Mythmaking presents us with an idiosyncratic fusion of language and metaphysics so as to simply convey meaning as language does, and also communicate an entire metaphysics at a level of meaning beyond language and image. Claiming so, is to attest to the relevance of myths in the operationalization of ecological worldviews. In this paper, I will assume such an operational relationship between myths and ecological worldviews. First and foremost, our worldviews act as ‘first principles’ in establishing our interaction with our environment. At a time when anthropogenic ecocide presents a grave threat to the balance of life on earth, this fundamental notion is of great relevance. Specifically, this paper will study how myths mediated human interaction with nature in the past and continue to do so today. By comparing sets of myths of the Tukano Indians of the Amazon and Hindus of India, I will identify two functions of myth as mediator between man and nature.
four lessons about philosophy. Students focused on Nature concept during the centuries, from ancient Greeks till the contemporary ethical approaches.
Last lesson is a brief reflection about Nature during Covid-19 time
Animal domestication in geographic perspective kay andersonFábio Coltro
This document discusses perspectives on animal domestication from a geographic and cultural perspective. It summarizes the work of earlier scholars like Shaler and Sauer who viewed domestication as a cultural advance driven by human rationality and agency that separated humans from animals and led to civilization. However, more recent scholars have challenged this view, arguing that factors like fragile human ecosystems and mutual relationships between humans and animals also drove domestication. The document examines debates around the origins and causes of domestication and whether it was primarily a cultural or ecological phenomenon.
This paper focuses on the gustatory perception of the Incas that will help reveal and contribute to the knowledge on their spiritual (rituals, religious hierarchy, and pursuit for transcendence), social, political and economic dimensions such as ideas on civilization, food distribution, and procreation. These scopes of interest are apparently manifested as well in their mythology and cosmology.
This document summarizes the history of animal geography as a subfield within human geography. It discusses two early approaches - zoogeography which focused on animal distributions, and cultural animal geography which examined human-animal relations. It notes that by mid-20th century, animal geography had receded due to other fields taking over zoogeography work and criticisms of cultural geography. However, in the late 20th century, interest revived due to environmental activism, social theory incorporating animals, and research revealing animal cognition/culture. This led geographers to reconsider animals' subjectivity and role in nature-society relations.
This document summarizes an essay by Steven Best that argues for greater cooperation between the animal liberation movement and the political left. It provides background on the animal advocacy movement, including its origins in animal welfare and the emergence of animal rights and liberation philosophies. Best asserts that human and animal liberation are interrelated and the left could benefit from engaging with animal rights perspectives in working to end all forms of hierarchy, domination, and environmental destruction.
Conscious vs mechanical evolution: transcending biocentrist social ontologies Luke Barnesmoore o
This article expounds a new theory of humanity that problematizes the discrete, biomaterialist and materially rational individual of Modernity through sensitivity to the human potential for Conscious Evolution (evolution of the ‘invisible self’, which is to say the cultivation of reason, free will, intuition and the other ‘high epistemological faculties’ that allow humans to actualize the potential for self-mediation of the biological desires and animal (irrational) passions). After defining Conscious Evolution, comparing it with Mechanical Evolution and providing a brief overview of the epistemological processes involved in Conscious Evolution, we examine the ways in which Modernism axiomatically, logically and practically negates the potential for Conscious Evolution and self-mediation as well as the manifestations of this negation in Modernist epistemology and Modernist social systems like Economic Theology or ‘the police’ that, due to their biomaterialist understanding of humans as discrete, biological, materially rational individuals, aim to mediate biological desires and animal passions through external, forceful, hierarchical domination rather than the cultivation of Conscious Evolution and subsequent actualization of the potential for self-mediation. This critique of epistemological and social systems that seek to create order through external, forceful, hierarchical domination sets the stage for a follow up paper titled “Conscious Evolution, Social Development and Environmental Justice” that critiques contemporary Planning Theory and Practice and calls for planning of social systems from a theoretical perspective where seeking to cultivate Conscious Evolution and the actualization of the social order implicit in the self-mediation made potential by Conscious Evolution is possible (which is to say that (r)evolution of theory must precede (r)evolution of practice).
Monkey business social and cultural geography 2010Fábio Coltro
This article examines ongoing human-animal conflicts between residents and long-tailed macaques in Bukit Timah Nature Reserve in Singapore. As residential development encroaches into the macaque habitat, destroying important wildlife corridors, the macaques have been significantly affected as they search for food in residential areas. The article seeks to understand the complex urban-wilderness conflicts between humans and macaques, showing that the divide between tamed and wild animals is ambiguous and shifting. It is especially interested in the role of intermediaries like the National Parks Board and animal activists in making space for macaques in the reserve through discourse and actions.
This document provides an analysis of the phenomenology of time through an existentialist lens. It begins by discussing how time appears in the works of poets like Donne and Shakespeare, then examines theories about the reality of time. The document argues that time should be viewed as both real and unreal, as it unfolds within consciousness, which is itself paradoxical. It presents Sartre's view that consciousness is the origin of time. The document analyzes this thesis through a phenomenological methodology, distinguishing how time appears from what it fundamentally is. It concludes that Sartre's view leads to a paradox, as the past existing in consciousness could then be changed, which would be a contradiction.
four lessons about philosophy. Students focused on Nature concept during the centuries, from ancient Greeks till the contemporary ethical approaches.
Last lesson is a brief reflection about Nature during Covid-19 time
Animal domestication in geographic perspective kay andersonFábio Coltro
This document discusses perspectives on animal domestication from a geographic and cultural perspective. It summarizes the work of earlier scholars like Shaler and Sauer who viewed domestication as a cultural advance driven by human rationality and agency that separated humans from animals and led to civilization. However, more recent scholars have challenged this view, arguing that factors like fragile human ecosystems and mutual relationships between humans and animals also drove domestication. The document examines debates around the origins and causes of domestication and whether it was primarily a cultural or ecological phenomenon.
This paper focuses on the gustatory perception of the Incas that will help reveal and contribute to the knowledge on their spiritual (rituals, religious hierarchy, and pursuit for transcendence), social, political and economic dimensions such as ideas on civilization, food distribution, and procreation. These scopes of interest are apparently manifested as well in their mythology and cosmology.
This document summarizes the history of animal geography as a subfield within human geography. It discusses two early approaches - zoogeography which focused on animal distributions, and cultural animal geography which examined human-animal relations. It notes that by mid-20th century, animal geography had receded due to other fields taking over zoogeography work and criticisms of cultural geography. However, in the late 20th century, interest revived due to environmental activism, social theory incorporating animals, and research revealing animal cognition/culture. This led geographers to reconsider animals' subjectivity and role in nature-society relations.
This document summarizes an essay by Steven Best that argues for greater cooperation between the animal liberation movement and the political left. It provides background on the animal advocacy movement, including its origins in animal welfare and the emergence of animal rights and liberation philosophies. Best asserts that human and animal liberation are interrelated and the left could benefit from engaging with animal rights perspectives in working to end all forms of hierarchy, domination, and environmental destruction.
Conscious vs mechanical evolution: transcending biocentrist social ontologies Luke Barnesmoore o
This article expounds a new theory of humanity that problematizes the discrete, biomaterialist and materially rational individual of Modernity through sensitivity to the human potential for Conscious Evolution (evolution of the ‘invisible self’, which is to say the cultivation of reason, free will, intuition and the other ‘high epistemological faculties’ that allow humans to actualize the potential for self-mediation of the biological desires and animal (irrational) passions). After defining Conscious Evolution, comparing it with Mechanical Evolution and providing a brief overview of the epistemological processes involved in Conscious Evolution, we examine the ways in which Modernism axiomatically, logically and practically negates the potential for Conscious Evolution and self-mediation as well as the manifestations of this negation in Modernist epistemology and Modernist social systems like Economic Theology or ‘the police’ that, due to their biomaterialist understanding of humans as discrete, biological, materially rational individuals, aim to mediate biological desires and animal passions through external, forceful, hierarchical domination rather than the cultivation of Conscious Evolution and subsequent actualization of the potential for self-mediation. This critique of epistemological and social systems that seek to create order through external, forceful, hierarchical domination sets the stage for a follow up paper titled “Conscious Evolution, Social Development and Environmental Justice” that critiques contemporary Planning Theory and Practice and calls for planning of social systems from a theoretical perspective where seeking to cultivate Conscious Evolution and the actualization of the social order implicit in the self-mediation made potential by Conscious Evolution is possible (which is to say that (r)evolution of theory must precede (r)evolution of practice).
