•  24
    This chapter presents an argument against the core features of ‘ecomodernism,’ i.e., a school of thought which presents itself as a form of sustainable/environmental philosophy while being in reality the new Trojan Horse of neoclassical economics in the field of environment. In effect, ecomodernists offer a new momentum to the capitalist agenda, its rejection of ecological limits, and its support to the techno-optimist and neoliberal rearrangement of the world. The first shortcoming of this theo…Read more
  •  20
    This chapter examines the current assault on nature as coming from two different fronts: On the one hand, it comes from the hypermodern camp, that is, from those who celebrate the Anthropocene as the apex of human mastery and domination over nature (‘good Anthropocene’ scenario), the ‘techno-optimists’ who are willing to (re)engineer/recreate the earth, and the neo-greens who wish to see the growth-based economy and the technological colonization of the planet continue, even if the cost is the d…Read more
  •  22
    This chapter provides a critique of the strong (arrogant) version of anthropocentrismAnthropocentrismStrong anthropocentrism on the account that the exclusive defense of human interests it promotes cannot secure the preservation of ecosystems on which humanity depends to thrive and survive in the context of the AnthropoceneAnthropocene. This is why the shift to a post-anthropocentrismAnthropocentrismPost-anthropocentrism which takes into account the macroscopic and interrelated conditions of hum…Read more
  •  22
    This conclusive chapter summarizes the main objectives of the book, emphasizing the critique of the ‘good anthropocene’ scenario given by dominant Earth System Science (ESS) and Post-environmentalism that fails to recognize and address the current socio-ecological predicament. Particularly, it demonstrates that the new ‘geology of humankind’ is not so much the era of humanDominationon earth but rather the era of human destruction of earth. This chapter recalls that the dominant Anthropocene narr…Read more
  •  28
    This chapter analyzes the ecological crisis as being the ultimate symptom of a civilizational collapse linked to the prevailing (neo)liberal socioeconomic organization of Western and westernized societies (i.e., the industrialised and liberalised world). Such a system fosters, under the rule of instrumental rationality and capital’s principle of utility, unsustainable high-energy and high-material consuming patterns of life, narratives of control and domination of nature, the reduction of human …Read more
  •  24
    In the context of a carbon-constrained and climate change world, green republicans aim to provide a high level of human flourishing with concomitant low energy and resource use. Contrary to liberal institutions which emphasize negative freedom, individualism and competition, private interests, and the systemic depoliticization of social actors, green republicanism stresses the importance of solidarity, commitment, and community-based life for flourishing, mindful and sustainable ways of inhabiti…Read more
  •  29
    Against the optimistic and technocratic way of considering the Anthropocene as the ‘new age of humans,’ i.e., ‘human’s power over nature,’ this chapter rather evidences that the Anthropocene is an epoch of great danger and indeterminacy—and for scientists themselves, an age of ‘impotent power’—which calls, therefore, for prudence and humility. In opposition to the ecomodernist techno-optimistic ‘neoliberal Anthropocene,’ the alternative is a humbler ‘democratic Anthropocene,’ in which humanity r…Read more
  •  95
    The environmental crisis is the most prominent challenge humanity has ever had to battle with, and humanity is currently failing. The Anthropocene—or so called ‘age of humans’—is indeed a period when the survival of humanity has never been so much at risk. This book locates itself in the field of critical green political theory. Fremaux's analysis of the current environmental crisis calls for us to embrace radical shifts in our modes of being; or, in other words, socially progressive innovations…Read more