Eco-philosophy concerns itself with the intersection of ecology with philosophyâand particularly our response to industrialisation and manmade climate change. Rupert Read, the philosopher-activist and author of Parents for a Future, selects five of the best books that contemplate eco-philosophy and our place on this Earth.
Letâs start with the obvious question before we talk books. What is eco-philosophy?
Iâd say eco-philosophy is philosophy that stands on the Earth, or, to put it in a way which is slightly more etymological, itâs the love of wisdom about all things earthly. So itâs thinking about how our ecology has philosophical implications, and how philosophy may have ecological implications. Eco-philosophy has to do with ethics, obviously. But itâs not just ethics. Itâs also to do with what kinds of beings we are, what kinds of things we can hope for, what kind of world this is. In a way eco-philosophy embraces all philosophy in my opinion, but certainly a broad swathe of philosophical thinking that includes epistemology, metaphysics, phenomenology, and ethics insofar as they are relevant to the nature of our existence as earthlings.
It seems to me that what youâre saying is that itâs the philosophy that focuses on questions about ecology, and the environment, and our relationship to the living world. And so just about everythingâs eco-philosophy in that sense. But the really important aspect of it is surely where its emphasis lies: in a kind of urgency in relation to the scientific evidence about the climate crisis and impacts of industrialisation on our climate, our ecology and on our social structures. That is what I understand by eco-philosophy anyway.
Absolutely. And industrialisation is highly relevant to most of my book choices. My final book choice, Bruno Latourâs Downto Earth is about the increasingly important question of whether weâre going to stay with this idea of ourselves as earthlings, or whether weâre going to try and escape our earthly nature, which, because of technological advances, is supposedly starting to be a live question.
And just before we get into this, for people who think that simply philosophising about these things, is probably not enough. Could you say a bit about your own active involvement in ecological concerns?
Yes. Iâm a professor at the University of East Anglia, where Iâve been researching and teaching for many years, increasingly about this stuff. Obviously, when one does that one needs to be appraised of the science, but science is not everything. Weâll talk about that, how there are considerations to do with precaution that seed ethical questions that go beyond what science has to offer. And, as you imply, I strongly believe that itâs not enough just to philosophise. Philosophers interpret the world. But it also needs changing. And Iâve tried to do some of that as well. Iâve been involved in various kinds of activism for many years. Recently, I was heavily involved in Extinction Rebellion, strategising for them, meeting with the government for them, going on TV for them. Thatâs a very interesting way of engaging with the public and trying to bring an intellectual perspective to bear, but doing it very much out there in the real world.
Support Five Books
Five Books interviews are expensive to produce. If you're enjoying this interview, please support us by donating a small amount.
Letâs talk about these eco-philosophy books. Whatâs your first choice?
So the first bookâperhaps a bit of an unexpected choiceâis Lyrical Ballads by William Wordsworth, and Samuel Taylor Coleridge. This is a fascinating book in so many ways. One thing thatâs so unusual about it is that it is a book of poems by more than one author. Why did Wordsworth and Coleridge decided to produce this, together? Well, basically, it was because they regarded themselves as having something to say, something to contribute that went way beyond the sphere of pleasing or thought provoking in a purely literary sense.
The Lyrical Ballads was a kind of manifesto for a new way of doing poetry. The form of the poetry was very shocking at the time and they were also bringing a new point to poetry. And that point is what really brings this very close to eco-philosophy. What they tried to do in the Lyrical Ballads was to produce a sort of poetic manifesto for thinking about nature in a different way, in a more serious way, than was customary at the time.
Get the weekly Five Books newsletter
We know this as one of the great statements of the philosophy, or ideology, of Romanticism, which is a point of view, a perspective on the world that I believe needs to be taken incredibly seriously. Romanticism has been viewed over the last couple of centuries, most of the time, as a middle class indulgence or something. As something which is nice, but really canât be the main way to live oneâs life. Wordsworth and Coleridge, were among those who were really serious about it, saying, âLook, this should be something like the basis of lifeâ, which obviously brings it very, very close to philosophy. They thought that what we call Romanticism should be the way that we live, the way that we orient ourselves towards the world. And, they thought, if we are missing the kinds of things that they were trying to get at, that were present in their poems, they thought, in a certain sense, we were missing everything.
You could think of the Lyrical Ballads as a confrontation with the emerging spirit of industrialism. At the very time they were writing these poems, the Industrial Revolution was really taking off in England. They were seeking to resist that, but to resist it actively, and to sketch a live alternative. I think they do it absolutely brilliantly and profoundly.
