar workers, in
surprising proportions, including those in the timber industry, express agreement with radical
environmental-type propositions. Unfortunately, the survey item most directly addressing
spiritual feelings in nature was inadvertently left out of their survey (p. 94). Two recent studies
have begun to remedy the need for more quantitative data on spiritual attitudes toward the
environment. Brasier illustrates that nature spirituality resonates with many Americans (Brasier
1995). Minteer and Manning found that a number of radical environmental ethics, which
revolve around a set of arguments for the intrinsic value of nonhuman nature, were embraced
by respondents, especially ‘‘organicism/animism’’ ...‘‘natural rights’’ . . . and to a lesser extent
‘‘pantheism’’ ’ (1999, p. 199).
6 Some scholars now eschew the term animism because of its origins as a pejorative devised to
contrast primitivetribal religions to highermonotheistic ones (see Tylor 1871). But
contemporary earth-based religions have widely adopted the term. I employ the term in a
non-pejorative way to indicate a perception that the world is inspirited and that inter-species
communication is possible.
7 The emphasis is mine.
8 At a 1997 conference in Stockholm, Gordon Melton criticised Campbells assumption that
tolerance among such deviant religious groups is the norm, noting that many of these religions
have high expectations of their followers and strongly disapprove of other deviantgroups.
188 B. Taylor
9 For example, only 35 percent of the general public endorsed the proposition that The Creator
intended that nature be used by humans, not worshipped by them.This suggests that the
majority, at least, are not hostile towards nature worship. Moreover, 83 percent endorsed the
proposition that plants and animals have intrinsic aesthetic and spiritual value, even if they
are not of any use to humans, compared with 96 percent of surveyed Sierra Club members and
100 percent of Earth First! activists (see Kempton, Boster and Hartley 1995, pp. 262, 268).
10 This is another way to express an idea analogous to Campbells idea of a cultic milieu.
11 This bricolage is often self-conscious among pagan environmentalists. A humorous example can
be heard in Earth First! musician Danny Dollingers song Hillbilly Hippie, found on his Rome
Wasnt Burn it a Day album, available from Barnstormers by telephone in the United States at
512/459-4012. See also Trudy Frisk: Who is Goddess? She is not one but many: benecent
Demeter, sensual Aphrodite, learned Sophia, loving Freya, wild huntress Artemis, benevolent
Ameratsu, dark Kali, compassionate Tara of Tibet, feline Bast, Cerridwen, keeper of the
cauldron of change. She is ancient: Danu, Mother of Celts, Isis Sovereign of the elements,
Yemaya, Holy Mother of the West African Sea, Pacamamma of the Andes who pre-dates the
Incas, triune Hecate, Spider Woman weaving the threads of Native American fate. She is Gaia
(Frisk 1993: 21). Compare Ancient Forest activist Lou Gold, who states that I dont consider
myself a follower of Native American religion . . . my spirituality is soup, it is stew . . . but when
its time to nd the right metaphors, I nd [Native American] metaphors come easily to me [and
have become] a source of genuine religious experience [promoting] what Im calling ecological
consciousness . . . feeling the relationship to all this magnicent stuwe call the creation
(26 April 1992 interview, Madison, Wisconsin).
12 Chidester uses the word stealingas a shorthand designation for complex negotiations over the
ownership of symbols(1988, p. 157).
13 First at a 1972 conference in Bucharest (see LaChapelle 1988, p. 11) and shortly thereafter in
print (see Naess 1973).
14 Naess writes, for example, By denition what is called the ‘‘deep ecology movement’’
explicitly bases its activity upon philosophical and religious premises. These can dier
considerably without disturbing the fairly uniform character of the aims of the supporters of the
movement(Naess 1989, p. 178). The aims, summarised in the deep ecology platform, include
propositions that arm the intrinsic value of nature along with general action principles
promoting population reduction, voluntary simplicity and political action.
15 For example, Naess wrote positively about the California Indians who with their animistic
mythology, were an example of equality in principle, combined with realistic admissions of their
own vital needs(Naess 1989, p. 174).