Monkey business social and cultural geography 2010Fábio Coltro
This article examines ongoing human-animal conflicts between residents and long-tailed macaques in Bukit Timah Nature Reserve in Singapore. As residential development encroaches into the macaque habitat, destroying important wildlife corridors, the macaques have been significantly affected as they search for food in residential areas. The article seeks to understand the complex urban-wilderness conflicts between humans and macaques, showing that the divide between tamed and wild animals is ambiguous and shifting. It is especially interested in the role of intermediaries like the National Parks Board and animal activists in making space for macaques in the reserve through discourse and actions.
This document provides an analysis of the phenomenology of time through an existentialist lens. It begins by discussing how time appears in the works of poets like Donne and Shakespeare, then examines theories about the reality of time. The document argues that time should be viewed as both real and unreal, as it unfolds within consciousness, which is itself paradoxical. It presents Sartre's view that consciousness is the origin of time. The document analyzes this thesis through a phenomenological methodology, distinguishing how time appears from what it fundamentally is. It concludes that Sartre's view leads to a paradox, as the past existing in consciousness could then be changed, which would be a contradiction.
The document discusses the concepts of environmental ethics and ecology. It defines environmental ethics as the study of humans' moral obligation to preserve the natural environment and order. It discusses the theory of moral extensionism, which argues that natural entities have intrinsic value beyond their usefulness to humans. The document also defines ecology as the study of organism-environment interactions and interrelations. It provides examples of climatic, chemical, and biological environmental conditions. Finally, it discusses humans' relationship with nature and technology's impacts on degrading the environment.
This document summarizes key ideas about the concept of nature in philosophy. It discusses nature as viewed by ancient Greek philosophers like Aristotle, Renaissance philosophers like Giordano Bruno, and how the modern scientific view turned nature into a mechanistic system to be conquered. It also examines the double meaning of nature as both a living organism and a mechanism. Finally, it explores new approaches to environmental ethics and how the COVID-19 pandemic has highlighted humanity's interdependence with nature.
#INDG2015 Fall Term 2021, Week 3: Indigenous Ecological Ways of Knowing in No...Zoe Todd
Readings for Week 3:
Wretched of the Earth -On Violence in the International Context (pp. 53-63)
Salmón, Enrique. “Kincentric Ecology: Indigenous Perceptions of the Human-Nature Relationship”. Ecological Applications, Vol. 10, No. 5 (Oct., 2000), pp. 1327-1332. https://www.fws.gov/nativeamerican/pdf/tek-salmon-2000.pdf
Land Back: A Yellowhead Institute Red Paper. 2019. https://redpaper.yellowheadinstitute.org/
This document provides an overview of human geography, including its nature and scope. It discusses key concepts in human geography such as environmental determinism, possibilism, and neo-determinism. It outlines the broad stages in the development of human geography as a discipline from early exploration and imperial interests to modern quantitative and qualitative approaches. The document also lists and describes various fields and sub-fields that make up the subject matter of human geography, reflecting its interdisciplinary nature.
This document provides an overview of the nature and scope of human geography. It discusses key concepts in human geography including the relationship between physical environment and human activities. It outlines the evolution of approaches in human geography from environmental determinism to possibilism to neo-determinism. It also summarizes the broad stages in the development of human geography from the colonial period to modern approaches. Finally, it discusses the interdisciplinary nature of human geography and lists some of its main fields and sub-fields.
This document provides an overview of the contents of a human geography textbook. It includes:
- A table of contents outlining the 4 units and 10 chapters that make up the textbook, including topics like population, economic activities, transportation, and human settlements.
- An introduction to the first chapter which defines human geography as the relationship between humans and the physical environment and how human activities and settlements have modified the natural landscape.
- Excerpts from the first chapter discussing the naturalization of early human societies that were directly dependent on the environment for resources, and the later humanization of nature as technology advanced and human impacts increased.
Ecopsychology Fosters Sustainable Behavior-Final PaperJason E Evitt
This document discusses how alienation from nature leads to unsustainable behavior and how ecopsychology aims to repair the division between humans and the natural world. It provides examples of how spending time in nature can have positive psychological benefits and healing effects. The document argues that reconnecting with nature through restoring ecosystems and changing education policy could help shift societies toward a new ecological paradigm with healthier relationships between humans and the environment.
LESSON 5- HUMAN PERSON IN HIS/HER ENVIRONMENT Cynalyn1
This document discusses different perspectives on human beings and their environment. It provides definitions of a human person and environment. It then summarizes some key pre-Socratic philosophers who shifted from mythical to rational explanations of the cosmos, including Anaximander and Pythagoras. It also discusses modern thinkers' views such as Immanuel Kant on beauty and morality, and Herbert Marcuse and George Herbert Mead on human power over and duties to nature. The conclusion calls for taking good care of nature to maintain balance in life.
This document discusses mythology and provides reasons for studying and teaching mythology. It explains that mythology allows us to learn about ancient cultures by studying the stories and beliefs they passed down. Studying mythology has educational benefits and helps students learn about history, language, literature, art, and makes learning entertaining. The document also categorizes different types of myths and discusses their functions and value.
Module 3 anthropology and the study of cultureNara Mier
This document provides an overview of anthropology and culture. It defines anthropology as the holistic study of humans, both biologically and socially, from early evolution to current variations around the world. Culture is defined as the beliefs, behaviors, and objects that are learned and shared within a society. Material culture includes tangible objects while non-material culture consists of intangible aspects like values and knowledge. Culture is shared between generations and influences how individuals learn and act. Anthropological perspectives seek to understand how culture has adapted to environments over time and continues to change dynamically in response to changing human needs.
Anthropology is the scientific study of humans, human behavior, and cultures. It is divided into four main subfields: physical/biological anthropology which studies human evolution and biology; archaeology which studies past human cultures through material remains; cultural anthropology which studies cultural variation; and linguistic anthropology which studies human language and communication. Key figures in the development of anthropology included Charles Darwin, who formulated the theory of evolution, and Edward Tylor who established cultural anthropology. Later, Franz Boas introduced cultural relativism, challenging beliefs of Western cultural superiority. Margaret Mead studied gender roles and their cultural influences. Structuralism and symbolic anthropology also emerged as important approaches in anthropology.
A human person contains a will to direct their own development towards fulfillment through unconditional truth, love, goodness, beauty, and unity. The environment provides conditions that allow for a living organism's development and growth, as well as dangers. There are two frameworks for understanding humans' relationship with the environment: the anthropocentric model which views humans as superior to nature, and the ecocentric model which views nature as superior and humans as part of the ecosystem. The ecocentric model includes theories of deep ecology, social ecology, and ecofeminism which emphasize holism, interdependence, and equality between all life. Pre-Socratic philosophers initiated a paradigm shift from mythological to rational explanations of nature's processes and origins
This presentation is all about how human behavior affects our environment,either positively or negatively. This also includes different thories about human person in the environment.
*The said words are not mine, credits to the owners
Ma. Kathrina G. Salud
Joevilyn M. Dulay
Jericho Abadilla
Carlos Bayan
Marlon Buhain
John Henry Clerigo
Gerald Condrillon
James Patrick Condrillon
Jervee Dela Crus
Ricardo Esteban
John Rey Labid
Mico Ricafrente
Neil Santos
John Michael Sunga
Cathleen Dale Bacolod
Mary Gane Bella
Emaila Cuano
Arriza Maw Datu
Precious Datugan
Myka Del Mundo
Pamela Estores
Camille Francisco
Lyra Mancilla
Rain Silao
Gigi Ubana
1) There is no single, objective definition of "nature" - it is a socially constructed concept that varies between cultures and time periods.