Sometimes in Britain, we tend to venerate and get excited about speakers of German or French or other languages more than we do speakers of English. And that can happen with Romanticism, as well. I think these poems are astonishingly fine in the main, I think theyâre really important. They were brought together by these two authors in the prime of their talent and I think they still have something to teach us now.
So, just to give a flavour of it, could you pick out an overarching message or a message from within a single poem that you tells us something about ethics?
Yes. Iâd like to read out a little passage from the final poem in the book. I donât think itâs a coincidence that it is the final poem. Itâs âLines written above Tintern Abbeyâ by Wordsworth. I could have picked many poems from the book, most of them by Wordsworth, or I could have picked something else, perhaps something from Wordsworthâs amazing narrative poem, âThe Preludeâ, which points in much the same direction. But this is a particularly powerful passage. And I think itâll be clear, as I read it, how this is philosophically relevant. Here we go:
ââŚAnd I have felt A presence that disturbs me with the joy Of elevated thoughts; a sense, sublime Of something far more deeply interfusedâŚâ
This idea of interfusion, I think, is something which philosophers could take some notice of.
ââŚWhose dwelling is the light of setting suns, And the round ocean, and the living air, And the blue sky, and in the mind of man: A motion and a spirit, that impels All thinking things, all objects of all thought, And rolls through all thingsâŚâ
So thereâs some kind of sense there, which you might connect in a way with philosophical Idealism, of a central importance to the human mentality, and the fusing of it with the world. And then the poem continues with this line,
ââŚTherefore am I still A lover of the meadows and the woods, And mountains; and of all that we behold From this green earth, of all the mighty world Of eye and ear,âboth what they half create And what perceive;âŚâ
I think this is very lovely, these final lines I read, âboth what they half create/ And what perceiveâ. Somehow our minds and our senses are involved in the creation of what they perceive and donât merely perceive itânor do they merely create it. Thereâs a kind of active interfusion. And that, I think, is part of what Wordsworth was seeking to give us in this poem.
Itâs striking of course that these poems are poems about the countryside, about the Lake District and, in this case of Tintern Abbey, in Wales. Theyâre rural scenes, places of great beauty.
But, as John Stuart Mill and various other people have pointed out, ânatureâ applies to everything. Nature isnât simply the beautiful landscape, itâs the whole thing. Whatâs natural is what we do. Isnât there a place for an ecology of cities and ecology of factories even? Arenât we in danger of a kind of romanticisation of the countryside, which, actually today, isnât the greenest place to live, except visually?
Letâs start with nature. Is nature everything? Iâd say yes and no. I think itâs really important that the word ânatureâ is used in different ways in different contexts. There is a really important use of the word ânatureâ often made by philosophers, where itâs simply everything, and itâs opposed only to the supernatural, or the non-existent.
But I think itâs important to remember that thereâs another sense of the word ânatureâ, which is not that, which is nature as opposed to culture, or nature as opposed to the urban environment. Thereâs an important use for that concept of nature, as well. Iâve argued previously, that actually, itâs not a coincidence that we have these two senses of nature, and I think we canât do without either of them.
Am I implying that we canât think in the kind of way that Wordsworth does about cities and so forth? No, not at all. And in that context, of course, itâs really interesting that another of the great poems in the Lyrical Ballads is âComposed upon Westminster Bridge, September, the Third 1802â. Itâs a splendid poem, which begins:
âEarth has not anything to show more fair, Dull would he be of soul who could pass by A site, so touching in its majesty: This city now doth, like a garment, Wear the beauty of the morningâŚâ
There you have Wordsworth doing that, bringing the spirit of Romanticism into the heart of the city; but does that mean in turn, that we just simply have to accept that it all comes together as a package, and we have to just roll over and accept industrialisation and accept all its consequences? I donât think it does means that either. I think that thereâs a dialectical relationship, if you will, between these two senses of nature. And what Wordsworth and Coleridge try to give us is a sense of the beauty of wild nature and rural nature, a sense of the same thing sometimes in cities, but also a sense, often by a sort of implied contrast, of where these things can go wrong. I think that they did start to go wrong in some pretty serious ways, during the Industrial Revolution.
I think it would obviously be absurd to say simply, âIt would have been better if the Industrial Revolution hadnât have happened.â But I donât think itâs totally absurd to say something like, âImagine if the industrial revolution had happened a lot more slowly, or a lot more carefully, or a lot more selectively.â Among other things, we wouldnât be in the situation that we are in now, where we have to contemplate the possible destruction of our civilisation and even of our species, this century. Thatâs part of whatâs motivating the choices of my books here today. What if we were able to think philosophically and in ways that inform philosophy, through literature and other sources, that might make it less likely that we head down this path to mutual self-destruction?
