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Escaping Humanocentrism: Why a Slime Mold Will Be President in 2028
Manage episode 420875212 series 2491141
The myth of human dominion and exceptionalism is as old as the Bible and as unquestioned as gravity, at least in "modern" society. Rob, Asher, and Jason explore the ways that humanocentrism has come to dominate the planet and our minds, while pointing to ancient and newly emerging ways that the more-than-human world is respected and protected, even the dung beetle.
Warning: This podcast occasionally uses spicy language.
Sources/Links/Notes:
- Eileen Crist defines (and critiques) anthropocentrism.
- Global biomass of wild mammals
- Global human-made mass exceeds all living biomass.
- Decline of pollinators
- Decline of flying insect biomass
- Daniel Quinn’s book Ishmael
- Human Nature Odyssey podcast with Alex Leff
- Tom Murphy’s journey of understanding the pitfalls of human exceptionalism
- Two-thirds of the world’s longest rivers have been dammed.
- Declining wild bird populations in North America
- Ed Yong’s book An Immense World
- Yellowstone to Yukon conservation initiative
- Restor
- Douglas Tallamy’s book Nature’s Best Hope: A New Approach to Conservation That Starts in Your Yard
- Story of mining permit revocation in Panama
- Timeline of expansion of the rights of nature that was compiled by the Community Environmental Legal Defense Fund
- Center for Democratic and Environmental Rights
- Stop Ecocide International
- Crazy Town episode with Danielle Celermajer on multispecies justice
- Robin Wall-Kimmerer’s book Braiding Sweetgrass
- Prominence of nature in the Tuvan language
- Holding the Fire episode with Anne Poelina
- Quote by Kenneth Brink of the Karuk Tribe
- Quote by Sammy Gensaw III of the Yurok Tribe
133 episodi
Manage episode 420875212 series 2491141
The myth of human dominion and exceptionalism is as old as the Bible and as unquestioned as gravity, at least in "modern" society. Rob, Asher, and Jason explore the ways that humanocentrism has come to dominate the planet and our minds, while pointing to ancient and newly emerging ways that the more-than-human world is respected and protected, even the dung beetle.
Warning: This podcast occasionally uses spicy language.
Sources/Links/Notes:
- Eileen Crist defines (and critiques) anthropocentrism.
- Global biomass of wild mammals
- Global human-made mass exceeds all living biomass.
- Decline of pollinators
- Decline of flying insect biomass
- Daniel Quinn’s book Ishmael
- Human Nature Odyssey podcast with Alex Leff
- Tom Murphy’s journey of understanding the pitfalls of human exceptionalism
- Two-thirds of the world’s longest rivers have been dammed.
- Declining wild bird populations in North America
- Ed Yong’s book An Immense World
- Yellowstone to Yukon conservation initiative
- Restor
- Douglas Tallamy’s book Nature’s Best Hope: A New Approach to Conservation That Starts in Your Yard
- Story of mining permit revocation in Panama
- Timeline of expansion of the rights of nature that was compiled by the Community Environmental Legal Defense Fund
- Center for Democratic and Environmental Rights
- Stop Ecocide International
- Crazy Town episode with Danielle Celermajer on multispecies justice
- Robin Wall-Kimmerer’s book Braiding Sweetgrass
- Prominence of nature in the Tuvan language
- Holding the Fire episode with Anne Poelina
- Quote by Kenneth Brink of the Karuk Tribe
- Quote by Sammy Gensaw III of the Yurok Tribe
133 episodi
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