OCR Output

RELIGION AND ECOLOGY

Judit Farkas

This chapter surveys the concepts held by different religions and belief systems
on nature. Recent decades have shown that in addition to technical and
technological results and political desires, there is also an urgent need to transform
the human system of values so that people can comprehend environmental
problems as legitimate problems that are in need of solutions. An eco-conscious
religious or spiritual system of values and the technological solutions to
environmental problems both aim at the same goal, yet they encounter difficulties
in understanding one another. Their rapprochement and reconciliation could
largely be promoted by the attitude of EH with its multi- and cross-disciplinary
efforts. This is the reason for the chapter devoted to religion in a reader of EH.

Ecology and religion

Both concepts in the chapters title — religion and ecology — are difficult to define.
In a narrow sense, ecology designates a branch of the natural sciences: it studies
the space of living, the relationships between living beings and their environment.
At the same time, the term is often colloguially used to denote the environment
(or - and this is rather problematic — as a synonym of Nature). Its contemporary
interpretation is the exploration of environmental problems, concentrating on the
interaction of humans and the natural environment. Religion is perhaps an even
more complex notion, with innumerable different historical, scientific, theological
and denominational interpretations. An examination of the definitions by a single
field of scholarship (e.g., cultural anthropology — see the framed text below), reveals
that the examination of religion and environmental protection is not an easy
undertaking, nor is the elaboration of the theory and practice of religious
environmentalism (Lodge — Hamlin 2006: 279-307). On the conceptual
difficulties, see also Baumann — Bohannon — O’Brien 2017).

ECOLOGY, ENVIRONMENT, RELIGION

Ecology. The term is associated with the German biologist Ernst Haeckel (1866). “As
a discipline of synthetic biology, it is interested in the laws of the relationship between
populations of living beings (above the individual level) and the environment. Ecology’s
fields of interest include the study of interactions that determine the distribution and
frequency of living beings. In other words, it studies the conditions which influence
the populations of living beings and their impact. The word of Greek origin means
a study of the milieu, environment. More recently, the importance of the issue has