2) Common conceptions of nature include the dualistic view of nature as separate from humans/culture, the monistic view of nature as everything in the physical world, and the adverbial view found in East Asia of humans acting according to or contrary to their true nature.
3) Major ways of conceiving nature are as a collection of individual organisms, as a web of relationships between all living and non-living things, as ongoing natural processes, and as the entire planet ("Gaia") including long-term conditions and events.
1 NATURE - Its More Complicated Than You Think.pptPradeepS474205
nature and it complication. how to define environment and its components. why environment cannot be ignored while humankind exists. can we defy the forces of nature
1 NATURE - Its More Complicated Than You Think.pptAnasUnended
1) There is no single, objective definition of "nature" - it is a socially constructed concept that varies between cultures and time periods.
2) Common conceptions of nature include the dualistic view of nature as separate from humans/culture, the monistic view of nature as everything in the physical world, and the adverbial view from East Asia of humans acting according to or contrary to their true nature.
3) Major ways of conceiving nature are as a collection of individual organisms, as a web of relationships between all living and non-living things, as ongoing natural processes, and as the entire planet ("Gaia") including long-term conditions and processes.
This document discusses different cultural conceptions of nature and their implications. It outlines that nature does not have a single, universal definition, but rather is socially constructed. It then examines three common meanings of nature - dualistic (nature vs. human), monistic (everything physical), and adverbial (acting according to inherent characteristics). Finally, it analyzes four major ways nature is conceived - as a collection of individual organisms, as interconnected webs of relationships, as dynamic processes, and as the planet Gaia. The conceptualization of nature informs different environmental policies around exploitation, preservation, and intervention.
The document discusses different ways that nature has been socially constructed and conceived. It outlines three fundamental meanings of nature: dualistic, monistic, and adverbial. It then describes four major ways nature has been conceived: as a collection, as a web of relationships, as a process, and as Gaia. Different constructions of nature lead to different views on environmental policy and human relationships with the natural world.
The document discusses structuralism as applied to analyzing Philippine creational myths. It provides context on myths and their significance in cultures. It then samples three Philippine creational myths from different regions to analyze using structuralism. The analysis identifies binary oppositions and mediating elements in each myth. It examines the relationships between these elements to derive the underlying structural properties and meanings. The analysis aims to better understand Filipino culture and psyche by unraveling the truths in these "living fossils" of myths.
The document discusses the concepts of environmental ethics and ecology. It defines environmental ethics as the study of humans' moral obligation to preserve the natural environment and order. It discusses the theory of moral extensionism, which argues that natural entities have intrinsic value beyond their usefulness to humans. The document also defines ecology as the study of organism-environment interactions and interrelations. It provides examples of climatic, chemical, and biological environmental conditions. Finally, it discusses humans' relationship with nature and technology's impacts on degrading the environment.
This document summarizes key ideas about the concept of nature in philosophy. It discusses nature as viewed by ancient Greek philosophers like Aristotle, Renaissance philosophers like Giordano Bruno, and how the modern scientific view turned nature into a mechanistic system to be conquered. It also examines the double meaning of nature as both a living organism and a mechanism. Finally, it explores new approaches to environmental ethics and how the COVID-19 pandemic has highlighted humanity's interdependence with nature.
#INDG2015 Fall Term 2021, Week 3: Indigenous Ecological Ways of Knowing in No...Zoe Todd
Readings for Week 3:
Wretched of the Earth -On Violence in the International Context (pp. 53-63)
Salmón, Enrique. “Kincentric Ecology: Indigenous Perceptions of the Human-Nature Relationship”. Ecological Applications, Vol. 10, No. 5 (Oct., 2000), pp. 1327-1332. https://www.fws.gov/nativeamerican/pdf/tek-salmon-2000.pdf
Land Back: A Yellowhead Institute Red Paper. 2019. https://redpaper.yellowheadinstitute.org/
This document provides an overview of human geography, including its nature and scope. It discusses key concepts in human geography such as environmental determinism, possibilism, and neo-determinism. It outlines the broad stages in the development of human geography as a discipline from early exploration and imperial interests to modern quantitative and qualitative approaches. The document also lists and describes various fields and sub-fields that make up the subject matter of human geography, reflecting its interdisciplinary nature.
This document provides an overview of the nature and scope of human geography. It discusses key concepts in human geography including the relationship between physical environment and human activities. It outlines the evolution of approaches in human geography from environmental determinism to possibilism to neo-determinism. It also summarizes the broad stages in the development of human geography from the colonial period to modern approaches. Finally, it discusses the interdisciplinary nature of human geography and lists some of its main fields and sub-fields.
This document provides an overview of the contents of a human geography textbook. It includes:
- A table of contents outlining the 4 units and 10 chapters that make up the textbook, including topics like population, economic activities, transportation, and human settlements.
- An introduction to the first chapter which defines human geography as the relationship between humans and the physical environment and how human activities and settlements have modified the natural landscape.
- Excerpts from the first chapter discussing the naturalization of early human societies that were directly dependent on the environment for resources, and the later humanization of nature as technology advanced and human impacts increased.
Ecopsychology Fosters Sustainable Behavior-Final PaperJason E Evitt
This document discusses how alienation from nature leads to unsustainable behavior and how ecopsychology aims to repair the division between humans and the natural world. It provides examples of how spending time in nature can have positive psychological benefits and healing effects. The document argues that reconnecting with nature through restoring ecosystems and changing education policy could help shift societies toward a new ecological paradigm with healthier relationships between humans and the environment.
LESSON 5- HUMAN PERSON IN HIS/HER ENVIRONMENT Cynalyn1
This document discusses different perspectives on human beings and their environment. It provides definitions of a human person and environment. It then summarizes some key pre-Socratic philosophers who shifted from mythical to rational explanations of the cosmos, including Anaximander and Pythagoras. It also discusses modern thinkers' views such as Immanuel Kant on beauty and morality, and Herbert Marcuse and George Herbert Mead on human power over and duties to nature. The conclusion calls for taking good care of nature to maintain balance in life.
This document discusses mythology and provides reasons for studying and teaching mythology. It explains that mythology allows us to learn about ancient cultures by studying the stories and beliefs they passed down. Studying mythology has educational benefits and helps students learn about history, language, literature, art, and makes learning entertaining. The document also categorizes different types of myths and discusses their functions and value.
Module 3 anthropology and the study of cultureNara Mier
This document provides an overview of anthropology and culture. It defines anthropology as the holistic study of humans, both biologically and socially, from early evolution to current variations around the world. Culture is defined as the beliefs, behaviors, and objects that are learned and shared within a society. Material culture includes tangible objects while non-material culture consists of intangible aspects like values and knowledge. Culture is shared between generations and influences how individuals learn and act. Anthropological perspectives seek to understand how culture has adapted to environments over time and continues to change dynamically in response to changing human needs.
Anthropology is the scientific study of humans, human behavior, and cultures. It is divided into four main subfields: physical/biological anthropology which studies human evolution and biology; archaeology which studies past human cultures through material remains; cultural anthropology which studies cultural variation; and linguistic anthropology which studies human language and communication. Key figures in the development of anthropology included Charles Darwin, who formulated the theory of evolution, and Edward Tylor who established cultural anthropology. Later, Franz Boas introduced cultural relativism, challenging beliefs of Western cultural superiority. Margaret Mead studied gender roles and their cultural influences. Structuralism and symbolic anthropology also emerged as important approaches in anthropology.