I like that poem you quoted about the sublime and the feeling of connection with something bigger. I think thatâs something that almost anybody would recognise as having experienced, at least from time to time, and it reminds me very much of Schopenhauer. And I suspect German idealism, as you say, is the source of some of Wordsworthâs thinking, but it also puts me in mind of that poem by Dylan Thomas, which is almost pure Schopenhauer, âThe force that through the green fuse drives the flower,ââthere he writes about the life energy, or the âworld as willâ as Schopenhauer would have expressed it.
Is there some kind of message from Wordsworth and Coleridge about what we should do. Thereâs that famous line from Auden, âPoetry makes nothing happenâ, which is probably false. Itâs certainly false but, on the other hand, itâs true that poetry doesnât make a lot happen.
What Wordsworth and Coleridge offered usâand I think it did have some consequenceâis a sense of, or a way of being in the world, which wouldnât just take for granted nostrums of so-called progress, thinking that thereâs nothing to do in the face of industrialisation bar roll over and accept it. This has, of course, been often a defensive or rear-guard action, but itâs a rear-guard action which has had some real effects. Hereâs an interesting question: would you have had organisations like the National Trust, if you hadnât had poets like Wordsworth and Coleridge? Now obviously, thatâs an impossible counterfactual question to answer. But it seems to me that one might at least speculate that ideas and practices such as those embedded in amazing organisations like the National Trust, or later, the National Parks, donât come from nowhere; they come from a certain kind of cultural milieu, or a certain kind of sense of whatâs possible and whatâs important. The lines are not going to be direct. It would be very difficult to write an impact case study for Wordsworth. But I think there are likely to be real connections there and perhaps quite deep and significant connections.
And my thought is that we need to go back to some of these writers and thinkers and see their relevance now that the consequences of rampant, reckless industrialism are much plainer to see. I see people like Wordsworth and Rabindranath Tagore, who weâll come on to in a minute, as visionaries and people with a cultural and philosophical influence who need to be listened to now if there is going to be a future.
Letâs move on to your second book, Tagoreâs Letters From a Young Poet, 1887 to 1895.
A book by another great literary figure, this time from the east: Rabindranath Tagore. Itâs not one of his best-known books, but in my opinion, it is one of his very best. Itâs a collection of letters to his niece. And when he wrote these, in most cases, there would have been absolutely no thought of publication, which makes their quality all the more remarkable. You might think of this book as an eastern epistolatory nature philosophy. It contains passages of astounding beauty about the natural world that Tagore was inhabiting, which was basically the river deltas around Calcutta. It also contains his reflections on how these give us a very different sense of whatâs important and of how to live than one gets in the city. Itâs a sort of Eastern counterpart, as I see it, of Romanticism, and again, very visionary.
Iâve been dipping into Henry Thoreauâs Walden recently, and also Iâve reviewed, Peter Godfrey-Smithâs recent book Metazoa. What struck me about both of those booksâboth written by philosophersâwas that most of the argument is carried in a certain kind of description, a very attentive way of responding to whatâs in front of them, the natural world, as we say. In the case of Thoreau, it was the changing natural world he was living in by Walden Pond, self-exiled, as it were, in a little hut there for a couple of years. For Peter Godfrey-Smith it was diving
in the sea near Sydney looking at, for the most part, things like sea anemones and shrimps, as well as octopuses, but looking really hard. And the first stage of this process is a willingness to describe with great attention, whatâs in front of your nose.
Very nice. I think thatâs a great connection. It also reminds me of the philosopher who has been a great influence on my work, Wittgenstein, who over and over again emphasised the importance of description. There are those key lines in Philosophical Investigations, âdonât think but look; I repeat, donât think but look!â; look at how language actually works, look at real examples. And possibly itâs no coincidence that for Wittgenstein Tagore was a towering figure. When Wittgenstein encountered the Vienna Circle in the 1920s, they thought they were going to be meeting a scientifically-minded philosopher, and they were absolutely astonished when Wittgenstein chose to read out long passages from Tagore to them, instead!
I think that connection with Walden that youâve essayed there is a very apt one, Nigelânot very distant in time, from this book of Tagoreâs. I think the sensibilities of Thoreau and Tagore are quite similar. And interestingly, neither of them are really writing from or about the deep wilderness, but writing about the places where nature intersects with human life, and also very much writing about water, and places where, water and trees and human beings come together and combine.
