www.ecologicalcitizen.net
LONG ARTICLE
Why ecocentrism is the
key pathway to sustainability
Ecocentrism is the broadest term for worldviews that recognize intrinsic value in all lifeforms
and ecosystems themselves, including their abiotic components. Anthropocentrism, in
contrast, values other lifeforms and ecosystems insofar as they are valuable for human
well-being, preferences and interests. Herein, the authors examine the roots of ecocentrism
and discuss its mixed history of international recognition. They argue that non-human
nature has intrinsic value irrespective of human preferences or valuation, and they refute
the claim that ecocentrism is misanthropic. They then summarize four key examples from
the academic literature in which anthropocentrism fails to provide an ethic adequate for
respecting and protecting planet Earth and its inhabitants. The authors conclude that
ecocentrism is essential for solving our unprecedented environmental crisis, arguing its
importance from four perspectives: ethical, evolutionary, spiritual and ecological. They
contend that a social transformation towards ecocentrism is not only an ethical but a
practical imperative, and they urge support for ecocentric understanding and practices.
Haydn
Washington,
Bron Taylor,
Helen Kopnina,
Paul Cryer and
John J Piccolo
About the authors
See following page.
Citation
Washington H, Taylor B,
E
cocentrism inds inherent (intrinsic)
value in all of nature. It takes a
much wider view of the world
than does anthropocentrism, which sees
individual humans and the human species
as more valuable than all other organisms.
Ecocentrism is the broadest of worldviews,
but there are related worldviews (that
might be called ‘intermediate varieties’
(Curry, 2011: 57). Ecocentrism goes beyond
biocentrism (ethics that sees inherent
value to all living things) by including
environmental systems as wholes, and
their abiotic aspects. It also goes beyond
zoocentrism (seeing value in animals) on
account of explicitly including lora and
the ecological contexts for organisms.
While other scholars may difer, we see
ecocentrism as the umbrella that includes
biocentrism and zoocentrism, because
all three of these worldviews value the
non-human, with ecocentrism having
the widest vision. Given that life relies on
geology and geomorphology to sustain it,
and that ‘geodiversity’ also has intrinsic
value (Gray, 2013), the broader concept
‘ecocentrism’ seems the more inclusive
value (Curry, 2011) and hence most
appropriate.
The Ecological Citizen Vol 1 No 1 2017
Historical roots of ecocentrism
Kopnina H, Cryer P and
In a sense, ecocentrism has been with
humanity since we evolved; it underpins
what can be called the ‘old’ sustainability
(Washington, 2015). Many indigenous
cultures around the world speak of lore
and (in Australia) ‘law’ that relects an
ecocentric view of the world (Knudtson and
Suzuki, 1992). Ecologist Aldo Leopold (1949:
203–4) provided a classic example of the
notion in what he called ‘The Land Ethic’:
The
land
ethic
simply
enlarges
Piccolo JJ (2017) Why
ecocentrism is the key
pathway to sustainability.
The Ecological Citizen 1: 35–41.
Keywords
Anthropocentrism;
ecological ethics;
geodiversity; intrinsic
value; worldviews
the
boundaries of the community to include
soils, waters, plants, and animals […] A
land ethic of course cannot prevent the
alteration, management, and use of these
‘resources,’ but it does airm their right to
continued existence, and, at least in spots,
their continued existence in a natural state.
Arne Naess (1973) coined the term ‘Deep
Ecology’ for similar sentiments, later
articulating the notion in Principle 1 of
the Deep Ecology Platform (Devall and
Sessions, 1985: 69):
The well-being of non-human life on Earth
has value in itself. This value is independent
35
www.ecologicalcitizen.net
Why ecocentrism is the key pathway to sustainability
of any instrumental usefulness for limited
human purposes.
In terms of ecocentrism helping to solve
the environmental crisis, Stan Rowe (1994)
argued:
It seems to me that the only promising
universal belief-system is Ecocentrism,
deined as a value-shift from Homo sapiens
to planet earth: Ecosphere. A scientiic
rationale
backs
the
value-shift.
All
organisms are evolved from Earth, sustained
the United Nations means that it is not itself
binding, it does have “the character of a
proclamation directed to states for their
observance” (Wood,85: 982).