16 Two of the most important mountain climbers in the history of the deep ecology movement are
not philosophers but have given millions of dollars to grassroots deep ecology and other
environmental groups: Doug Thompkins, who founded North Face and Esprit and who funded
the Foundation for Deep Ecology and the El Pumalin Bosque Foundation, and Yvon
Chouinard, founder of the outdoor equipment and clothing companies Patagonia and Black
Diamond. Naess directly inuenced Thompkins and set him on his deep ecology path (May
1994 interview with Arne Naess in Killarney, Ireland).
17 Beginning with Naesss experience, Drengson oers a psychological theory about why many
men are drawn to the mountains and then to deep ecology: The mountains became a father to
Arne, when as a child he lost his own dad. For many of us whose fathers were gone (to war or
depression perhaps) the mountains became surrogates. Many of us share a spiritual kinship with
mountains. Mountains help us explore wildnerness and ourselves. This is an important journey
of self-development for many of us living in the modern period(Drengson 1992, p. 44).
18 For an analysis of Devalls inconsistent defensiveness regarding nature mysticism, see Taylor
1996, pp. 99101.
19 Quotations in this paragraph are from a 14 April 1993 interview at Dr Sessionshome near
Auburn, California. Perhaps reecting his pantheism, there is a massive altar-hearth of granite,
located at the centre of his home, quarried from his beloved Sierra Nevada.
20 The Monkeywrench Gang is a ribald tale of environmentalist saboteurs that draws on the illegal
actions and fantasies of those opposed to the Central Arizona Water and Power Project and
others acting in defense of Black Mesa, American Indian-owned land that was to be coal-mined
as a part of this project. Many environmentalists and Southwestern Indians consider Black Mesa
and other Southwestern landscapes to be sacred.
Earth and Nature-Based Spirituality 189
21 Abbey cites several books with spiritualities based on desert experiences, including Joseph
Wood Krutchs pantheist classic, The Voice of the Desert.
22 Delores LaChapelle has been the most notably self-conscious Taoist deep ecology theorist.
During Earth First! wilderness gatherings in the late 1980s, she introduced drumming into the
ritualising. See LaChapelle 1978,1988.
23 The quotations from Loeer are from 21 and 23 July 1997 telephone interviews. Loeer and
Abbey, after meeting in the early 1960s, participated in a variety of extralegal eorts to thwart
what they considered to be commercial desecrations of sacred desert landscapes. Guided by
what they found to be the imperfect instructions contained in The Anarchists Cookbook, these
exploits provided Abbey with many ideas for his subsequent novels.
24 This movement would later take a greenturn as it transmogried into transpersonaland then
eco-psychology.
25 Interview with Gary Snyder, Davis, California, 1 June 1993. For a detailed discussion of
Snyders animistic spirituality, see Taylor 1995, pp. 1105.
26 From the Nature Conservancys emphasis on ecoregionsto increasing cooperation among
various federal, state, and local resource agencies along bioregional lines in California. See Litn
1993.
27 For an in-depth study, see Taylor 2000.
28 As described by Jim Dodge, another proponent of this perspective, ‘‘Bioregionalism’’ is from
the Greek bios (life) and the French region (region), itself from the Latin regia (territory), and
earlier, regere (to rule or govern).Bioregion means, according to Dodge, ‘‘life territory’’ or
‘‘place of life’’, or perhaps by extension, ‘‘government by life’’ ’ (Dodge 1981).
29 For a recent editorial focusing on woo wooand illustrating the dierent understandings of it
in the movement, see Lunn 1998.
30 All quotations of Howie Wolke are from a 12 November 1994 interview in Missoula, Montana.
31 This language Foreman borrowed from John Seed, the Australian Buddhist, deep ecology
activist, and co-architect of the ritual process known as the Council of All Beings, to which
Wolke previously alluded. Seed also is a prominent international rain forest activist who
co-founded Australias Rainforest Information Centre. For details on the Council process see
Taylor 1993 and 1994 and Seed et al. 1988.
