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- Ecomodernism abstract "Ecomodernism is the strain of environmental philosophy which argues that humans can protect non-human nature by using technology to “decouple” anthropogenic impacts from the natural world. Ecomodernism is an emergent school of thought from many environmentalist scholars, critics, philosophers, and activists. In their 2015 manifesto, 18 self-professed ecomodernists—including scholars from the Breakthrough Institute, Harvard University, Jadavpur University, and the Long Now Foundation—defined their philosophy as such:"...we affirm one long-standing environmental ideal, that humanity must shrink its impacts on the environment to make more room for nature, while we reject another, that human societies must harmonize with nature to avoid economic and ecological collapse."Ecomodernism explicitly embraces substituting energy, technology, and synthetic solutions for “natural” ecological services. Among other things, ecomodernists embrace agricultural intensification, genetically modified and synthetic foods, desalination and waste recycling, urbanization, and substituting denser energy fuels for less dense fuels (e.g. substituting coal for wood and, ultimately, getting all energy from zero-carbon technologies like nuclear power and advanced renewables). Key among the goals of an ecomodern environmental ethic is the use of technology to intensify human activity and “make more room” for wild nature.Ecomodernism emerged from various debates, including the debate over when homo sapiens became a dominant force acting on Earth’s ecosystems (proposed start-dates to the so-called “Anthropocene” range from the advent of agriculture 10,000 years ago to the invention of atomic weapons in the 20th century). Other debates that form the foundation of ecomodernism include how best to protect natural environments, how to accelerate decarbonization to mitigate climate change, and how to accelerate the economic and social development of the world’s poor.In these debates, ecomodernism distinguishes itself from other schools of thought, including sustainable development, ecological economics, degrowth or the steady-state economy, laissez-faire economics, the “soft energy” path, and central planning. Ecomodernism considers many of its core ideologies borrowed from American pragmatism, political ecology, evolutionary economics, and modernism.".
- Ecomodernism wikiPageExternalLink love-your-symptoms-a-sympathetic-diagnosis-of-the-ecomodernist-manifesto.
- Ecomodernism wikiPageExternalLink can-we-save-the-world-by-leaving-nature-behind-.
- Ecomodernism wikiPageExternalLink www.ecomodernism.org.
- Ecomodernism wikiPageExternalLink environmentalists-civil-war.
- Ecomodernism wikiPageExternalLink decoupled-ideals-1.17363.
- Ecomodernism wikiPageExternalLink an-environmentalist-call-to-look-past-sustainable-development.html.
- Ecomodernism wikiPageExternalLink an-environmentalist-call-to-look-past-sustainable-development.html?_r=0.
- Ecomodernism wikiPageExternalLink a-degrowth-response-to-an-ecomodernist-manifesto.
- Ecomodernism wikiPageExternalLink ecomodernism_a_21st_century_environmental_philosophy_that_embraces_a_good.html.
- Ecomodernism wikiPageExternalLink 26073883.
- Ecomodernism wikiPageExternalLink .VYRAMxNVhBc.
- Ecomodernism wikiPageID "47421364".
- Ecomodernism wikiPageLength "9321".
- Ecomodernism wikiPageOutDegree "26".
- Ecomodernism wikiPageRevisionID "678726482".
- Ecomodernism wikiPageWikiLink Barry_Brook_(scientist).
- Ecomodernism wikiPageWikiLink Breakthrough_Institute.
- Ecomodernism wikiPageWikiLink Bruno_Latour.
- Ecomodernism wikiPageWikiLink Category:Environmentalism.
- Ecomodernism wikiPageWikiLink David_Keith_(scientist).
- Ecomodernism wikiPageWikiLink Degrowth.
- Ecomodernism wikiPageWikiLink Ecological_economics.
- Ecomodernism wikiPageWikiLink Economic_planning.
- Ecomodernism wikiPageWikiLink Evolutionary_economics.
- Ecomodernism wikiPageWikiLink Jadavpur_University.
- Ecomodernism wikiPageWikiLink Laissez-faire.
- Ecomodernism wikiPageWikiLink Long_Now_Foundation.
- Ecomodernism wikiPageWikiLink Mark_Lynas.
- Ecomodernism wikiPageWikiLink Michael_Shellenberger.
- Ecomodernism wikiPageWikiLink Modernism.
- Ecomodernism wikiPageWikiLink Political_ecology.
- Ecomodernism wikiPageWikiLink Pragmatism.
- Ecomodernism wikiPageWikiLink Robert_Stone_(director).
- Ecomodernism wikiPageWikiLink Roger_A._Pielke,_Jr..
- Ecomodernism wikiPageWikiLink Ruth_DeFries.
- Ecomodernism wikiPageWikiLink Soft_energy_path.
- Ecomodernism wikiPageWikiLink Steady-state_economy.
- Ecomodernism wikiPageWikiLink Stewart_Brand.
- Ecomodernism wikiPageWikiLink Sustainable_development.
- Ecomodernism wikiPageWikiLink Ted_Nordhaus.
- Ecomodernism wikiPageWikiLinkText "ecomodernism".
- Ecomodernism hasPhotoCollection Ecomodernism.
- Ecomodernism wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Div_col.
- Ecomodernism wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Div_col_end.
- Ecomodernism wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Ecomodernism subject Category:Environmentalism.
- Ecomodernism hypernym Strain.
- Ecomodernism type Species.
- Ecomodernism comment "Ecomodernism is the strain of environmental philosophy which argues that humans can protect non-human nature by using technology to “decouple” anthropogenic impacts from the natural world. Ecomodernism is an emergent school of thought from many environmentalist scholars, critics, philosophers, and activists.".
- Ecomodernism label "Ecomodernism".
- Ecomodernism sameAs m.0262zb7.
- Ecomodernism wasDerivedFrom Ecomodernism?oldid=678726482.
- Ecomodernism isPrimaryTopicOf Ecomodernism.