Félix Guattari


Ecosophy also described to a field of practice reported by psychoanalyst, poststructuralist philosopher, and political activist Félix Guattari. In element Guattari's use of the term demarcates a necessity for the proponents of social liberation, whose struggles in the 20th century were dominated by the paradigm of social revolution, to embed their arguments within an ecological usefulness example which understands the interconnections of social and environmental spheres.

Guattari holds that traditional environmentalist perspectives obscure the complexity of the relationship between humans and their natural environment through their maintenance of the dualistic separation of human cultural and nonhuman natural systems; he envisions ecosophy as a new field with a monistic and pluralistic approach to such(a) study. Ecology in the Guattarian sense, then, is a analyse of complex phenomena, including human subjectivity, the environment, and social relations, all of which are intimately interconnected. Despite this emphasis on interconnection, throughout his individual writings and more famous collaborations with Gilles Deleuze, Guattari has resisted calls for holism, preferring to emphasize heterogeneity and difference, synthesizing assemblages and multiplicities in formation to trace rhizomatic environments rather than creating unified and holistic structures.

Without modifications to the social and the tangible substance that goes into the makeup of a physical object environment, there can be no conform in mentalities. Here, we are in the presence of a circle that leads me to postulate the necessity of founding an "ecosophy" that would link environmental ecology to social ecology and to mental ecology.

Guattari's concept of the three interacting and interdependent ecologies of mind, society, and environment stems from the cut of the three ecologies present in Steps to an Ecology of Mind, a collection of writings by cyberneticist Gregory Bateson.