The World Commission on Environment
and Development (WCED, 1987a: 45), in Our
Common Future, argued that development
“must not endanger the natural systems
that support life on Earth: the atmosphere,
the waters, the soils, and living beings.” It
also (in a little-noticed passage) expressed
the view that nature has intrinsic value
(WCED, 1987a: 57):
by Earth. Thus Earth, not organism, is the
metaphor for Life. Earth not humanity is
[T]he case for the conservation of nature
the Life-center, the creativity-center. Earth
should not rest only with development
is the whole of which we are subservient
goals. It is part of our moral obligation to
parts. Such a fundamental philosophy gives
other living beings and future generations.
ecological awareness and sensitivity an
enfolding, material focus.
About the authors
Haydn Washington is an
environmental scientist,
writer and activist based
at the PANGEA Research
Centre, UNSW, Sydney,
NSW, Australia.
Bron Taylor is Professor
of Religion, Nature and
Environmental Ethics at
the University of Florida,
Gainesville, FL, USA, and a
Fellow of the Rachel Carson
Center for Environment and
Society, Munich, Germany.
Helen Kopnina is
an environmental
anthropologist at Leiden
University, Leiden, and The
Hague University of Applied
Science, The Hague,
the Netherlands.
Paul Cryer is a
conservationist for the
Applied Ecology Unit,
African Conservation Trust,
Hillcrest, South Africa.
John J Piccolo is
Associate Professor
in the Department of
Environmental and
Life Sciences, Karlstad
University, Sweden.
36
Acknowledgment of intrinsic
value internationally
The intrinsic value of nature has had a
mixed history in terms of international
recognition. The Stockholm Declaration of
1972 (see https://is.gd/89WDc2) noted that
‘natural resources’ must be safeguarded
for future human generations. The World
Conservation Strategy (International Union
for Conservation of Nature and Natural
Resources, 1980) also took an anthropocentric
approach, with three objectives:
n maintaining essential ecological processes
for human survival;
n preserving genetic diversity for the
protection of human industries that use
living resources;
n ensuring the sustainable utilization
of species and ecosystems for rural
communities and human industries.
In contrast, the World Charter for Nature in
1982 was underpinned by strong ecocentric
principles, stipulating that humanity and
culture are part of nature: “Every form
of life is unique, warranting respect
regardless of its worth to man, and, to
accord other organisms such recognition,
man must be guided by a moral code of
action” (United Nations, 1982: preamble).
Whilst the inherent nature of the Charter of
However, the Tokyo Declaration that
accompanied Our Common Future had
Principle 1 to “increase growth” while
Principle 3 was to “conserve and enhance
the resource base” for humans (WCED,
1987b). The Rio Declaration (see https://
is.gd/TJjVAS) from the Earth Summit of
1992, similarly, had Principle 1 stating:
“Human beings are at the centre of concerns
for sustainable development.”
The Earth Charter was inalized in 2000
(www.earthcharter.org) and was proposed
for United Nations endorsement at the World
Summit on Sustainable Development (WSSD)
in Johannesburg, South Africa, in 2002. It
strongly advanced an ecocentric worldview,
urging in Principle 1a that we:
Recognize that all beings are interdependent
and every form of life has value regardless of
its worth to human beings.
This visionary document expresses
compassion for humanity and nature as
a whole, and urges justice for both. It is
probably the best international document
we have to help demystify sustainability
(Soskolne, 2008; Washington, 2015).1
Although it was mentioned positively
in some speeches at the WSSD, the inal
Johannesburg Declaration (see https://
is.gd/Ve0Lnq) did not endorse the Earth
Charter. Likewise, The Future We Want, an
The Ecological Citizen Vol 1 No 1 2017
www.ecologicalcitizen.net
Why ecocentrism is the key pathway to sustainability
output of the Rio+20 Earth Summit, also
failed to endorse the intrinsic value of
nature (see https://is.gd/vh5KQ0). However,
Point 39 did recognize that many people
do have such moral sentiments (our
emphasis):
We recognize that the planet Earth and its
ecosystems are our home and that Mother
Earth is a common expression in a number
of countries and regions and we note that
some countries recognize the rights of
nature in the context of the promotion of
sustainable development. We are convinced
that in order to achieve a just balance among
the economic, social and environment
needs of present and future generations,
it is necessary to promote harmony with
nature.
