Exiting Eden: an exploration of the evolution of humanity’s conception of divine disposition and its impact on the Earth

This dissertation examines how humans conceptualise their relationship with the divine vis-à-vis the created world, positing that this in turn impacts the health of the world, where health of the world is examined via ecofeminist principles. It is argued that western culture, in its progression from...

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Main Author: Stevens, Charlotte
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/64326/
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author Stevens, Charlotte
author_facet Stevens, Charlotte
author_sort Stevens, Charlotte
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description This dissertation examines how humans conceptualise their relationship with the divine vis-à-vis the created world, positing that this in turn impacts the health of the world, where health of the world is examined via ecofeminist principles. It is argued that western culture, in its progression from antiquity to the contemporary modern era, evolves from an organismic to a mechanistic framework, and this shift results in an increased conceptual distance between the creator and the created. Using ecofeminist theory, a mechanistic framework is identified as an anthropocentric one, and the negative impacts of such anthropocentrism on the health of the world are explored from the way the earth is valued, and the impact this has on ecology, to the further centric structures (such as androcentrism) that become justified through the presence of anthropocentrism, and the impact they have on our treatment of that which is ‘Other’ to us.
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spelling nottingham-643262025-02-28T15:10:02Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/64326/ Exiting Eden: an exploration of the evolution of humanity’s conception of divine disposition and its impact on the Earth Stevens, Charlotte This dissertation examines how humans conceptualise their relationship with the divine vis-à-vis the created world, positing that this in turn impacts the health of the world, where health of the world is examined via ecofeminist principles. It is argued that western culture, in its progression from antiquity to the contemporary modern era, evolves from an organismic to a mechanistic framework, and this shift results in an increased conceptual distance between the creator and the created. Using ecofeminist theory, a mechanistic framework is identified as an anthropocentric one, and the negative impacts of such anthropocentrism on the health of the world are explored from the way the earth is valued, and the impact this has on ecology, to the further centric structures (such as androcentrism) that become justified through the presence of anthropocentrism, and the impact they have on our treatment of that which is ‘Other’ to us. 2021-08-04 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en arr https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/64326/1/EXITING%20EDEN_2nd%20submission_CS.pdf Stevens, Charlotte (2021) Exiting Eden: an exploration of the evolution of humanity’s conception of divine disposition and its impact on the Earth. MRes thesis, University of Nottingham. ecofeminism human ecology religious aspects feminism creation
spellingShingle ecofeminism
human ecology
religious aspects
feminism
creation
Stevens, Charlotte
Exiting Eden: an exploration of the evolution of humanity’s conception of divine disposition and its impact on the Earth
title Exiting Eden: an exploration of the evolution of humanity’s conception of divine disposition and its impact on the Earth
title_full Exiting Eden: an exploration of the evolution of humanity’s conception of divine disposition and its impact on the Earth
title_fullStr Exiting Eden: an exploration of the evolution of humanity’s conception of divine disposition and its impact on the Earth
title_full_unstemmed Exiting Eden: an exploration of the evolution of humanity’s conception of divine disposition and its impact on the Earth
title_short Exiting Eden: an exploration of the evolution of humanity’s conception of divine disposition and its impact on the Earth
title_sort exiting eden: an exploration of the evolution of humanity’s conception of divine disposition and its impact on the earth
topic ecofeminism
human ecology
religious aspects
feminism
creation
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/64326/