
Publication details
Year: 2005
Pages: 157-171
Series: Human Studies
Full citation:
, "Gadamer and the otherness of nature", Human Studies 28 (2), 2005, pp. 157-171.


Gadamer and the otherness of nature
elements for an environmental education
pp. 157-171
in: Human Studies 28 (2), 2005.Abstract
In this work I search for elements that contribute to the development of the ethical dimension of environmental education. I start with the existence of what C.A. Bowers calls "areas of silence" in the curriculum in both schools and universities. The reason for this silence, I argue, is to be found in the Cartesian conceptual structures of curricula. I suggest that the works of Bacon, Galileo and Descartes provoke a twofold process that I have termed the forgetting of tradition and objectification of nature. As a corrective to this process, I explore the possibilities that the philosophical hermeneutics of Hans-Georg Gadamer opens for rehabilitation of tradition and de-objectification of nature. I work with the concept of the "dignity of things" present in Greek dialectics: that nature is not simply a projection of mind (as the neo-Kantians claim), but something that thought suffers. In my conclusions I argue that for nature to be reinserted into almost all areas of knowledge it is necessary that we respect "the otherness of nature."
Cited authors
Publication details
Year: 2005
Pages: 157-171
Series: Human Studies
Full citation:
, "Gadamer and the otherness of nature", Human Studies 28 (2), 2005, pp. 157-171.