This passage was in part in recognition
that, in 2008, Ecuador enshrined rights of
nature as a part of its new Constitution (see
https://is.gd/5kBr9d):
of an anthropocentric approach in
government thinking and, indeed, the
anthropocentrism prevalent among the
world’s religious traditions (Taylor et al.,
2016). It highlights the need for academics to
speak in support of ecocentrism.
“We maintain that
nature and life on
Intrinsic value free
from human valuation
Earth is inherently
We maintain that nature and life on Earth
are inherently good. That is to say nature
has intrinsic value, irrespective of whether
humans are the ones valuing it. It is true
that, as far as we know at present, we
humans are the only species that relects
on and applies moral values. However, we
can also understand that elements of the
ecosphere have co-evolved to form the
wondrous complexity of the web of life –
and contend that nature has value, whether
humans perceive this or not. As philosopher
Holmes Rolston (2002: 118–20) put it:
nature has intrinsic
good. That is to say
value, irrespective of
whether humans are
the ones valuing it.”
Some values are already there, discovered
not generated by the valuer because the
is
irst project here is really the natural object,
reproduced and exists, has the right to exist,
nature’s project; the principal projecting is
persist, maintain itself and regenerate its
nature creating formed integrity. […] The
vital cycles, structure, functions and its
theory of anthropogenic intrinsic value
processes in evolution.
needs to give place to a theory of autonomous
Nature
or
Pachamama,
where
life
intrinsic value. […] Those who value wild
In concert, in December 2010, Bolivia
passed its own constitutional reforms,
including the Law of the Rights of Mother
Earth (see https://is.gd/j423Hk). It deined
Mother Earth as “a collective subject of
public interest” and declared both Mother
Earth and life-systems (which combine
human communities and ecosystems) as
titleholders of inherent rights speciied
in the law. Such positive and visionary
constitutional reform is an example for
all nations. By contrast, however, the
United Nations’ Sustainable Development
Goals that were passed in 2015 failed to
mention ecocentrism or the intrinsic value
of nature, or to acknowledge the rights of
nature (Kopnina, 2016).
We can see above that there is a mixed
history of support for ecocentrism (and
the intrinsic value of nature). This likely
relects the problem of the dominance
The Ecological Citizen Vol 1 No 1 2017
nature, having discovered the intrinsic
natural values that we have been defending,
wish to preserve natural processes as well
as natural products. Humans can and ought
to see outside their own sector and airm
non-anthropogenic, non-cultural values.
[…] At the same time, only humans have
conscience. That conscience emerges for the
building of culture to relate humans to other
humans with justice and love, but it also
emerges—so environmental ethicists are
now arguing—for the relating of humans
to nature, to the larger community of life
on the planet. That relationship, governed
by conscience (and also by pragmatic selfinterest), requires a harmonious blending of
nature and culture, where this is possible.
The same conscience also generates a
duty that respects wild nature at some
times and places for values present there
independently of humans.
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Why ecocentrism is the key pathway to sustainability
“Ecocentrists
overwhelmingly
support inter-human
justice; however,
they also support
inter-species justice,
or ecojustice, for the
non-human world.”
The theory of autonomous intrinsic
value of nature frees humanity from its
anthropocentric obsession that it is all
about our valuing. It states clearly that
nature has intrinsic value, whether or not
humans perceive and acknowledge this.
Is ecocentrism anti-human?
Ecocentrism has been labelled ‘anti-human’
(Smith, 2014), or as contrary to concerns for
social justice. We reject this contention and
agree with Stan Rowe (1994):
Ecocentrism is not an argument that all
organisms have equivalent value. It is not
an anti-human argument nor a put-down
of those seeking social justice. It does not
deny that myriad important homocentric
problems exist. But it stands aside from
these smaller, short-term issues in order
to consider Ecological Reality. Relecting
on the ecological status of all organisms, it
comprehends the Ecosphere as a Being that
transcends in importance any one single
species, even the self-named sapient one.
Ecocentrists overwhelmingly support
inter-human justice; however, they also
support inter-species justice, or ecojustice,
for the non-human world (Baxter, 2005).
Just as environmental systems involve
many
interrelationships,
we
think
environmental and social systems are
entwined, and so social and ecojustice
concerns are (and must be) as well
(Washington, 2015).
Strength of anthropocentrism
in academia
Anthropocentrism is the prevalent ideology
in most societies around the world, and it
also permeates academia and domestic
and international governance. Four brief
examples are given in Box 1.
