• Earthly Matters: An Ecosophical Approach

  • Oct 17 2024
  • Length: 45 mins
  • Podcast

Earthly Matters: An Ecosophical Approach

  • Summary

  • We're back with The Subverse. In this episode of the season, host Susan Mathews talks to writer and ecological thinker Aseem Shrivastava about the current crises in modern cosmology. Ecosophy, which acknowledges the living earth, is a way to address this arrythmia and our current alienation from the earth to which we belong. Aseem Shrivastava is a writer,
    teacher, and ecological thinker with a doctorate in Economics from the University of
    Massachusetts, Amherst. He has lectured across the world on ecological issues emanating
    from globalisation. Shrivastava speaks of the present moment as an existential crisis, not just an intellectual crisis or a crisis of culture. During this fundamental upheaval in human affairs, the first thing you need to do is look at where your feet are. We need to ask fundamental questions about how we got here, and also address the terminal crisis in modern cosmology itself.

    “Without Nature, we are not.”- This is the start of an article Shrivastava wrote in The Open
    Magazine in 2021. He quotes Rilke and writes, “it appears that in the process of arising
    within us, the earth has dreams for us!” This earth is our only home, so he asks, “Are we
    ready to abandon her for the greener pastures of another planet that the space fantasists never
    fail to promise us? In a gentle defiance of the European Enlightenment vision, let us seriously
    consider the possibility that Rilke is right, that perhaps the Earth does have dreams for us, in
    the manner that a mother has dreams for her children. And like a mother’s dreams, the earth’s
    hopes for us must have power.”

    Ecosophy, unlike environmentalism or ecology, fundamentally tackles things like earth
    alienation and looks at the content of our vanishing relationship to the natural world in its full
    physical and metaphysical depth. We need a new mythos, and we can learn from
    Rabindranath Tagore in this context. Through his poetry, music, stories, plays and letter, the
    mythos is all there and you don’t need to go to science to find the meaning of life.
    We have a world that is arrhythmic, out of sync, not to mention suffering from psychic,
    cognitive and spiritual arrhythmia too. We need to understand the real roots of the crises we
    face, the limits of our knowledge, question our need to dominate and control and, in the end,
    face some heart reckoning and atonement.

    Aseem Shrivastava has taught at prestigious universities in India and the West and offered
    courses on Global and Indian Ecosophy at Ashoka University. He has been guiding and
    mentoring a number of graduate students and young people working in the realms of
    Philosophy, Ecosophy, Ecology, and Economics. He is the author (with Ashish Kothari) of
    the books ‘Churning the Earth: The Making of Global India’ (2012), and ‘Prithvi Manthan
    (2016). He is currently at work on several books on Ecosophy:‘The Grammar of Greed:
    Reflections on a Fatal Ecology’, ‘The Alphabet of Ecosophy: A Grammar for Twilight Modernity’, and ‘For Love of the Earth: Modernity, Ecosophy, Rabindranath Tagore’. All these works dialogue with the ecological challenges of 21st century global modernity.

    The Subverse is the podcast of Dark ‘n’ Light, a digital space that chronicles the times we live in and reimagining futures with a focus on science, nature, social justice and culture. Follow us on social media @darknlightzine for episode details and show notes.

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