Publication | Closed Access
‘Nature and I are Two’: A Critical Examination of the Biophilia Hypothesis
177
Citations
51
References
2011
Year
Human EcologyNatural SelectionEnvironmental EthicsSocial SciencesPsychologyGender IdentityCritical ExaminationParaphiliaBioethicsEdward O. WilsonKin SelectionBehavioral SciencesPhilosophy Of Biology‘ NatureSexual BehaviorHuman EvolutionEvolutionary BiologyBiophilia HypothesisEvolutionary TheorySexual OrientationHuman Sexuality
In 1984, Edward O. Wilson proposed the idea that natural selection has resulted in an adaptive love of life-forms and life–like processes (‘biophilia') in humans. To date, the idea of biophilia has been viewed as an ultimate explanation of many conservation attitudes in humans. In this paper, we contend that environmental ethics has little to gain from the biophilia hypothesis. First, the notion is open to various and even conflicting interpretations. Second, the empirical findings that do seem to corroborate a more well–defined version of the biophilia hypothesis can often be accounted for by alternative hypotheses. Third, the evolutionary reasoning behind the biophilia hypothesis tends to be unclear, and sometimes even inaccurate.
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