Itâs interesting too that nobody teaches philosophers to describe the world. They just want to argue, give reasons, and find evidence which supports their conclusionâa conclusion which they may have already reached before theyâve started the processâif thatâs not too cynical. I donât think thereâs an innocent eye. But thereâs a great value in an immersion in a place either socially or physically, in trying new things, and in communicating something about the complexity of what it is youâre actually thinking about, not assuming how everything is before you start.
Absolutely. And this is very much what Tagore does. Heâs basically spending leisure time in the Ganges Delta, and in the nearby tributary rivers, especially the Padma, which is the one that he loves. He just writes these letters to his niece and describes what he sees. And then, sometimes, he draws morals or parallels.
So let me read you a little one here, which is quite intriguing for us. Here heâs contrasting the existence he has on the Ganges Delta and his boat with the world he lives in the majority of the time. He says this:
âThe world in which I find myself is full of very strange human beings. They are all occupied night and day with rules and building walls. They carefully put up curtains just in case their eyes actually see anything. Really, the creatures of this world are very strange. Itâs a wonder they donât cover up every flowering bush, or erect canopies to keep out the moonlight.â
I think itâs a splendid remark. It intrigues me that heâs interested in something there, which Iâm also interested in, which is the way in which weâre not very goodâand I include philosophers in this typicallyâat noticing the world outside of⌠not necessarily our own minds, but of our own human-made environments. In other words, itâs almost as if Tagore is saying here, âWhy are people so obsessed with staying in the cave, when there are these wonderful, natural landscapes, that you could see if you just turned your head and look outside.â
Get the weekly Five Books newsletter
I encountered a great example of this some years ago at the University of East Anglia. I was in a meeting with a bunch of colleagues in the Humanities faculty. We were talking about whether we were going to create a new school of the Humanities. And outside the window there developed this astounding, huge thunderstorm, one of the most ferocious thunderstorms Iâve ever seen; and no one took a blind bit of notice of it. I just couldnât understand it, and I couldnât relate to that non-seeing. I just thought, âWhy arenât we stopping and appreciating, and taking in this this astounding, perhaps once-in-a-lifetime phenomenon.â But it seemed to me as if my colleagues literally didnât notice or, if they did, they deliberately turned their heads back inside again. That incident has stayed with me.
Iâve got an experience that has something in common with that. I once went to a wedding with a philosopher friend, and we were being driven by a third philosopher. We were driving through part of Norfolk through open land with trees and they didnât have low branches. One of my travelling companions noted that we could probably conclude from this, that there were deer around that had eaten them. But the irony was that there were all these antlers sticking out through the grass. You could see the deer. You didnât have to reason to their existence indirectly.
Before we move on to your third choice, can I just ask, is the Tagore book the kind of book that you would read from cover to cover? Or is it one you might dip into and enjoy itâone letter at a time?
Well, one of the nice things about this book is that it was never the intention of Tagore himself for this to be a book. Iâve done it both ways. The first time I read it, I read it all the way through and became more and more absorbed. But itâs equally possible to just dip in.
Your third eco-philosophy book choice is The Imperative of Responsibility by Hans Jonas.
My third choice is more classically within the philosophical canon. The Imperative of Responsibility is probably Jonasâs masterpiece. He wrote this book in 1979. Itâs a contemporary classic, in the sense that itâs really foundational, in my view (but not just in my view), for environmental ethics because itâs a bookâand this is over 40 years ago nowâthat really takes seriously, as very few had before, the change that needs to come to philosophy. We need to start taking seriously the change that has come to us as a species as a result of industrialism, as a result of our growing technological power.
The argument that Jonas makes in an early part of the book is that this growing technological power forces upon us new questions and new responsibilities. He thinks that traditional ethics was not really well placed to answer or respond to the imperative of responsibility for our planetary home. I think heâs basically right. And, increasingly, thatâs almost taken for granted, at least outside a few holdout departments of moral philosophy. But, at the time, it was quite a bold thing to argue. So Jonas says, for example, that nuclear war and environmental devastation are possibilities that mean that itâs not adequate anymore just to think within the confines of Kantianism, or Utilitarianism or similar perspectives.
âNuclear war and environmental devastation are possibilities that mean that itâs not adequate anymore just to think within the confines of Kantianism, or Utilitarianismâ
In particular, he emphasises the way that so much of ethics is designed to deal with person-to-person interactions, which are not cumulative; whereas the choices that have increasingly faced us over the past couple of generations, are on a vast scale, and are cumulative over time. They demand foresight. They demandâin terms which have been increasingly important to me and my work in recent yearsâprecaution. They demand that we think ahead, and take care ahead of time; they demand, in particular, that we donât wait until all the scientific evidence is in. If we wait until all the evidence is in with regard to these kinds of threats, we may have waited until a time when itâs no longer possible for us to head off the threat. This is especially relevant to problems like genetic modification and geo-engineering. But itâs still relevant to climate as well.