A human person contains a will to direct their own development towards fulfillment through unconditional truth, love, goodness, beauty, and unity. The environment provides conditions that allow for a living organism's development and growth, as well as dangers. There are two frameworks for understanding humans' relationship with the environment: the anthropocentric model which views humans as superior to nature, and the ecocentric model which views nature as superior and humans as part of the ecosystem. The ecocentric model includes theories of deep ecology, social ecology, and ecofeminism which emphasize holism, interdependence, and equality between all life. Pre-Socratic philosophers initiated a paradigm shift from mythological to rational explanations of nature's processes and origins
This presentation is all about how human behavior affects our environment,either positively or negatively. This also includes different thories about human person in the environment.
*The said words are not mine, credits to the owners
Ma. Kathrina G. Salud
Joevilyn M. Dulay
Jericho Abadilla
Carlos Bayan
Marlon Buhain
John Henry Clerigo
Gerald Condrillon
James Patrick Condrillon
Jervee Dela Crus
Ricardo Esteban
John Rey Labid
Mico Ricafrente
Neil Santos
John Michael Sunga
Cathleen Dale Bacolod
Mary Gane Bella
Emaila Cuano
Arriza Maw Datu
Precious Datugan
Myka Del Mundo
Pamela Estores
Camille Francisco
Lyra Mancilla
Rain Silao
Gigi Ubana
1) There is no single, objective definition of "nature" - it is a socially constructed concept that varies between cultures and time periods.
2) Common conceptions of nature include the dualistic view of nature as separate from humans/culture, the monistic view of nature as everything in the physical world, and the adverbial view found in East Asia of humans acting according to or contrary to their true nature.
3) Major ways of conceiving nature are as a collection of individual organisms, as a web of relationships between all living and non-living things, as ongoing natural processes, and as the entire planet ("Gaia") including long-term conditions and events.
1 NATURE - Its More Complicated Than You Think.pptPradeepS474205
nature and it complication. how to define environment and its components. why environment cannot be ignored while humankind exists. can we defy the forces of nature
1 NATURE - Its More Complicated Than You Think.pptAnasUnended
1) There is no single, objective definition of "nature" - it is a socially constructed concept that varies between cultures and time periods.
2) Common conceptions of nature include the dualistic view of nature as separate from humans/culture, the monistic view of nature as everything in the physical world, and the adverbial view from East Asia of humans acting according to or contrary to their true nature.
3) Major ways of conceiving nature are as a collection of individual organisms, as a web of relationships between all living and non-living things, as ongoing natural processes, and as the entire planet ("Gaia") including long-term conditions and processes.
This document discusses different cultural conceptions of nature and their implications. It outlines that nature does not have a single, universal definition, but rather is socially constructed. It then examines three common meanings of nature - dualistic (nature vs. human), monistic (everything physical), and adverbial (acting according to inherent characteristics). Finally, it analyzes four major ways nature is conceived - as a collection of individual organisms, as interconnected webs of relationships, as dynamic processes, and as the planet Gaia. The conceptualization of nature informs different environmental policies around exploitation, preservation, and intervention.
The document discusses different ways that nature has been socially constructed and conceived. It outlines three fundamental meanings of nature: dualistic, monistic, and adverbial. It then describes four major ways nature has been conceived: as a collection, as a web of relationships, as a process, and as Gaia. Different constructions of nature lead to different views on environmental policy and human relationships with the natural world.
The document discusses structuralism as applied to analyzing Philippine creational myths. It provides context on myths and their significance in cultures. It then samples three Philippine creational myths from different regions to analyze using structuralism. The analysis identifies binary oppositions and mediating elements in each myth. It examines the relationships between these elements to derive the underlying structural properties and meanings. The analysis aims to better understand Filipino culture and psyche by unraveling the truths in these "living fossils" of myths.
Similar to REFLECTING THE MIND OF NATURE IN HINDU AND AMAZONIAN (TUKANO) MYTHOLOGY (20)
A Visual Guide to 1 Samuel | A Tale of Two HeartsSteve Thomason
These slides walk through the story of 1 Samuel. Samuel is the last judge of Israel. The people reject God and want a king. Saul is anointed as the first king, but he is not a good king. David, the shepherd boy is anointed and Saul is envious of him. David shows honor while Saul continues to self destruct.
Chapter wise All Notes of First year Basic Civil Engineering.pptxDenish Jangid
Chapter wise All Notes of First year Basic Civil Engineering
Syllabus
Chapter-1
Introduction to objective, scope and outcome the subject
Chapter 2
Introduction: Scope and Specialization of Civil Engineering, Role of civil Engineer in Society, Impact of infrastructural development on economy of country.
Chapter 3
Surveying: Object Principles & Types of Surveying; Site Plans, Plans & Maps; Scales & Unit of different Measurements.
Linear Measurements: Instruments used. Linear Measurement by Tape, Ranging out Survey Lines and overcoming Obstructions; Measurements on sloping ground; Tape corrections, conventional symbols. Angular Measurements: Instruments used; Introduction to Compass Surveying, Bearings and Longitude & Latitude of a Line, Introduction to total station.
Levelling: Instrument used Object of levelling, Methods of levelling in brief, and Contour maps.
Chapter 4
Buildings: Selection of site for Buildings, Layout of Building Plan, Types of buildings, Plinth area, carpet area, floor space index, Introduction to building byelaws, concept of sun light & ventilation. Components of Buildings & their functions, Basic concept of R.C.C., Introduction to types of foundation
Chapter 5
Transportation: Introduction to Transportation Engineering; Traffic and Road Safety: Types and Characteristics of Various Modes of Transportation; Various Road Traffic Signs, Causes of Accidents and Road Safety Measures.
Chapter 6
Environmental Engineering: Environmental Pollution, Environmental Acts and Regulations, Functional Concepts of Ecology, Basics of Species, Biodiversity, Ecosystem, Hydrological Cycle; Chemical Cycles: Carbon, Nitrogen & Phosphorus; Energy Flow in Ecosystems.
Water Pollution: Water Quality standards, Introduction to Treatment & Disposal of Waste Water. Reuse and Saving of Water, Rain Water Harvesting. Solid Waste Management: Classification of Solid Waste, Collection, Transportation and Disposal of Solid. Recycling of Solid Waste: Energy Recovery, Sanitary Landfill, On-Site Sanitation. Air & Noise Pollution: Primary and Secondary air pollutants, Harmful effects of Air Pollution, Control of Air Pollution. . Noise Pollution Harmful Effects of noise pollution, control of noise pollution, Global warming & Climate Change, Ozone depletion, Greenhouse effect
Text Books:
1. Palancharmy, Basic Civil Engineering, McGraw Hill publishers.
2. Satheesh Gopi, Basic Civil Engineering, Pearson Publishers.
3. Ketki Rangwala Dalal, Essentials of Civil Engineering, Charotar Publishing House.
4. BCP, Surveying volume 1
This presentation was provided by Rebecca Benner, Ph.D., of the American Society of Anesthesiologists, for the second session of NISO's 2024 Training Series "DEIA in the Scholarly Landscape." Session Two: 'Expanding Pathways to Publishing Careers,' was held June 13, 2024.
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Level 3 NCEA - NZ: A Nation In the Making 1872 - 1900 SML.pptHenry Hollis
The History of NZ 1870-1900.
Making of a Nation.
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Level 3 NCEA - NZ: A Nation In the Making 1872 - 1900 SML.ppt
REFLECTING THE MIND OF NATURE IN HINDU AND AMAZONIAN (TUKANO) MYTHOLOGY
1. Ecology: An International Journal (ECOJ) Vol. 1, No. 1, 2016
21
REFLECTING THE MIND OF NATURE IN HINDU AND
AMAZONIAN (TUKANO) MYTHOLOGY
Siddhant Kalra
Flame University, Pune, India
ABSTRACT
Mythmaking presents us with an idiosyncratic fusion of language and metaphysics so as to simply convey
meaning as language does, and also communicate an entire metaphysics at a level of meaning beyond
language and image. Claiming so, is to attest to the relevance of myths in the operationalization of
ecological worldviews. In this paper, I will assume such an operational relationship between myths and
ecological worldviews. First and foremost, our worldviews act as ‘first principles’ in establishing our
interaction with our environment. At a time when anthropogenic ecocide presents a grave threat to the
balance of life on earth, this fundamental notion is of great relevance. Specifically, this paper will study
how myths mediated human interaction with nature in the past and continue to do so today. By comparing
sets of myths of the Tukano Indians of the Amazon and Hindus of India, I will identify two functions of myth
as mediator between man and nature.