32 Zakin misses how pagan spirituality is a central animating force behind radical environmentalism
and has ridiculed the more overtly spiritual participants, but he recognises at least that Foreman
had a tribal phase(1993, p. 230) and that he was, essentially, a preacher of a pantheistic
religion(p. 425).
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192 B. Taylor
BRON TAYLOR is Oshkosh Foundation Professor of Religion and Director of
Environmental Studies at the University of Wisconsin, Oshkosh. He is the author of
Armative Action at Work: Law, Politics, and Ethics (University of Pittsburgh Press, 1992)
and is editor of Ecological Resistance Movements: the Global Emergence of Radical and Popular
Environmentalism (State University of New York Press, 1995) and of the Encyclopedia of
Religion and Nature (Continuum International, forthcoming 2003). His last contribution
to Religion was ‘‘Earthen Spirituality or Cultural Genocide: Radical Environmentalisms
Appropriation of Native American Spirituality’’ (April 1997). He hopes to publish Dark
Green Religion, a study exploring in more detail the themes of the present study,
sometime in 2002.
Environmental Studies Program, University of Wisconsin, Oshkosh, WI 54901, U.S.A.
E-mail: bron@religionandnature.com
Earth and Nature-Based Spirituality 193
... In Mentawai society, the Arat Sabulungan embodies this ecocentric perspective, considering nature spirits as guardians of ecological balance, upheld through rituals and environmental ethics. Supported by spiritual ecology, this research suggests that both traditional and modern religions can inspire environmentally responsible behavior (Taylor, 2001). The study concludes that Mentawai religiosity offers a robust spiritual framework for ecological conservation, proposing that integrating these values into contemporary policy could significantly enhance conservation efforts in Mentawai, while also serving as a model for other indigenous communities. ...
Article
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This research aims to explore how the belief systems of indigenous peoples influence everyday conservation practices and examine how these beliefs can be integrated into modern conservation policies. This study employed an ethnographic qualitative approach. Data collection involved participatory observation, in-depth interviews, and. Data collection involved participatory observation, enabling involvement in daily life to directly observe community interactions with the environment and the performance of religious rituals. In-depth interviews were administered semistructured interviews with various key informants, including traditional leaders, religious figures, community elders, and environmental practitioners. Secondary sources from academic publications, government reports, and media archives relevant to the research topic. Interpretative analysis was conducted within cultural and historical contexts to gain a deeper understanding of how religiosity shapes the environmental conservation practices of the Mentawai people. This study presents three key findings related to the environmental conservation practices of the Mentawai community. Their conservation practices are deeply rooted in a belief system. Transformative dynamic is observed, whereby the younger generation successfully combines traditional values of ancestral religion with teachings from world religions and modern perspectives. A gap is identified between the local wisdom-based conservation system and the pressures exerted by the global political economy. The study provides new insights into the crucial role of local religiosity in environmental conservation and highlights the potential for integrating traditional and modern beliefs in nature conservation efforts. The study suggests that environmental conservation strategies should integrate local communities' religious values and indigenous knowledge rather than relying solely on scientific and technological approaches.
... In America, radicals of deep ecology believe there are many spiritual and philosophical paths to a proper spiritual perception of the earth as sacred and to action in line with this belief. Participants in these movements reach moral sentiments in diverse ways, such as spiritual experiences in nature (Taylor, 2001). The deep ecology approach offers a shift towards mechanistic ways of thinking (Capra, 1996;Grierson, 2009). ...