We have vast evidence now on dangerous man-made climate change, but there are still issues that we donât fully understand. And there always will be. Thatâs in the nature of any question being a scientific question. The question is not entirely settled yet, which sometimes makes it difficult for scientists to communicate well in the public domain. So, even with regard to climate, there are questions about climate sensitivity, for example, which mean that, beyond the evidence, we need to bring in a precautionary perspective. And it was on that notion that Jonas really did the spade work in this wonderfully written book.
For people my ageâIâm nearly 60âthese are questions about responsibilities we have to people who will outlive us. Thatâs when the worst is likely to hit. Lots of people seem merely motivated by things that happen or are likely to happen within their own lifetimes. So it doesnât seem irrational to think only about yourselfâmy conscious lifetime, my experiences, what happens to those I care about. The further away you get from now, the harder it is accurately to predict what life will be like. Who could have predicted the internetâs impact social life 30 years ago? Who would have known about citizen science? Those sorts of things didnât exist.
So, I canât project with much certainty into the future but, in any case, isnât it quite rational to think about my life and my short-term cost/benefit analysis when thinking about how I should live? Added to that, if you think the human species is going to continue, and other animals which you have duties to, or responsibilities for are doing to keep going on into the future, arenât you going to be overwhelmed by what you have to do in the present for the future? Â How can you start to think about those things without being swamped? If youâre a consequentialist youâre going to end up living on nothing and sacrificing everything about this life for a possible future one that someone else may or may not get to live.
Those are great questions. I think theyâre really important. I think that the thing about those two questions you ended up there with, is that thereâs a real danger that, because we donât really want to hear the answer to the questions, we try not to ask them very deeply.
In other words, I donât think we should be living on virtually nothing now. And I think that extreme consequentialist visions of what we should be doing donât cut the mustard. But what I certainly think, is that we should be thinking far more carefully, and seriously, about what we owe to future people, what we owe to our descendants. If we allowed ourselves to really do that thinking, everything would change about the way that we live.
Now, how do we motivate that? Well, this is the topic of my new book, Parents for a Future, and the argument that I make at the core of this book, which has been much influenced by Jonas in the background, is that, if you simply accept that we are in a period of potential environmental catastropheâand I think everyone has to accept that now, that at the very least we are facing a potential true environmental catastropheâand if you are serious about loving your own children, that itself is enough to impel a long-term care for the entire Earth, and to draw the consequences now for how we need to change living our lives now, including politically.
âWe should be thinking far more carefully, and seriously, about what we owe to future people, what we owe to our descendantsâ
How so? Because my argument is that if you love your children, you have to make it possible for them to extend the same love to their children, and this swiftly iterates into the future. And then, in order to ensure that we are placing them in the best possible position to have a future, we have to provide them with the basic conditions for that, which is not so much a question of us denying ourselves everything, but rather a question of us ensuring that theyâre not denied the right to have everything, or even anythingâcrucially, functional ecosystems, the capacity to live, breathe, eat, drink, and so on. We should assume that human beings are going to need that for a very, very long time to come.
So the argument I would make on a broadly Jonasian basis, and the argument I do make in this book, is that we do, indeed, have deep responsibilities to the future. This means that we have to change the way that we live now. Anything less is reckless, and unethical, and means that we wonât be able to look our children in the eye in the future. If we donât change everything and change it fast, there is highly likely to be a massive deterioration, an historic deterioration, or potential collapse in the quality of life in our childrenâs generation. If that happens, then every child, sooner or later, every descendant, sooner or later, is going to turn around and ask the one question they will be interested in knowing the answer to: What did you do while there was still time? So thatâs another motivation that Iâm trying to bring to bear in this bookâregret-avoidance: avoiding being in the position of not being able to say, âI did everything that I could.â Hopefully doing everything that we can will be enough. But if it isnât, you still want to know that you at least did everything that you could.
Is Jonasâ book a dense philosophical tome, or is it something that is written for a wider audience?
Well, itâs a bit of both. But itâs certainly not a light read. And I think you canât get the full impact of it unless youâre willing to give it some serious attention, and probably to read most of it or all of it. Before we leave it, let me just give you one little example of the philosophical power and broader relevance of the book. One of the things that Jonas does in the book is offer a kind of refutation of the famous philosophical is/ought distinction or fact/value distinction.