KEYWORDS
Tukano Mythology, Hindu Mythology (Pancabhutas and Samudra Manthan), Ecological Worldviews,
Interpretation of Myths, Sustainability
1. INTRODUCTION
Our collective unconscious ties us all together in an unconscious web of instincts, intuitive
epistemologies and the fundamental human condition. It remains after we are gone, almost like a
fount of metaphysical memory, for others to resurrect our minds and impressions, even
posthumously. Myths represent a dimension of this memory which convey imaginative, rational
and metaphysical meaning all at once. Sontag calls myth ‘a first principle’ [1] – upon which
metaphysical meaning depends. For him, myths have a penetrating power to reveal the inner life,
which is to say, the metaphysical experiences of what would otherwise remain only a linguistic
description. Language, as we use it everyday, is different from myth in that it often stops at the
referential level of pointing to objects in existence. Myths on the other hand convey qualia of
experience, truths of realizations and linguistic allegory all at once – or as Jung would say, simply
the inner life. One might ask the question, what do myths really refer to? The simple answer to
this question is ‘worldviews’ – sets of ideas, experiences, values expressed to someone else.
Worldviews in the inner life don’t exist. They emerge with the need for exposition and
description. In this paper, I wish to explore the function of myth wherein it facilitates the
interaction between worldviews and our natural environment. In a sense, asserting that
mythic worldviews determine our interaction with our natural environment is a somewhat
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Functionalist argument, akin to the social charter. However, my approach is one where the
emphasis is more cosmological than sociological.
Myths act as mediator between man and his natural environment. They embody the emotional,
rational and metaphysical dimensions of this relationship and communicate adaptive worldviews,
ecological wisdom and even universal cosmologies. Moreover, they employ natural symbols to
reflect the human itself, as in the case of the churning of the ocean myth. This paper will
illuminate these two functions of myth as it pertains to the human-nature and subject-object
dynamic. For the former, the case of the Tukano people of the Amazon as documented by
Gerardo Reichel-Dolmatoff and the Pancabhutasin Hindu mythology will be considered and for
the latter, the myth of the churning of the ocean from the Mahabharata.
2. NATURE REFLECTING UPON HERSELF: COMPARISON
BETWEEN TUKANO AND INDIAN [HINDU] COSMOLOGIES
During the period of colonial modernity, the predominant image of the American-Indian tribes
was that of a rather ‘primitive’, hostile and intellectually impoverished people, whose
contribution to human thought was claimed to be negligible at best. It followed then, that the
levels of complexity in their social structures was also non-existent. For the most part, one may
attribute this notion to the quintessential narrative of modern colonialism which polarized most of
its subjects as primitive and occasionally, mystical. Interestingly, the beginnings of modern
anthropology, embodied by the likes of Edwin Tylor (1832 – 1917) and James Frazer (1854 –
1941) operated primarily on the basis of extensive reading, without much actual interaction with
cultures outside their respective locales. After decolonization however, anthropology began to
shed some of its colonial baggage and began to consider the possibility of a primitive ‘intellect’
outside of a post-Enlightenment framework of determining abstract rationality. American
anthropology in particular, saw a flurry of anthropologists travelling to the Amazon and opening
up to the native worldview.
Gerardo Reichel-Dolmatoff (1912 – 1994) was one such anthropologist– often considered to be
the father of Colombian Anthropology - among others such as the American ethnobiologist,
Richard Evans Schultes (1915 – 2001). His work in the Eastern Tukano region of North-West
Amazon opened up the West to a new image of the native – “not only a highly pragmatic thinker
and an individual with a sound sense of reality, but also as an abstract philosopher, a builder of
intricate cosmic models and a planner of sweeping moral designs” [2]. Of particular interest to
him were the ‘adaptive’ aspects of the Tukano Indian culture with respect to their thriving and
often, highly demanding Amazonian environment. To identify the fount of their ‘adaptive’
strategies, he attempted to establish a connexion between the cosmological concepts –
cosmologies, mythic structures and rituals – and the realities of adaptation to their environment –
ecological principles and socio-economic norms. Of interest to us for the present purpose of this
paper are his insights into how Tukano myths (cosmological concepts, more generally) relate to
the natural environment and facilitate their interactions therein.
2.1. Myth as a mediator of Ecological Interconnectedness
The Tukano are bound to their rain forest habitat, which is surrounded by Colombian or Brazilian
settlers and thus, have to rely upon their local resources. “Their traditional settlement patterns
consist of widely scattered large and well-built communal houses, occupied by extended families.
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They derive most of their food supplies primarily by cultivating manioc gardens, while seasonal
hunting, fishing and gathering play a secondary role both as food and in economic relations” [2].
In the social, spiritual, medicinal and even economic spheres, ceremonies and rituals officiated by
the shaman, play a pivotal role.
As for Tukano mythic structures, the creator was the Sun-Father, an anthropomorphic god who
designed the three planes of existence - flat earth, a celestial vault and a place of bliss situated
under the earth. He created plants and animals, both under the constant care of spirit-beings who
were to guard and protect against eventual abuses. Further, he demarcated a limited, roughly
circular, stretch of land and gave to each species, a set of rules to live and reproduce. We may
note here, that the sun-father created a finite material reality for the Tukano. Their creation myth
is localized to their community. In fact, in another mythic account, the Tukano are bound to the
rain forest by an everlasting promise made to their ancestors, who had found it and gave its
denizens appropriate designations [2]. Their role as caretaker and inhabitant of their habitat is
thus, doubly emphasized. Further, the Sun-Father’s creation of the natural world is not told
as having been completed. It is still in process and the Tukano are an active and formative
part of it. The sun’s energy is equated with light and heat which is the creative energy for all life
on earth, as well as spiritual illumination for the soul.
This circuit of energy is imagined as having a limited amount of energy which comes into the
system and is constantly transformed into different forms. Thus, the myth puts forth the world as
a cycle of conserved energy, where the amount of energy which enters is directly related to that
which is put out. The system encompasses the entire universe and the Tukano are an active part
of it. The energy circuit sits in a balance, which must not be disturbed. As human beings, the
Tukano recognize their potential to disturb this balance. The operational consequence of this
cosmological balance is manifested in the social and economic organization of the group.
Operationally, it becomes a religious duty to ensure that the balance of Sun-Father’s energy is not
disturbed. To ensure that the balance is maintained, the Tukano make efforts to return any
energy they consume in any form. Curating extensive knowledge about their ecosystem
becomes a religious observance [2].
Thus, the Tukano constantly build on an old tradition of learning about their ecosystem in an
attempt to learn adaptive strategies. They understand the animal and plant kingdoms around them
very well – parasitism, symbiosis, commensalism and other relationships among species are well
known to them and often provide a source to learn new adaptive strategies. In fact, Shamanistic
wisdom often contains descriptions of exchange with plants and animals which often teach
unexpected food sources, cures for illnesses or solutions to everyday problems. At the same time,
maladaptive strategies in myths are portrayed as receiving punitive treatment – gluttony,
improvidence, aggressiveness and all forms of overindulgence. In this manner, the universal
system of energy conflates upon the societal level and further, to the individual’s everyday
life.
Dolmatoff notes the manifestation of this social charter playing out in social customs as concerns
the birth rate, the harvest rate and socially disruptive behaviour [2] – all elements which
contribute to maintaining the natural balance. As for population control, the Tukano rely on two
adaptive strategies – herbal contraceptives and abstinence (which forms a requirement for most
ritual ceremonies, including hunting for food). In fact, sexual appetite is related to caloric intake.