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Objective: This research aims to: (1) understand the historical development of Holistic Contemporary Worldview (CHW) and Kejawen Philosophy (Hamemayu Hayuning Bawana/HHB); (2) explore the correlation between CHW and HHB; (3) compare the axiology of HHB and CHW to better understand the path to achieving sustainable development goals; and (4) identify opportunities for maintaining sustainability through the perspectives of CHW and HHB. Theoretical Framework: The Earth is currently facing unsustainable changes, which are evident in climate change and the increasing frequency of disasters. These problems are believed to stem from reductionist-mechanist thinking, which fosters an anthropocentric attitude. In contrast, holistic thinking offers a new perspective on nature, seeing it as an interconnected whole where each component supports the others to maintain prosperity and balance. This idea is in line with the Javanese philosophy of life, HHB, which emphasizes harmony between humans and nature to enhance the beauty of life. Both concepts highlight the need for fundamental changes in the way humans interact with each other and nature to support the achievement of Sustainability especially the implementation of the Sustainable Development Golas (SDGs). Method: This descriptive qualitative research uses a literature study technique that is conducted in three stages. First, a literature study on the historical development of human views on nature, both from the Western view (CHW) and the Eastern view, especially Java (Kejawen-HHB). These historical developments are presented in the form of narratives to provide a clear picture of events and context, thus helping in understanding each philosophy. The second stage reviews these narratives to identify the core similarities and differences between the two approaches. Finally, the third stage analyses these comparisons to find clues about new approaches to sustainability, especially attitudinal changes to support the achievement of sustainable development goals Results and Discussion: This research shows that the concepts of CHW and HHB are two concepts that emerged from two different regions and times but have the same philosophical line. Both understand that all components of nature need to coexist and respect each other psychologically and even spiritually. This change in attitude is necessary to avoid the evil nature of humans (greed and arrogance) in fulfilling their needs in the form of development. The goal of sustainable development should be utilized for the benefit of the many and the broad (inclusive), which is the core concept of deep ecological understanding (Ecosophy of CHW) and needs to be supported by the concept of roso (spiritual culture of HHB). Both approaches have significant similarities and differences in some aspects but share the common goal of maintaining a dynamic balance to sustain living systems. Research Implications: The findings of this research are expected to contribute to a new perspective on how to achieve sustainability. The old approach based on classical mechanics is still relevant and useful to support the achievement of the SGDs, but the complexity of the world demands a change in behaviour in treating the universe and development. CHW and HHB provide new clues on how to achieve this. Originality/Value: This study compares and correlates two approaches from distinct origins: one rooted in the logic-driven Western culture and the other in the spiritual-based Eastern tradition. These approaches also emerged in different eras: one in the modern, complex age, and the other in the mythology-based ancient kingdom. By examining this correlation, the study underscores the importance of regulating thoughts and behaviors to ensure the continuity of life, particularly within the complexities of modern civilization.
... Although Starhawk has had a more prominent influence, the US Earth First! movement is also important. Dave Foreman, who founded Earth First! in 1980, perceives 'monkey wrenching' or 'ecotage' as a form of earth worship, and Bron Taylor (2001) asserts that the 'radical environmental' movement in the US "can aptly be labelled 'Pagan environmentalism' ". ...
Presentation
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Debate continues about how to define Paganism, but it is generally agreed that it is a 'nature religion'. Unsurprisingly, Pagans are widely supposed to be environmentally active, and the Dictionary of Contemporary Religion in the Western World goes so far as to say, "Paganism is an ecological faith tradition, a nature-centric spirituality that seeks to break down hierarchies." (Partridge, (ed.), 2002; 326). However, most ethnographic research shows that in practice, Pagans are not especially ecological, and only a minority of eclectic 'Eco-Pagans' are involved in direct action (Adler, 1986, pp. 399-415). Smith Obler concluded that although Pagans' language and beliefs speak of a love for nature, their behaviour is no more environmental than anyone else's (2004), and Adler found that "quite a few" Pagans were actually against environmental activism (1986; 400). We focus on this apparent paradox at the heart of the movement: If Paganism is a 'nature religion', why are so few practitioners environmentalists? The obvious answer is that belief does not always translate into practice, but we offer a more useful hypothesis based on existing research and recent ethnographic work. We make sense of this apparent inconsistency by tracing the genealogy of Paganism, which reveals diverse currents of influence. While Contemporary Paganism originated from esoteric magical traditions, we trace how an ‘earth-based’ Paganism emerged from folk Romanticism and the Free Festival movement. These currents are not isolated but nevertheless carry distinct ideological characteristics and attract different socio-political groups. Although our argument focuses on UK Paganism, the fundamental cross-cultural influences between the US and the UK mean that our analysis is relevant to both countries.
