The ecology of freedom

the emergence and dissolution of hierarchy

Pas de couverture

Murray Bookchin: The ecology of freedom (Paperback, 1991, Black Rose Books)

Paperback, 385 pages

Langue : English

Publié 8 novembre 1991 par Black Rose Books.

ISBN :
978-0-921689-72-0
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4 étoiles (1 critique)

The Ecology of Freedom: The Emergence and Dissolution of Hierarchy is a 1982 book by the American libertarian socialist and ecologist Murray Bookchin, in which the author describes his concept of social ecology, the idea that ecological problems are caused by human social problems and can be solved only by reorganizing society along ecological and ethical lines. The book is considered Bookchin's magnum opus, but it has also been criticized as utopian.

8 éditions

Insightful

4 étoiles

Excellent investigation into hierarchies of all kinds and their origins. Some of the writing is thick as mud, but there are gorgeous passages scattered throughout. Seems to misunderstand science/evolution somewhat, in that he imagines a striving toward complexity and differentiation throughout the history of matter. This concept then is the basis for his ideas on societal and natural ecology, that there is wholeness in complementarity among difference. He thus advocates for our actions to increase this diversity, complementarity, lack of hierarchy etc., so that we can participate in this evolutionary process and eventually...well no one knows. Something cool one hopes!

I read the "Twenty Years Later" introduction after reading the book. In it, he addresses a lot of woo that became more popular in that time, and that was maybe even inspired by his writing. His views on this striving or inherent direction/reason in nature make him sound like a …

Sujets

  • Civilization -- Philosophy
  • Civilization -- History
  • Social control
  • Liberty
  • Technology and civilization