Politics and Worldview

J. Meyer
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Abstract

Political Nature stands at the very important juncture of politics and environmentalism, and in it John M. Meyer challenges political thought that would divorce politics from questions of the human-nature relation, as well as environmentalist thought that would divorce questions about the human-nature relation from politics. Meyer thus brings the political and the environmental together in an attempt to move past some familiar environmentalist debates and towards a more productive environmentalism. The book is divided into three sections, the first of which reviews and critiques certain strains of environmentalist literature. Meyer’s analysis begins by noting that environmentalists often emphasize the importance of developing a new worldview or “ecological conception of nature” (5)—a conception often linked to ecological science— which asserts “that humans and non-human nature are necessarily connected and hence interdependent” (35). This view, Meyer argues, is intended by environmentalists to give new direction to our dealings with the natural world and to inform greener social and political practices, but Meyer is concerned that within this way of thinking “political debate becomes ... largely inconsequential” (33) due to the fact that it sees politics as “a mere consequence of our worldview” (37). He goes on to suggest that this emphasis on worldviews is supported by two dominant ways in which environmentalists (and others) read the history of Western thought. The “dualist” reading (35 ff.), which Meyer finds in clear form in the work of ecofeminist Val Plumwood, contends that in the West our thinking about human beings and human activities involves a rejection of our status as natural beings. Interpreting Western thought in this way, it is easy to see the power of a transformed worldview: if our current practices are premised upon such a dualism, then the ecological worldview “can have great power to restructure our thinking on a wide variety of other subjects; most notably on politics and social order” (40). The second reading, which Meyer associates with Carolyn Merchant and Freya Mathews, is that political and social orders have in fact been derived from conceptions of nature all along. On this “derivative” account (36 ff.), the problem in the West is not that our thinking about politics has been based on a dualistic separation of the human from the natural, but rather that the current (mechanistic) conception of nature gives rise to a distinctively un-ecological order of things. Consequently, on this telling, the ecological worldview is promoted as a corrective to previous, flawed understandings of nature and the practices to which they have given rise. Meyer takes issue with both of these interpretations, not least because of their oversimplification of the nature-politics relation in Western thought. This critique is
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政治与世界观
《政治自然》站在政治与环境保护主义的重要结合点上,约翰·m·迈耶在书中挑战了将政治与人与自然关系问题分离的政治思想,以及将人与自然关系问题与政治分离的环境保护主义思想。因此,迈耶将政治和环境结合在一起,试图超越一些熟悉的环境主义者辩论,走向更有成效的环境主义。本书分为三个部分,第一部分回顾和批评了一些环保主义文学流派。迈耶的分析首先指出,环保主义者经常强调发展一种新的世界观或“自然的生态概念”的重要性(5)——这一概念通常与生态科学有关——它断言“人类和非人类的自然是必然联系在一起的,因此是相互依存的”(35)。迈耶认为,这种观点是环保主义者的意图,旨在为我们与自然世界的交往提供新的方向,并为更环保的社会和政治实践提供信息,但迈耶担心,在这种思维方式下,“政治辩论变得……很大程度上是无关紧要的”(33),因为它认为政治“仅仅是我们世界观的结果”(37)。他接着指出,这种对世界观的强调得到了环保主义者(和其他人)解读西方思想史的两种主要方式的支持。“二元论”的解读(第35页),迈耶在生态女性主义者瓦尔·普拉姆伍德的作品中发现了清晰的形式,认为在西方,我们对人类和人类活动的思考涉及到对我们作为自然存在的地位的拒绝。以这种方式解读西方思想,很容易看到一种转变后的世界观的力量:如果我们当前的实践是以这种二元论为前提的,那么生态世界观“可以具有巨大的力量来重组我们对各种其他主题的思考;尤其是在政治和社会秩序方面”(40)。Meyer与Carolyn Merchant和Freya Mathews合作的第二种解读是,政治和社会秩序实际上一直源于自然概念。根据这种“衍生”的解释(36页),西方的问题不在于我们对政治的思考是基于人与自然的二元分离,而在于当前的(机械的)自然概念产生了一种明显的非生态的事物秩序。因此,在这种情况下,生态世界观被提升为对以前有缺陷的自然理解和实践的纠正。迈耶对这两种解释都有异议,尤其是因为它们对西方思想中自然-政治关系的过度简化。这个评论是
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