For instance, when it comes to hunting, the Tukano must ritually seek the permission of the
Master of Animals – a dwarf-like phallic spirit-being – through rituals requiring abstinence. Often
the shaman ritually becomes the mediator between the Master of Animals and his society in
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maintaining a balance between the population of game animals and the hunting habits of his tribe.
Similar ritual measures are taken to restrict the harvesting and gathering of wild fruits, nuts,
honey, and insects for food as well as for manufacturing or technological purposes. Further,
socially disruptive behaviour is checked through the mechanism of organized exogamic groups
which exchange with each other women, food, raw materials etc., often through ritualised dances
and ceremonies. Clearly, there is an overt ecological dimension to these measures which may be
seen as adaptive strategies to maintain the mythic balance.
Another mechanism is the Tukano theory of disease and illness, according to which the revenge
of game animals, the ill-will of other people and the malevolence of supernatural beings such as
the Master of animals are the primary external sources of disease.
The myth and ritual based adaptive strategies have an overt religious meaning to the Tukano and
an ecological relevance on a wider scale. The Shamans are often outrightly aware of their role as
an economic and ecological mediator. Thus, the socio-economic as well as ethical operational
frameworks of the Tukano derive substantially from their mythic cosmology, the central concern
of which remains exploring the ecosystem for adaptive strategies. The myths and rituals prescribe
a socio-economic model of constraint of consumption patterns and even prescribe the moral
order. In light of this, one might see the relevance of Malinowski’s functionalist framework of the
social charter [3]. Myths in the case of the Tukano do indeed provide a social charter. However,
for Malinowski the functionality of myths was primarily aimed at perpetuating the order of the
ruling class. In this case, the Shamans, as mediator between humans and the spirit world would
form the exploitative priestly class whose social charter is justified. However, deriving this
conclusion would bemissing the point.
The adaptive strategies mentioned are based on a religious reverence for the natural world, living
in balance with which requires conscious effort. Eliade’s ideas on religion and myth are better
suited in this context. To begin with, Eliade identifies hierophany – a manifestation of the sacred
– which bequeaths a sacred order and structure to the world, as the core of religious belief. Sacred
space is that space where the sacred manifests. Further, Eliade interprets rituals as being gateways
of eternal return to the primordial, sacred time wherein the people undergoing the ritual actually
participate in the act of sacred manifestation [4]. The Tukano practice their task of maintaining
the balance of energy with religious fervour. Spirit-beings exist in all forms of life. This,
combined with the fact that their connection to the rain forest is envisioned as a sacred lineage
allude to the hierophany which makes their ecosystem a sacred space. Further, the Tukano
ritually participate in ceremonies, often centred on the plant spirit that they revere the most –
Ayahuasca – to recreate and renew the world to re-establish its order [2]. To ensure the
continuation of sacred time – that is time of the original balance which was created at the moment
of origin by the Sun Father – they ritually participate in its re-creation and re-newal. It must be
noted here, that creation is not complete, but an ongoing process. Thus, the concept of sacred
time and space apply even to the daily lives of the Tukano.
Eliade’s ideas interpret the Tukano cosmology in line with Dolmatoff’s observations of what it
means to the tribals. However, we may add another dimension. Their myths and rituals ensure the
cyclical maintenance of bio-rhythms of the ecosystem around them. In this respect, myth
functions as a source of adaptive strategies and ecological wisdom, and places the Tukano in the
midst of the ongoing process of creation. To the Tukano, their ecosystem is their only source of
socio-economic livelihood as well as their spiritual and ecological teacher. With this worldview,
they are able to maintain the delicate balance of an ecotone as complex as the Amazon, and are
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also able to keep a check on their patterns of consumption – a feat utterly lacking in the global
world, where material consumption is thought to be without any consequence.
In 1977, an inter-governmental conference on Environmental education held in Georgia began
with the following declaration, which rings true to this day:
In the last few decades man has, through his power to transform his
environment, wrought accelerated changes in the balance of nature. The
result is frequent exposure of living species to dangers which may prove
irreversible.
What is perhaps lacking is a cosmology which marries all dimensions of life – biological,
physical, psychical, philosophical, metaphysical and spiritual – and in doing so, places the human
being at the centre of the continuous process of cyclic degeneration and regeneration of life. The
Natural Sciences provide a cosmology with the cosmos as a distinct, often lifeless object of study.
It relinquishes any role of the individual consciousness in the cosmos and thus, perceives it as
being a separate entity altogether, almost as if man existed outside of nature. Kapila Vatsyayan’s
inquiry is very similar to that of Dolmatoff’s, albeit in the context of the pancabhutas in
Hinduism. She too wonders at the decrepit ecological worldview of the modern world and asks
“what are the diverse components of the disturbance, the ecological imbalances and what
methodologies and strategies were adopted in the past to sustain these balances?” [5]
Interestingly, for her too, the essential core of myths is “the sustenance of the ecological balance,
which to her was the human being’s first and last duty, for only then the moral order of the world
[Rta (cosmic moral order)] as also Dharma would be sustained” [5].
To begin with, the human being is envisioned as a jiva – one among all living matter whose life
depends upon all that surrounds and sustains him. The jiva is at once the microcosm and the
macrocosm. What he is by himself is what he is as the whole. In fact, as a part of the whole, he is
in eternal anguish and fails to see any semblance of belonging. He sees belonging in things bigger
than himself – social groups, movements, designations, professions and so on. The ‘biggest’ of all
is the whole, the macrocosm itself. Thus, just as the pancabhutas – water, earth, air, space and
fire - make up the Universe (the macrocosm), they also make up the jiva (the microcosm). In
other words, the elements of creation are the jiva just as much as they are prakriti (creation) itself.
The first element, water is the principle of fertility and life. The Vedas tell many hymns of water,
or of Varuna, the god of the waters.
This earth is King Varuna's as also this great far-flung sky: the two seas are
his belly (appetite); at the same time he is hidden in this little water. Even we
who may cross the sky will not escape King Varuna; from heaven his spies
are patrolling this earth with a thousand eyes; they scan through the earth.
King Varuna sees all that is between heaven and earth and that which is
beyond (them) - Atharva Veda (IV. 16).
The Vedic poet here, is referring to an eternally known natural phenomenon of the primeval
waters rising as vapour (as spies) in the sky only to descend again to Earth [5]. In the Hindu
worldview, as with many other pre-modern worldviews, water is the primordial element whence
life spawns. In the myth of the horizontally floating golden egg, Visnu or Brahma is lying upon
an undulating serpent which represents the primordial ocean or pralaya. The banalinga from the
Narmada and the shalagramas (ammonite fossils from the mountains) act as symbols of creation
from water and solar energy and embody this myth [5]. In a cyclical continuum, the waters and
the stones reflect the constant creative and destructive processes of existence.
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Myths about the rivers too abound Hindu mythology. For instance, Ganga – often personified as a
mermaid descending from heaven – represents the drop of water from the celestial heavens which
fills the ocean (sagara). There are multiple myths attributed to Ganga. In one version, Agastya
swallows the entire ocean. Although he meant well as he wanted to expose the demons hiding in
the sea, his swallowing deprived the earth and all beings of the necessary life-sustaining water.
Sage Bhagiratha undertook the task of bringing Ganga back to earth. After performing great
austerities and tapas he received a boon from Brahma in response to which, Bhagiratha asked for
Ganga to descend back to earth. Brahma agreed but claimed that only Siva can break the fall of
the mighty Ganga. So, Bhagiratha performed more tapas until Siva finally appeared and allowed
Ganga to flow through the forest of his jatas.
The ecological overtones of the myth are as clear as the physical reality of the course of the
Ganga; its origin in the Himalayas, whether mythically Kailash or actually Gomukha or Gangotri,
the Vasudhara falls and the rich Deodar forests through which it meanders, the several streams
into which it breaks before reaching Haridvara (literally the entrance [dvara] to Siva [Hari]) [5].
