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Kierkegaard in the Anthropocene: Hope, Philosophy, and the Climate Crisis
Guyatt, Ruby
Religions (Basel, Switzerland ), 2020-06, Vol.11 (6), p.279
[Periódico revisado por pares]
MDPI AG
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Título:
Kierkegaard in the Anthropocene: Hope, Philosophy, and the Climate Crisis
Autor:
Guyatt, Ruby
Assuntos:
climate crisis
;
ecology
and
religion
;
hope
;
Søren Kierkegaard
É parte de:
Religions (Basel, Switzerland ), 2020-06, Vol.11 (6), p.279
Descrição:
What is the role of hope in the climate crisis? What type of hope does this crisis demand? How can we sustain hope, in order to resist falling into fatalistic despair or paralyzing fear, whilst always guarding against hope giving way to happy complacency? This essay considers these urgent questions through a novel encounter between the Christian philosophy of Søren Kierkegaard, and recent eco-critical and empirical research on the affectivity of climate change mobilization. I begin by outlining the scope and aims of this essay (1st section), before introducing some affective dimensions of the climate crisis (2nd section), particularly the place of hope. Next, I examine Kierkegaard’s account of hope, and explore the extent to which it corresponds to the type of hope needed in the climate crisis (3rd section). Here, I show that Kierkegaardian hope is a therapeutic practice which subverts the eco-anxiety and sense of helplessness that can otherwise prevent individuals from engaging in positive climate action. Finally, I compare Kierkegaard’s theologically grounded hope with the hope held by climate change activists without religious faith (4th section). Participating in collective climate action anchors the individual’s hopes in a larger, collective hope, which I suggest is sustainable in ways that are partially analogous to the therapeutic functions of Kierkegaard’s Christian hope.
Editor:
MDPI AG
Idioma:
Inglês
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