Item Details

Globalization and Sustainability: A Humanist Agenda

Issue: Vol 11 No. 3 (2006) Ecotheology 11.3 September 2006

Journal: Journal for the Study of Religion, Nature and Culture

Subject Areas: Religious Studies

DOI: 10.1558/ecot.2006.11.3.268

Abstract:

At the core of this contribution are two questions: 1) Is the vision of sustainable
development not just ethically justified and economically viable—but
captivating enough to clean poisoned wells and restore the structures of
the mind? 2) Is the current religious revival in non-European countries a
possible ally—or adversary—of positive globalization?
The argument is that among the greatest obstacles to the endeavour of
sustainable development is human attraction to stories of excess, profusion,
decadence, a sense of ending or shock. People are compelled by the
myths of transgression, irreverence, and the hedonist greatness and glory
in the same way that they are not drawn to the penitential story of renewable
resources, equal distribution. Economic reason and democratic Geist—
have either devalued or suppressed human desire for transcendence or
muddled values. Those who attempt to renew the environmental narrative
through the romance with Eastern spirituality or via the alterglobalist
protest are often either unwitting allies of neoliberal order or lack any
coherent plan or vision of the future. The much flaunted ‘postmodern’
mindset is of little use, since it has celebrated the lack of assurance and
conviction, and thus launched a quixotic project of founding the social and
cultural values on the lack of foundations themselves.
The suggestion is that the search for the solid ground should start, not
just from reclaiming the commons but, first of all, from reclaiming the
humanist project, which has been lost by Western civilization.

Author: Nina Witoszek

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