And this is how he does it.
âWhen asked for a single instance, and one is enough, where the coincidence of the âisâ and the âoughtâ occurs, we can point at the most familiar sight, the new-born, whose mere breathing uncontradictably addresses an âoughtâ to the world around, namely, to take care of him.â
So the suggestion that Jonas makes there is: simply looking at a new-born baby is enough to unleash the imperative of responsibility. Iâm not certain that I agree with him. Iâve argued in print in the past that, actually, we need to have a sort of virtue of love or care that intervenes there to help us. But itâs a very, very powerful idea, a powerful attempt at disagreeing with one of the main dogmas of philosophy.
Your next eco-philosophy book is Entropia, a novel.
My next book is by far the least well known of my authors, and itâs by far the least well known book. Itâs by my friend and colleague, Samuel Alexander, with whom Iâve co-written a couple of books now, including my little book, This Civilisation is Finished.
This is a book that deserves to be much better known than it is. And, of the things that Samuel has written, I think itâs the most important. Itâs a philosophical novel. What Sam wants to do, is to depict a future in which industrial growth and society have collapsed, and people are trying to live on the wreckage in a way that is sustainable. And theyâre trying to live in that sense within entropic limits, trying to be scavengers of the old civilisation and to remake a new viable, essentially agrarian civilisation, with small scale workshops, doing stuff by hand. Thereâs lots of poetry, with people doing spontaneous performances for each other in their leisure time. But struggling to get by some of the time. The book contains an account of what happens after the Great Disruption, when most societies of the world collapsed, which is conceived as having been within the lifetimes of many of these people in the book.
Itâs a splendid read. For philosophers, itâs charming, because Sam is continually bringing in implicitly, and mostly explicitly, the great philosophers. Heâs quoting or talking about Hobbes, Rousseau, Marx, and the rest. His characters sometimes offer lines of one of them to each other. And, in that sense, itâs very much a novel of ideas in the tradition of utopias and dystopias.
âThey wanted to see whether people could potentially live off the wreckage of industrial civilisation, whether people could live much more lightly on the earthâ
Now, for the first two thirds one could think itâs fun and interesting, but a little bit plodding. Quite a lot of it is expository, and itâs not exactly driven by a brilliant narrative or by literary flair. I donât think Sam would mind me saying that. But then, two thirds of the way through, thereâs this enormous twist. And what Iâm afraid I have to do in order to give you a sense of why the book is really, really worth reading, is to tell you what the twist is. So, this is going to be a horrible spoiler for you. But itâs for the greater good.
The novel is set on an island where theyâre building this community of Entropia on the wreckage of industrial civilisation. What happens two thirds of the way through the novel is that, for the first time in a very long time, they get a visitor to the island who rows in a boat to them and tells them an astonishing fact. Here is where Plato comes in⌠This visitor says that the history of their community is based on a noble lie. And the lie is this: no collapse of civilisation has taken place. And in fact, the time isnât the late 21st century, the time is the present day. And, actually, the experiment of Entropia started in the 1930s and 1940s, when some far-sighted people started to see that we were on the path to potential societal collapse. What they wanted to see was whether people could potentially live off the wreckage of industrial civilisation and whether people could live much more lightly on the earth.
What this visitor then says to the inhabitants of Entropia is, âLook what we want you to do now in the early 21st century, is to come back to the world and teach people about how youâve been managing to live, and explain to them that itâs not going to be as terrible as they all think, and also to explain to them what it was like living in what they thought was the aftermath of the crash of industrial civilisation.â
Itâs an absolutely magnificent twist. It really took my breath away; and also, of course, it raises intriguing ethical issues in terms of whether a noble lie like that can ever really be noble, whether it can be justified.
Thatâs Entropia in a nutshell. I hope youâll still think it worth readingâor studying youâre your students, maybe, if youâre a teacherâeven after hearing that. I hope Iâve at least explained how it came to have a powerful effect on me. It is a novel of ideas supremely relevant to the situation in which we now find ourselves.
Letâs move on to the last of your eco-philosophy books: Latourâs Down to Earth: Politics in the New Climatic Regime.
This bookâs hard to classify. Itâs by the philosopher-sociologist-theorist, Bruno Latour.
Latour was not one of my favourite thinkers before I read this book. Iâve found him an interesting person to engage with, in person, and to read in the past, but I rarely found myself really agreeing with him very much. But this book has changed all of that. The title is translated from the Frenchâa better translation would be A Place to Land.
Whatâs the French title?
