In the GetReligion Blog Terry Mattingly writes about ghosts– religious images that hide behind the pixels and in between the lines of mainstream news reporting. These images and ideas are present, but not adequately reported because the press just doesn’t “Get Religion.” Environmental reporting is haunted by “ghosts” as well. For a view of some of the hidden religions terms in the environmental discourse see Environmentalism: Death and Resurrection by Mark Sagoff. (Sagof is director of the Institute for Philosophy and Public Policy and the University of Maryland.) Here is an extract:
An editorial in The Economist magazine quipped that the modern environmental movement borrows its underlying narrative from Christian thought. “There is a Garden of Eden (unspoiled nature), a fall (economic development), the usual moral degeneracy (it’s all man’s fault), and the pressing sense that the world is enjoying its final days (time is running out: please donate now!).” The global economy, at least in comparison to the past, however, seems to be booming. Environmentalism may be in its Last Days. As one commentator put it, “Secular apocalypticism appears devoid of an underlying redemptive meaning and is thus characterized by a sense of hopelessness and despair.” The “Death of Environmentalism” is much discussed. Why has the environmental movement, which waxed as a political force in the 1970s, waned today?In recent years, however, ecologists have come to question these assumptions. Ecologists are no longer sure that nature has a mathematical organization above the level of the organism or the population. Many ecologists wonder if human beings can be excluded from the idea of the ecosystem. Ecological science has moved away from the foundational beliefs that nature possesses a hidden order—that there are ecological “systems” or “communities” the “structure” of which “naturally” or by definition excludes human
influence. The environmental movement nevertheless continues to look to science to support its faith that there is a hidden order in nature which human beings disrupt because of our “wrongness”—notably our greed or ignorance or intransigence. Environmentalists invoke science to defend traditional religious views
Read Sagoff's discussion of the development of the environmental creed. Much to ponder here.