The cases presented are but a few of
the many possible examples of how
anthropocentrism continues to be the
world’s dominant ideology, even in venues
where ecological sustainability is a stated
goal. We contend, however, that a fully
sustainable future is highly unlikely
Box 1. Examples of how anthropocentrism permeates academia and governance.
Ecosystem services
The inluential term ‘ecosystem services’ was deined by
the Millennium Ecosystem Assessment (MEA Board, 2005)
as “the beneits people obtain from ecosystems.” With this
anthropocentric deinition, nature’s services are for humanity
alone. Of course, nature provides services (habitat, nutrients
and energy) to all species, and these too must be maintained
(Washington, 2013).
Strong sustainability
Mainstream economists (e.g. Solow, 1993) have argued for
‘weak’ sustainability, where human capital (skills in society)
and built capital can be substituted for natural capital
(another expression for ecosystem services). In this view
it is permissible to destroy natural areas and biodiversity
as long as we pass on money, skills and buildings to future
generations. ‘Strong’ sustainability goes further and requires
that natural capital stocks be ‘held constant’ independently of
human-made capital (Daly and Cobb, 1994). Although ‘strong’
is an improvement over ‘weak’ sustainability, it remains
anthropocentric because it is only focused on minimum
biophysical requirements for human survival (Wackernagel
and Rees, 1996; Washington, 2015).
Education for sustainable development
The United Nations and UNESCO promote ‘education for
sustainable development’ (ESD; https://is.gd/j2zmuc), but both
38
organizations consistently prioritize human rights and ignore
the question of whether nature also has rights. The UNESCO
2014 ‘Roadmap’ for ESD (https://is.gd/ryk7K8), for example,
failed to consider worldviews, ethics or ecocentrism. Critics
have observed that ESD has remained anthropocentric and
have argued the approach promotes an industrial worldview
antithetical to a holistic understanding of sustainability (Orr,
1994; Spring, 2004). Kopnina (2012) concluded that, at present,
ESD actually undermines eforts to educate citizens about the
importance of valuing and protecting the environment.
New conservation approach
Advocates of a ‘new conservation’ approach have argued that
human well-being should be at the forefront of conservation
eforts (Marris, 2011; Kareiva et al., 2012). It pursues economic
development, poverty alleviation and corporate partnerships
as substitutes for mainstream conservation tools such as
protected areas (Soulé, 2013: 895). Miller et al. (2014) have
compellingly argued that this anthropocentric approach is
based on a “human exceptionalism” that distorts ecological
science while prioritizing capitalist development over
ecosystem and societal health. Doak et al. (2015) similarly
conclude that new conservation is all about human interests,
not nature’s. Batavia and Nelson (2016) make a compelling
argument for the ethical view that nature has intrinsic
value, and conclude that new conservation’s endorsement of
anthropocentrism is highly suspect.
The Ecological Citizen Vol 1 No 1 2017
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without an ecocentric value shift that
recognizes the intrinsic value of nature
and a corresponding Earth jurisprudence.
Hence the need for academics to speak out in
support of ecocentrism.
Why ecocentrism is an
essential solution
We believe that ecocentrism, through
its recognition of humanity’s duties
towards nature, is central to solving our
unprecedented environmental crisis. Its
importance is for multiple reasons, as
described below.
In ethical terms
Ecocentrism expands the moral community
(and ethics) from being just about
ourselves. It means we are not concerned
only with humanity; we extend respect and
care to all life, and indeed to terrestrial and
aquatic ecosystems themselves. Ecocentric
care for life has been an important theme
for many individuals and some societies
for millennia. There is no philosophically
or scientiically sound justiication why
moral concern should not be extended to
all of the ecosphere, both its biotic and
abiotic components.
In evolutionary terms
Ecocentrism relects the fact that Homo
sapiens evolved out of the ecosphere’s rich
web of life – a legacy stretching back an
almost unimaginable 3.5 billion years.
There is no logical dividing line (temporally
or taxonomically) that can deine where or
when intrinsic value began (Piccolo, 2017).
Other species literally are our cousins and
relatives (close and distant) – a biological
kinship that many have recognized as
conferring moral responsibilities towards
all species. So does the recognition that we
are a part of nature, not apart from nature;
this erodes notions of human supremacy
(Crist, 2012; Taylor, 2013).