The myth extols firstly, the ecological process through which the Ganga sustains life on earth and
secondly, the power of austere discipline to uphold the moral and ecological order and not to
destroy it. Further, the waters are interconnected with the life that emerges from it – for instance,
the symbolisms associated with the lotus (representing fecundity, abundance and well-being) and
the serpent (the first species to come out of the waters), which represents undifferentiated creation
and interconnection.
This mythological worldview understands the waters as both the source and a part of creation.
Through an intricate system of symbolisms, the myths marry the human imagination with the
ecological interconnectivity of water with all the species of life that it is surrounded by. Similarly,
as this is the case with water, so it is with the other elements (bhutas). Earth (Prithvi), the mother
earth, is venerated in symbols pertaining to the millions of species of trees that she sustains,
which are in turn allegorically equated with rasas and bhavas in the human psyche; Air (Vayu) as
the pure breath of life (prana), pivotal to the jiva’s material and spiritual sustenance; Sky (Akasa)
as the giver of rain and thunder, Indra’s abode; and finally, fire (Agni), the principle of light,
creative energy and spiritual illumination. In the Vedas, as well as in later texts, each element is
endowed with a series of myths, personified as divine beings and accompanied with elaborate
rituals.
In fact, the ecological dimensions of Hindu myths may be seen even without much analysis. All
the gods in the pantheon are accompanied by animal vahanas – Siva with Nandi the bull, Visnu
with Garuda and Brahma with a swan or a goose. Even other Hindu gods have vahanas and in
some cases, are in zoomorphic or theriomorphic forms – Hanuman and Ganesa being the most
popular examples. Visnu’s dasavataras too evolve from the zoomorphic to the anthropomorphic.
The iconography of Hindu gods too may be interpreted through ecological analysis. For instance,
the dance of Siva (Tandava) may be interpreted so – His emblems are Agni and deer; his locks,
the forest; Ganga flows from his jatas; the sun and moon adorn his hair; snakes adorn his neck
and he plays the cosmic rhythm of creation and destruction on his damru as he dances atop the
embodiment of ignorance – apasmara purusa. While he is the embodiment of undifferentiated
consciousness, his consort is Shakti – the manifested energy which sustains the material universe,
the ‘atmanized’ ripples in the undifferentiated ocean.
Here, a remarkable similarity may be noted between Tukano and Indian Cosmology – both
perceive the world around them as hierophant manifestations. For the Tukano, this perception
rests in maintaining the balance of energy in their ecosystem.For the Hindus, God exists in
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everything, without exception – plants, animals, insects, stones, etc. Both their mythologies extol
adaptive strategies which place the human being in the larger web of ecological sustainability. As
a jiva, the Hindu worldview sees everything embodied in the individual, which is to say, that as
the elements exemplify divinity in cosmic creation, they also embody the human form. In both
cases, their worldviews are operationalized in rituals and ceremonies – in the maintenance of
ecological balance for the Tukano and in the numerous rituals in the Vedas and the numerous
harvest festivals, which participate (in an Elideansacred space) in the principles of creation, such
asMakar Sankranti, Pongal etc. Thus, in both cases the dynamic between man and nature is
mediated by myths as an ecological system of interconnected existence.
2.2. Myths Reflecting Microcosm and Macrocosm
Another Indian myth wherein ecological motifs act as the symbolic language, is that of the
Churning of the Ocean [6](samudra manthan). The main elements in the myth are Mt. Mandara,
the serpent Vasuki who forms the rope for the churning, the gods and demons, the tortoise who
forms the base, the amrit (elixir of immortality) and the poison swallowed by Siva. Let us begin
with the importance of Mt. Mandara in the myth. Mt. Mandara is both ecologically and
psychically important. “Its height and it being equated with the centre of the cosmos, naturally led
to other correspondences.First, the cosmic tree, then the straight column - the yupa of the yajna,
and ultimately the building of temples, stupas and even masjids in India [5]. One of Eliade’s
foremost ideas which have become axiomatic today, is his hierophantic interpretation of axis
mundi (Cosmic centre). The axis mundi acts as a separation of the sacred from the profane; that
is, the hierophantic space which gives a sacred point of reference to the individual, from the
orderless and indeed meaningless profane space, which has no centre or fixed point.
In the homogeneous and infinite expanse, in which no point of reference is
possible and hence no orientation is established, the hierophany reveals an
absolute fixed point, a centre [4].
Thus, the axis mundi refers to the sacred and spiritual centre of the individual’s experiential
universe, not the geographic one. In a sacred space, the individual not only commemorates but
also participates in hierophany. Thus, in this ‘Elidean’ sense, Mt. Mandara may be equated with
the axis mundi. In a yogic worldview, the centre of the Universe for the experiential observer is
represented by the spine [7]. Thus, the spine too, may be equated with the axis mundi. In the
simultaneous ecological and individual imagery of the myth, the microcosm and the macrocosm
are conflated. In this sense, it is really the spirit that is being churned to scale the heights of the
spine in samudra manthan. The turtle, the Kurma avatar of Visnu according to some myths,
represents the preservative force which upholds existence. The gods and demons pulling on the
serpent, in this scenario represent the ‘psychic’ demons and gods – as in psychical states of mind
of good and evil dispositions - that the individual must navigate through to reach the amrit – the
elixir of immortality. Immorality in this context, does not quite mean physical immortality, but a
spiritual immortality exemplified in liberation from the cycle of birth and re-births. South Indian
kurmasanas, wooden seats a metre across, represent this conflation of ecological features in the
myth and psycho-anatomical features within the human body graphically when a holy man sits on
top to meditate in the course of yoga, attempting to navigate his energy up the spine [6].
In the samudra manthan, the dynamic between man and nature is somewhat different from the
dynamic painted in thefirst function (of mediating ecological interconnectedness) discussed in
this paper. In the conflation of natural imagery with the interiors of the human psyche, the myth
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does achieve this objective too. However, I wish to bring attention to another function
exemplified in this myth - this conflation also places the jiva as the cosmos itself. It dispels the
common abstract fallacy of ‘human and nature’ and instead, points to a fascinating truth of
existence - that the human being is not separate from nature, but is in fact, nature reflecting upon
herself through the gift of consciousness. The semantic construction of myth in this regard is
poetic, ecological and metaphysical at the same time. Through the accommodation of these three
dimensions of language, the myth alludes to the goal of the process of self-realization – just as the
myth conflates the cosmos with the jiva, so too should the sadhaka - as realization or liberation is
nothing but the dispelling of the illusion of separation between subject and object. Thus, in this
mediatory function of myth, man and nature are united as reflections of each other. This
feature of myth may be observed even in the case of the Tukano cosmology. For the Tukano too,
the universal macrocosm is indispensably connected to the microcosm of the individual’s
ecosystem and further, to the individual itself as the duty of maintaining the creative balance of
father-sun’s energy becomes an individual responsibility. Both cultures, thousands of miles apart,
show an affinity for this idea through their respective mythologies.
3. CAUSE-EFFECT AND SUSTAINABILITY
At the intersection of mythology and ecology, we are now in a better position to judge the
worldviews of the mythmaking Tukano and Hindu. The picture we get is that first, both of them
illustrate a profound realization of ecological interconnectedness and the active role of the human
being in it. This realization was in part derived from a hierophantic worldview of the natural
world. In addition, they kept their patterns of consumption in check, almost as a religious duty. A
divine reverence for the natural world meant that maintaining ecological balance and constantly
evolving adaptive strategies were integral parts of spiritual development, of getting closer to God.
Second, both the Tukano and the Hindu saw the universal and the individual as conflated levels
of the same reality. In other words, they saw individual spiritual development in dissolving the
subject-object binary. Compounding these two features of their worldviews, one may see their
intuitive understanding of cause and effect;intuitive because it was built into their very way of
life.