OĂš Atterrir? (Where to come down to earth? or: Where to land?) Itâs that idea of where to come down, of finding a place to land, thatâs missing from the English version.
Hereâs a quotation from the book that I actually use as an epigraph in my book, Parents For a Future where Latour is explaining the sense in which he means the titleâespecially the French title:
âDo we continue to nourish dreams of escaping, or do we start seeking a territory that we and our children can inhabit? Either we deny the existence of the problem, or else we look for a place to land. From now on, this is what divides us all, much more than our position on the right or the left side of the political spectrum.â
Thatâs one of the things that really interests me in the book. Latour arguesâand this is very interesting coming from a French person againâthat it is widely but unwisely taken for granted in political philosophy and in actual politics that the division between left and right is the meaningful and central divide. Like Latour, I donât deny that it still has some relevance. But what Iâd argue, and what I find very convincing in Latourâs book, is that a more important divide now is the divide between those who essentially put their faith in technology and who think we can we can build a more anthropocentric Earth, or indeed escape from Earth altogether, or escape from our bodiesâessentially itâs the same idea, transhumanismâand those who donât think that, and who instead think that in some fundamental sense we need to go back to our nature as Earthlings, who think we need, in some sense, to go back to the land. We need to find a place to land, we need to re-associate ourselves with places, and we need to re-integrate ourselves with the land-base. You might see a kind of connection here, going back to the books we talked about at the start of this discussion.
And I think thatâs right. On the left, you have people like the advocates of so-called fully-automated-luxury-communism, and on the right you have those peculiar characters in California who hope to have their minds uploaded to computers to achieve immortality. But what they have in common is that theyâre not interested in finding a place to land, theyâre interested rather in escaping from our earthly nature, or escaping from the earth altogether. And I think Latour is proposing here a really helpful way of re-conceiving our politics and ourselves, a way that exposes the dangerous parallel between the right- and left- reality-deniers.
As a starting point, the way youâve expressed it, it seems quite extreme. Maybe itâs just the kind of people I mix with, but Iâve never met anybody who sincerely thinks that within the next few generations, the majority of the population will be out-housed on a different planet. And itâs looking increasingly implausible that weâll be able to upload people to computers, apart from in sci-fi movies.
Itâs a nice little philosophical puzzle, whether you could do that or not, and remain the same person. But realistically, it seems to be so far-fetched that itâs the wildest of Californian dreams. Like cryogenics, this is all a fantasy of achieving immortality, albeit with a tech twist.
But there is also a scientific optimism around that I find surprising. For instance, Steven Pinker, in The Better Angels of Our Nature, tells the story of how over the last 500 years, or whatever, things have got better for human beings, radically better. We mustnât lose sight of thatâin terms of poverty, in terms of ageing, in terms of the illnesses and suffering that we endure while weâre alive.
There is obviously the fear of massive nuclear war, massive climate change disaster. But he puts his faith in science to find solutions, rather than seeing a catastrophic decline and a change in the graph going upwards to a sudden, downwards turn. That kind of optimism, scientific optimismâthe idea that weâve dealt with crises in the past, therefore weâll be able to deal with them in the future is something that is disconcerting sometimes, because it can invite a kind of sit-back-and-let-the-scientists-get-on-with-it approach.
Given that, how is Latour telling us to redirect our energies?
Latour thinks that the very widespread idea of some kind of cosmopolitanism, which I find almost ubiquitous in academia, the very widespread and supposedly obviously good idea that weâre fundamentally âcitizens of the worldâ, that that actually can only at the very most tell half the story. âWe also need to attach ourselves,â as he puts it, âto a particular patch of soil.â We have to re-root ourselves, as Simone Weil might have put it. We have to get serious about place about place mattering and not just space or the entire globe.
And I think this is this is right, and a helpful move. I find the Pinkerian alternative deeply unconvincing. Let me briefly sketch why. Pinker has had very strong, devastating arguments made against him by people such as Ed Herman from the left, and by Nassim Taleb. Itâs really important to take into account that itâs arguably quite lucky that we are even where we are. By which I mean, for example, thereâs quite good reason to believe that weâre lucky not to have sunk our civilisation already. Plain lucky in particular not to have had nuclear war, massive nuclear war, over the last 70 years. Now, if youâre in the good position that youâre in simply as a matter of luck, then that really isnât a very good basis for any kind of faith in ongoing progress. And if you do have that⌠faith, then, surprisingly, the word âfaithâ really is relevant here. I think that this is a kind of faith-based approach. Itâs not based on rationality, itâs not based on reliable evidence.