In spiritual terms
Ecocentrism has generally been at variance
with the predominant religions in the
world, which have tended to ofer escape
from mortality and relief from the sufering
The Ecological Citizen Vol 1 No 1 2017
Why ecocentrism is the key pathway to sustainability
that human life naturally involves. History
and science also note that many people and
some societies have developed ecocentric
moral sentiments, and that these have
been ecologically and socially adaptive. In
short, the role that religion and spirituality
plays in environmental behaviours has
been complicated and mixed (Taylor, 2005).
There is evidence, however, that ecocentric
values (often buttressed by, if not directly
rooted in, scientiic understandings of
ecosystem complexity) are increasingly
being fused into nature-based, ecocentric
spiritualities, in many cases innovatively
so (Taylor, 2010). With such spiritualities,
even people who are entirely naturalistic
in their worldviews often speak of the
Earth and its ecosystems as sacred and
thus worthy of reverent care and defence.
In ecological terms
Ecocentrism reminds us that the ecosphere
and all life is interdependent and that both
humans and non-humans are absolutely
dependent on the ecosystem processes
that nature provides (Washington, 2013).
An anthropocentric conservation ethic
alone is wholly inadequate for conserving
biodiversity. Ecocentrism is rooted in an
evolutionary understanding that reminds
us that we are latecomers to what Leopold
(1949) evocatively called “the odyssey of
evolution” (in his musing ‘On a Monument
to the Pigeon’). This understanding also
reminds us that every species and every
organism living today got here through
the same long struggle for existence.
This logically leads both to empathy for
our fellow inhabitants (who have, like
us, managed to make it so far) and to
humility, because in this process we are
no diferent from the others. And ecology
teaches humility in another way, because
from it we recognize that we do not know
everything about the world’s ecosystems,
and never will. This leads quite naturally to
a precautionary approach towards all the
systems that constitute the ecosphere, so
that where there are threats of serious or
irreversible damage, lack of full scientiic
certainty shall not be used as a reason for
postponing remedial action.
“Ecology teaches
humility in another
way, because from
it we recognize that
we do not know
everything about the
world’s ecosystems,
and never will.”
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www.ecologicalcitizen.net
Why ecocentrism is the key pathway to sustainability
The role of science
time to increasingly understand the way
we (and the rest of the living world) came
to be. And this has enabled us to see that,
indeed, we are part of nature, embedded in
a beautiful and wondrous living world, the
only place in the universe where we know
for sure that life exists. Surely, if anything
is worthy of respect, even reverence, it
is life itself on our own home planet. We
maintain that a transformation towards an
ecocentric worldview, and corresponding
value systems, is a necessary path towards
the lourishing of life on Earth, including
that of our own species.
n
Western scientiic thought corroborates
an ecocentric worldview through the
understanding it gives to us of ecoevolutionary processes; from this we
rediscover our evolutionary heritage and
our ecological dependence on nature. This
understanding may originally have come
through reductionist methods, but these
have also contributed to an awareness of
complex interconnectedness. This aligns
the science of ecocentricity very closely to
belief systems of those indigenous peoples
(and others) who have in various ways
come to see themselves as part of a sacred
world. Indeed, many Western scientists
have recognized there has been a scientiic
method to many non-Western societies,
involving close observation of organisms
and ecological systems and their efects.
This has led to increasing interest in
traditional ecological knowledge and
eforts to fuse such knowledge with
Western scientiic understandings (Berkes,
2008). Many of those involved in these
cross-cultural discussions have come to a
deeper respect for the knowledge systems
and ecocentric moral sentiments of those
with whom they are intellectually (and
sometimes practically) engaged.
Baxter B (2005) A Theory of Ecological Justice. Routledge,
Conclusion
Berkes F (2008) Sacred Ecology: Traditional ecological
We conclude that an ecocentric worldview
follows naturally from our evolutionderived,
empathetic
and
aesthetic
capacities, which, when combined with
our rational abilities, have enabled us over
Acknowledgement
The authors would like to thank the peer reviewers,
whose comments added to the article.
Notes
1 Although not an international statement, A
Manifesto for Earth, written by Mosquin and Rowe
(2004), also argued strongly for ecocentrism:
https://is.gd/n7gIt2 (accessed March 2017).
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