4.6 Article

Michael Soule (1936-2020) on spirituality, ethics, and conservation biology

Journal

CONSERVATION BIOLOGY
Volume 34, Issue 6, Pages 1426-1432

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/cobi.13634

Keywords

biodiversity; biophilia; deep ecology; ecocentrism; kinship; religion; Society for Conservation Biology; worldviews; afinidad; biodiversidad; biofilia; ecocentrismo; ecologí a profunda; formas de ver el mundo; religió n; Sociedad para la Biologí a de la Conservació n

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Michael Soule is best known for his scientific contributions and central role in founding the Society for Conservation Biology and its flagship journal. Less well known are his childhood experiences, his affinity for Zen Buddhism and Arne Naess' deep ecology philosophy, and his contributions as an environmental activist to efforts to protect biodiversity and rewild ecosystems. Also less well known is the extent to which he was an interdisciplinary environmental studies scholar, struggling to understand what promotes and hinders proenvironmental behaviors. In this regard, his life and that of many other conservation scientists provide important clues, but no easy answers. By attempting to integrate the humanities, with its quest for a meaningful and fulfilling human existence, with naturalistic nature spirituality and ecocentric values, as well as the social and natural sciences, Soule sought to solve the riddle as to why human beings seemed unable to understand, slow, and halt negative anthropogenic environmental change. He thus modeled what interdisciplinary environmental studies is at its best. Those advocating the conservation of biological diversity have much to learn from Michael Soule, not only from his scientific findings but also from his way of seeing, the questions he asked, and his love of the living world.

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