Being Ecological

by Timothy Morton

Paperback, 2019

Status

Available

Call number

304.2

Publication

The MIT Press

Description

A book about ecology without information dumping, guilt inducing, or preaching to the choir. Don't care about ecology? You think you don't, but you might all the same. Don't read ecology books? This book is for you. Ecology books can be confusing information dumps that are out of date by the time they hit you. Slapping you upside the head to make you feel bad. Grabbing you by the lapels while yelling disturbing facts. Handwringing in agony about "What are we going to do?" This book has none of that. Being Ecological doesn't preach to the eco-choir. It's for you--even, Timothy Morton explains, if you're not in the choir, even if you have no idea what choirs are. You might already be ecological. After establishing the approach of the book (no facts allowed!), Morton draws on Kant and Heidegger to help us understand living in an age of mass extinction caused by global warming. He considers the object of ecological awareness and ecological thinking: the biosphere and its interconnections. He discusses what sorts of actions count as ecological--starting a revolution? going to the garden center to smell the plants? And finally, in "Not a Grand Tour of Ecological Thought," he explores a variety of current styles of being ecological--a range of overlapping orientations rather than preformatted self-labeling. Caught up in the us-versus-them (or you-versus-everything else) urgency of ecological crisis, Morton suggests, it's easy to forget that you are a symbiotic being entangled with other symbiotic beings. Isn't that being ecological?… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member thenumeraltwo
Less a green self-help book and more a philisophical rehabilitation of Nazi-loving Heidegger. Good to read now, before the oh-so-achingly-of-their-time references become unintelligible. A recommended read?

That's unfair.

I raced through the first hundred pages enjoying the philosophy tour. Then I saw
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some reviews about the wearying prose which I let get to me. And now I can't review this book cleanly. Which, given its ecological moral feels apt.
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LibraryThing member arewenotben
Frequently headspinning but definitely opened to my mind to alternative ways of looking at the world. Morton writes in a very engaging, readable style (even when digging into some pretty heavy philosophy) and his mind zaps around different ideas, references and thoughts almost constantly - if the
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book was any longer it'd be utterly exhausting but the small size works well.
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Language

Original language

English

Physical description

214 p.; 7.75 inches

ISBN

0262537125 / 9780262537124

Other editions

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