... Seit den 2000er Jahren werden ähnliche Ansichten unter dem Begriff "Ökospiritualität" vertreten. Kennzeichnend für diese Bewegung ist die Wahrnehmung der Natur als personifiziertes Wesen mit "mütterlichen" Zügen, das vor böser "männlicher" technischer Herrschaft und Ausbeutung bewahrt und verehrt werden muss, die Vorstellung einer spirituellen Verbindung zwischen Mensch und Natur sowie das Bewusstsein, dass die Natur eine heilige Einheit ist(Lincoln 2000;Taylor 2001a). ...
... Using a philosophical perspective from Europe, Taylor (2001) stated that Norwegian philosopher Arne Naess, coined the term Deep Ecology and argued for a fundamental shift in people's perception of the world and their relationship to it. Similarly, Doda and Awassa (2005) emphasised that according to German theologian Carl Barth, the biblical standard for human relationship with the ecosystem should be interactive, which involves sympathetic, good relations and friendliness with the rest of creation. ...
Conference Paper
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Abstract This paper explores the spiritual dimension of human ecology at Mount Pulag. To achieve this, the researchers gleaned themes on the sacredness of Mount Pulag from available literature and field interviews with members of the Indigenous groups living around the sacred mountain at the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic. The elements in the sacred mountains of the Judeo-Christian tradition are made to dialogue and interplay with the themes relative to Mount Pulag. The dialogue among the elements leads to the realization that the sacred Mount Pulag of Kabayan is physically distant from but very akin to the sacred mountains of Theophany in biblical Israel. In similar ways, both mountains are sacred mountains of God’s presence. Sustained by His (and spirits’) presence, Mount Pulag contributes to the well-being of human beings and creation. Thus, God’s sustaining presence makes sacred Mount Pulag a source of spirituality at the height of the COVID-19 pandemic. If recognized and made to influence practice, this rediscovered eco-spiritual bond between humankind and Mount Pulag could lead to a transformed way of being in the world, with humanity interrelating with all creation as subjects,
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Recently, the COVID-19 pandemic has made humans more aware of the alarming situation of nature with environmental and ecological crises that have become more urgent to have concrete actions. In working to protect our common home, among the religions, Eastern Christianity is involved very actively in making awareness, initiating dialogues, co-operation with other institutions, organizations, and governments, and contributing many insights and solutions to environmental issues. However, amid a secularized world, due to her nature and mission, Eastern Christian Church always emphasizes a deeper dimension of human life: salvation, rather than simply the world’s concerns. In reality, with a long history of the theological tradition of creation since the Church Fathers, Eastern Christianity has viewed creation as inherently related to Revelation, Incarnation, and salvation; it has provided an all-sided theological vision for environmental problems. And radically, Eastern Christianity identified the ecological crisis as a human failure to care for nature. Thus, the solutions it offers have spiritual root by calling for the radical shift of mentality and lifestyle as genuine repentance by living a life of asceticism. And as soon as humans convert and enter a deeper union with God, they can look after God’s creation and bring all creation back to the proper order God created at its beginning. In contrast, without a radical conversion, new mentality, and lifestyle, there is no real solution to environmental problems. From Eastern Christianity’s perspective, hopefully, the light may shine on the darkness of ecological crisis in the post-pandemic world; that is what this paper aims for.