I would argue that the only sane thing to do nowâand this, I think is the key message of eco-philosophy as Iâve been trying to understand it or expound itâis to start to roll back somewhat in the kind of direction that Latour is pointing to. But remember, the interesting thing about Latour is that heâs not simply saying something like, âLetâs go back to the local, letâs go back to the past.â He wants to maintain an idea of having access to the global world. I think this is very attractive, too.
Let me give an example. You mentioned the internet earlier. It seems to me that a very attractive possible scenario for the future of humankind, if weâre going to survive, is we try to re-root ourselves: we get serious about place, we get serious about the land again, with many more of us working on the land a lot more, starting with those who already want to but in various ways are prevented from doing so by poor institutional arrangements. But, on the scenario I hope for, we donât simply dispense with our global communications. On the contrary, we actually deliberately keep global communications open, so that we can continue to communicate with each other, so that we can continue to learn from each other, so that we can avoid atavism; and so that we can deal with coordination on worldwide problems such as pandemics or, or the climate itself. And I think that that shows, thereâs no inherent contradiction between these two.
We can have a future which is both global and much more seriously, local. Our world can be the best of both these worlds. That I think is a genuinely attractive vision for the future because, of course, there are many people who are not attracted by pure globalism or cosmopolitanism, but who want nevertheless to maintain the best of what we have, while actually having a way of life which is far more rooted, knowing their neighbours, having more security. I think itâs still not too late to combine these; but it will be too late soon.
Weâll probably soon be committed to some kind of collapse scenario, in my opinion, tragically, unless we aim seriously for the kind of alternative that is sketched in the most intriguing way in Latourâs book.
Iâm intrigued by that. Itâs quite comfortable for me, Iâm quite happy being located in this place in East Oxford, a quarter of a mile from the River Thames, with nice walks, reasonably good air quality, not too noisy. But for plenty of people, the place they find themselves in is the place that they want to have the chance to get away from. Itâs not given that because youâre in a place, you want to be rooted there, fundamentally, because some people are really unfortunate in the places they live. Not every place is equally attractive.
Why is that, though? I would argue that one of the key reasons is that many of these places have been destroyed by forces that were not from that place. And this is one of the key reasons why we need to do a lot of re-localisation. Because, when youâre dependent upon long supply lines, when youâre dependent on decisions made by CEOs, or investors, or prime ministers, who live 1,000s of miles away, then itâs hard for you to maintain and be fully âinvestedâ in where you live. Whatâs the best way typically to have people living in places that are not polluted and destroyed? Itâs to let them have power over those places, and for them not to be dependent upon the whims of human beings who donât have their interests at heart, and who canât necessarily see the damage that theyâre doing. When we buy products from China, we canât easily see the damage that weâre doing. If our supply lines were far more local and much shorter, if we were much more rooted, then it would be far more difficult to avoid facing the consequences of what we do and how we live.
Get the weekly Five Books newsletter
It is complicated, though, because in my experience, when you have small communities, you get the Nimby effect (ânot in my back yardâ)âdo it next door, not here. But also, trade is what has allowed for political progress historically. Trade is whatâs opened up channels of communication with people who would otherwise be fighting. And with trade with countries whose regimes operate in different ways, gradual change becomes possible, because of the necessity on both parts to continue to trade.
But thatâs what I think is hopeful again, about Latourâs vision. Heâs saying, âLetâs not go back to some kind of pure nativism/atavism/nationalism. But letâs get serious about re-localisation. Letâs get serious about roots, letâs get serious about place. And letâs find a way in which we can combine that with retaining the best of the globalâ, which, in my opinion, clearly includes trade where itâs necessary. Bananas would be a stereotypical example. I donât want to give up bananas. They should come on a boat, for a long time to come. But I donât think itâs a good idea that that all of my computers are made in China. And I want to be able to carry on communicating with people around the world. But I also want communities to be more genuine for peopleâfor people to know their neighbours, for people not to rush around commuting so much and holidaying endlessly in distant locations.
Of course, the pandemic is interesting here. Covid-19 may be the turning point. It may be the point at which globalisation and cosmopolitanism start to go into reverse. And what Iâm saying is that, if we make that change in the right manner, that could be a good thing. If we donât do it in a sort of simplistic globalisation-was-all-terrible kind of way. What if we thought carefully about what the good bits of industrialisation are, and the bad bits? What if we did the same with globalisation? It seems to me that making possible that kind of thinking is precisely the kind of thing that philosophers nowadays ought to be doing.
Five Books aims to keep its book recommendations and interviews up to date. If you are the interviewee and would like to update your choice of books (or even just what you say about them) please email us at [email protected]