Judging from the complete lack of acknowledgement of the human being’s active and formative
place in the ecological balance of the planet in modern and post-modern times, the present
understanding of cause and effect is seen as a linear principle that is 'unidirectional’. That is to
say, that it is a process/phenomenon, wherein one thing literally leads to another and so on and so
forth. This unidirectional understanding of phenomena isolates a piece of reality as if it existed in
the cognitive landscape of intellectual construction. Let us consider here, that the primary
function of intellectual abstraction is indeed to isolate our cognitive illusion of reality from the
'unapprehensible’ organic flux of nature. Thus, the present understanding of cause-effect remains
at the level of abstraction, not translatable into the true nature of organic reality.
Such a conception of cause and effect is inherently inhospitable to the notion of sustainability. It
must be noted here that sustainability is first and foremost, an epistemological attempt at trying to
apprehend the organic fluxes of nature into an intellectual model of interconnections and co-
existence. Every moment builds on the previous one and into the next. Every phenomenon is a
'sustained’ flux in the play of nature. Cause and Effect, as we know it, does not lend itself to
describing this 'sustained’ nature of reality, but instead breaks it down into isolated intellectual
events, as if they could exist in some vacuum. It lends itself to the same fallacy that reductionism
does; believing in a reducible reality separate from the real world.
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If human understanding of causality remains bound to the realm of cognitive 'untruths’, then how
can we ever begin to arrive at truth? It appears that the definitive reason why human cognitive
mindscapes appear to delude us is that they are separated from the very reality that they attempt
to apprehend. One may only understand or apprehend something that he or she IS not. In other
words, the assumption that modernity works with is that the human and the natural world stand at
a perceivable distance from each other. Now one might ask, what is it or rather, who is it that is
separated and from whom? Both the Tukano and the Hindu myths answer this question by
conflating the microcosm and the macrocosm. In doing so, they dissolve the subject-object binary
as well as the perceived distance between human and nature. They do this, not through
intellectual gymnastics, but through hierophany and poetic mythmaking.
What modernity refers to as sustainability is an attempt to account for the interconnected-ness of
ecosystems, natural cycles of the planet and in general, of all life in the Universe.From a
disposition of purely intellectual planning, it is perhaps impossible for even a supercomputer to
analyze all these interconnections - though systems theory is attempting exactly this. However,
this intellectual modelling approach is warranted only as long as an axiomatic distinction between
human nature and nature herself is maintained. In this case, actions cause an effect externally, to
an outside entity. As explained earlier, the myths referred to in this paper overcome this
predicament through intuition rather than purely intellectual modelling. Without the veil of
separation (that is with the conflation of micro- and macro-), as in the case of those myths,it
follows that both the cause and effect are self-contained, almost like mirror reflections.If cause-
effect are seen intuitively as self-contained, it is a way of being that is cultivated, not a way of
thinking. In essence, the Tukano and the Hindu myths paint the human being as both the subject
and the object of his actions. Hierophany is at the heart of this way of being.
4. CONCLUSION
Through the course of this paper, two functions of myth as mediator between man and nature
have been illuminated. First, the myths of both Tukano and Indian cultures reveal ecologically
adaptive strategies and worldviews of interrelated co-existence. Second, both sets of myth
conflate the microcosm and the macrocosm in an ingenious interplay between the imaginative,
rational and metaphysical dimensions of human experience and human language. The
commonality of these two functions of myth in these two distinct cultures alludes to the similar
way in which they perceived the cosmos and consequently, the human condition – the cosmos is
energy in eternal creation, a divine gift; the human being is the caretaker of this gift, forever
striving to be an active part of it.Additionally, in both cases, this similar cosmological worldview
translated into an operational worldview which saw ‘sustainability’ as a logical consequence of
the human condition.
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Table 1: Summary of the Comparison between Tukano and Hindu myths in the two ecological functions
considered in this paper
Function of Myth Tukano Hindu
1. Myths and
Ecological
Interconnectedness
Cosmological
Principle
The Cosmos is a
delicate balance of
Sun-Father’s energy
– of creation in
progress.
The Cosmos is an
interplay between
Universal
Consciousness and
Creative Energy.
Place of Humans The Human Being is
central to and a
formative part of the
process of creation.
The Human being is
one among countless
jivas – living beings.
The microcosm of
the jiva is not just
central to the
creation process, but
is conflated with
whole macrocosm
itself.
Operationalization
of Cosmological
Worldview into
Ecological
Worldview
Socio-Economic
Adaptive Strategies
condone co-existence
and condemn
overindulgence and
unsustainable
consumption.
This is based on a
religious duty to
maintain energetic
balance.
Hierophantic view
of all of creation.
Natural forces are
commemorated,
communed with and
revered as divine
beings.
Austerity and
overcoming material
desires is prescribed
as the path towards
salvation.
2. Myths Conflating
Microcosm and
Macrocosm
Conflation Through levels of
societal organization
based on father-sun
cosmology.
The Tukano attempts
to work in harmony
with the ongoing
process of creation.
Through imaginative
use of mythic
language.
Knowing the self is
equated with
knowing the
universal.
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The purpose of attempting a comparison between these two cosmologies may largely be seen in
undoing the colonial assumptions about the uselessness and ‘primitivism’ of tribal and ancient
cultures in an ecological context. However, the pursuit has also brought forth highly relevant
insights in context with the present post-modern moment in human history.
First, there is remarkable similarity between the modern integrated systems approach of studying
human beings and their environment as exposited by the likes of Fritjof Capra [8]. The integrated
systems approach, largely influenced by Eastern philosophy - especially Daoist philosophy –
proposes an entirely different worldview from the Cartesian worldview of man as separated from
everything around him. This worldview has formed the core of the natural sciences since the Age
of Reason in Europe. It proposes that to truly study nature, one must view her as an alive system
of profound interconnectivity, where nothing exists in isolation. Both Tukano and Indian myths
show an affinity for this view, both in their use of the different levels of language and symbolic
content. The relevance of this view is first and foremost epistemological and metaphysical, in that
conceptually, it completely transforms the dominant worldview through which the human being
is taught to view the world around him/her. Further, its most overt relevance is seen in the
consequences of its negligence – the ecological crisis which faces us today. What the worldview
of Tukano teaches post-modern civilisation is that to adapt to natural environs, even as
demanding as the Amazon, a conscious effort to learn about the interconnectedness of the natural
system is imperative. The primary culprit in the impending anthropogenic ecological crisis is the
unrestrained, unintelligible consumption and exploitation of natural resources. The Tukano’s
adaptive strategies correct just that. In the absence of an interconnected cosmology of human and
nature, these strategies are lifeless policies, where consumption is a cause with only external
effect.
Second, the similarities between the mythic structures of the Tukano and Indian myths are
remarkable. If a universal condition of the mythic human mind is to be found, it must be in their
facilitation of the dynamic between human and nature. If the functionalist model stepped out of
the knowledge-power formula, and approached from a perspective of ecological analysis, it
would perhaps also arrive at the same conclusion.
Finally, the last insight has to do with the universal human condition. Inextricably linked with the
interconnected universe that we live in is this fundamental issue which acts as a point of
departure for the eternal human pursuit of meaning. The myths considered in this paper convey
clues to answering this question. The search for meaning is a pursuit of finding one’s place in the
cosmos. Denizens of global culture are taught from an early age that human beings exist separate
from nature. In that,they arrive at a warped definition of nature without humansin it. In the second
function of myth highlighted in this paper - the conflation of the microcosm and the macrocosm -
myths tell us that perhaps the journey to find ‘meaning’ is to find ourselves ‘within’ nature; to
find oneself as nature herself. This is a fundamental, undeniable reality of existence – that we are
indeed nature reflecting on herself. This idea however, while it remains just an idea, has little
consequence in humanity’s violent relationship with her. Its realization however, is far more
profound as is seen in its operationalization in the myths of the Tukano and the Hindus.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
The author would like to thank Prof. Viraj Shah of FLAME University, Pune for guiding him
through the ideation and execution of this work.
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