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At the turn of the twentieth and twenty-first centuries, the landscape of religions and the dynamics of beliefs are reshaped by several movements. On one side, a ‘return of magic’ in contemporary societies and the rise of a modern witchcraft, and in parallel, and on another side, the rise and expansion of forms of ‘spirituality’. These two movements, both featuring in a specific manner the new face of the sacred, are often considered isolated from each other by social sciences and humanities, and religious studies, they, however, significantly crossover. As a result, modern witchcraft is turning more ‘spiritual’, whereas spirituality is – to a certain extent – becoming more ‘witchy’. With reference to the empirical examples of the emerging movements Magic for resistance and Witches 2.0, this article aims at demonstrating that the issue of politics and empowerment facilitate the cross-fertilization of the two movements in the context of high digitization.
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Since the 1980 formation of Earth First!, radical environmental movements have proliferated widely. Their adversaries, law enforcement authorities and some scholars accuse them of violence and terrorism. Here, I scrutinize such charges by examining 18 years of radical environmentalism for evidence of violence and for indications of violent tendencies. I argue that despite the frequent use of revolutionary and martial rhetoric by participants in these movements, they have not, as yet, intended to inflict great bodily harm or death. Moreover, there are many worldview elements internal to these movements, as well as social dynamics external to them, that reduce the likelihood that movement activists will attempt to kill or maim as a political strategy. Labels such as ‘violent’ or ‘terrorist’ are not currently apt blanket descriptors for these movements. Thus, greater interpretive caution is needed when discussing the strategies, tactics, and impacts of radical environmentalism.
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“Deep ecology” is a term coined in 1973 by the Norwegian philosopher Arne Naess. It has become the central label for an increasingly militant branch of the international environmental movement. Deep ecology rejects mechanistic assumptions about the natural world, supplanting them with the premise that at a metaphysical level, the natural world is a sacred, interrelated whole, characterized by a dynamic, ongoing process of evolutionary change. All creatures are similarly interrelated; indeed they are related as kin. Since all creatures are sacred and related, none are superior; all have intrinsic worth. Humans, therefore, ought to defend each life form and the integrity of the ecosystems they inhabit so that all creatures can fulfill their evolutionary destinies.The international deep ecology movement resists what movement activists label the human “war against nature.” Increasingly, however, deep ecologists recognize that this war is also a war against indigenous peoples and peasants whose survival is threatened directly by the destruction of particular ecosystems.Deep ecologists view the enclosure of lands previously managed as a commons—a process accompanying colonialism and the transition from feudal to industrial societies—as a huge ecological mistake. They think that peasant and indigenous lifeways are, in most cases, ecologically sustainable. There tends to be, therefore, a natural affinity between the land use proposals of deep ecologists and the interests of peasants and indigenous peoples. This has led to international efforts by deep ecologists, especially within Earth First!, to stand in solidarity with peasants and tribals as they defend their forests. As they resist cultural and ecosystem destruction, deep ecologists find themselves increasingly repressed, not only in their countries of origin but also in the native regions where they campaign.The heart and soul of the deep ecology movement is the perception that the natural world is a sacred, interrelated whole. Deep ecologists trace environmental decline to a spiritual crisis, reflected in the way that Western religious assumptions have divided humans from other creatures and divided the natural world from the divine realm. Thus, it is worth asking: How do deep ecologists come to their apparently antimodern perceptions about the natural world? How do they propose to place us on the proper path to nature‐harmonious lifeways? The answers reveal the important role played by the arts in the emergence of this new, international, religious movementMost deep ecologists think that time spent in undefiled wilderness is the central prerequisite for people developing deep “ecological consciousness” or an “ecological self* that understands the sacredness and value of all life. But how is this possible in the modern world, when in the words of one activist, “the Earth's sacred voices [and thus, authentic human consciousness] are paved over.” Deep ecologists believe that there is no substitute for a direct experience of the wild. Nevertheless, some believe that the arts can promote an ecological consciousness by breaking through the pernicious socializing power of industrial consumer culture, countering its instrumental, profit‐maximizing rationality, which separates us from our authentic, ecological selves.
