Ecology as a Pseudo-Religion?

Telos: Critical Theory of the Contemporary 1998 (112):107-124 (1998)
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Abstract

Since the 1960s, the Green movement has been seen as an innovative leftist phenomenon. From the times of Peter Kropotkin,1 it has been assumed that environmental concerns belong to the Left. Recent studies, however, have shown that in the late 19th and early 20th centuries there were political ecologists associated with the radical Right.2 Some supported National Socialism, eugenics, the mystical union of mankind and nature, and other esoteric practices. Given this historical precedent, recent leftist flirtations with ecology raise a number of moral and political questions concerning the ideological character of ecology, since the latter can take a variety…

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