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A growing number of contributors to environmental philosophy are beginning to rethink the field's mission and practice. Noting that the emphasis of protracted conceptual battles over axiology may not get us very far in solving environmental problems, many environmental ethicists have begun to advocate a more pragmatic, pluralistic, and policy-based approach in philosophical discussions about human-nature relationships. In this paper, we argue for the legitimacy of this approach, stressing that public deliberation and debate over alternative environmental ethics is necessary for a culture of democracy to be upheld in decision making and policy formulation. Then we argue for a democratically tempered environmental ethics that is grounded in a practical understanding of the character of moral claims regarding the natural world. We offer the results of an empirical study of environmental ethics held by the public to illustrate the diversity in their moral commitments to nature. Finally, we conclude with a discussion of the implications of this ethical pluralism for policy discussions about the management of American public lands.
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The present study attempts to measure how individuals define the terms religiousness and spirituality, to measure how individuals define their own religiousness and spirituality, and to examine whether these definitions are associated with different demographic, religio/spiritual, and psychosocial variables. The complete sample of 346 individuals was composed of 11 groups of participants drawn from a wide range of religious backgrounds. Analyses were conducted to compare participants' self-rated religiousness and spirituality, to correlate self-rated religiousness and spirituality with the predictor variables, and to use the predictor variables to distinguish between participants who described themselves as "spiritual and religious" from those who identified themselves as "spiritual but not religious." A content analysis of participants' definitions of religiousness and spirituality was also performed. The results suggest several points of convergence and divergence between the constructs religiousness and spirituality. The theoretical, empirical, and practical implications of these results for the scientific study of religion are discussed.
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Spirituality has increasingly featured in writings about religion. This article explores the diverse and often contradictory ways in which this term is now being employed, it questions the reasons for its present popularity, and asks to what extent it can serve the purposes to which it is being put. Finally, by using the insights of contemporary anthropology and especially the work of Michael Carrithers, it suggests a more satisfactory way in which the ideas associated with spirituality might be investigated.
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Ecologically responsible policies are concerned only in part with pollution and resource depletion. There are deeper concerns which touch upon principles of diversity, complexity, autonomy, decentralization, symbiosis, egalitarianism, and classlessness.
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Perceptions of danger result not only from fear of defilement, but also from competing claims to the ownership of central symbols by forces on the periphery of a society. This article examines two peripheral movements often perceived as dangerous in American society during the 1970s—the Unification Church and the Peoples Temple—by concentrating on their appropriations and interpretations of one central complex of symbols: the Bible. Biblical interpretation is investigated as a strategic attempt to underwrite the legitimacy of acts of appropriation; issues of meaning serve more basic interests in ownership of the power of symbols. Four issues in biblical interpretation are explored. First, in establishing the nature of the text, the Unification Church appropriated the Bible as an open canon requiring closure, while the Peoples Temple claimed it as a closed canon requiring erasure. Second, in appropriating the text's beginning, the Unification Church claimed the primordial garden as a pattern to restore, while the Peoples Temple claimed it as a prison to escape. Third, in appropriating the text's end, both movements claimed to play a central role in the eschatological battle between good and evil, but the Unification Church identified evil in satanic communism, while the Peoples Temple identified it as antichrist capitalism. Finally, both movements can be located as interpretive communities in America of the 1970s. The Unification Church was engaged in a strategic recentering of civil and biblical symbols in order to claim a place in American civil space, while the Peoples Temple was undertaking a strategic decentering of civil and biblical symbols in order to configure an alienation from American society. That conflict of symbols revealed the ambivalence of appropriation and alienation that operates in religion. In this regard, religion may be redefined as the cultural process of stealing back and forth sacred symbols.
Book
The basic thesis of the work is that environmental problems are only to be solved by people - people who will be required to make value judgements in conflicts that go beyond narrowly conceived human concerns. Thus people require not only an ethical system, but a way of conceiving the world and themselves such that the intrinsic value of life and nature is obvious, a system based on 'deep ecological principles'. The book encourages readers to identify their own series of such parameters - their own ecosophies. Ecology, Comunity and Lifestyle will appeal to philosophers, specialists working on environmental issues, and the more general reader who is interested in learning some of the foundational ideas of the rapidly expanding field of environmental philosophy.