The Solidarity of Life: Max Scheler on Modernity and Harmony with Nature

Ethics and the Environment 19 (1):49 (2014)
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Abstract

In Max Scheler’s powerful critique of modernity, he claimed that moderns suffer more in the midst of technological advancement, their values are set by an “ethos of industrialization,” and they have no unified vision of who they are. The consequences have been devastating, including a lack of balanced living and ecological estrangement. In pointing beyond modernism, Scheler called for establishing personal, collective, and environmental harmony. His philosophical anthropology—rooted in a phenomenology of persons and values—is a helpful foundation for an environmental philosophy that simultaneously forwards personal self-cultivation and a deeper connection to the non-human world.

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Timothy Mccune
Humboldt State University

References found in this work

Editorial.Christopher R. Stones - 2007 - Indo-Pacific Journal of Phenomenology 7 (2):1-4.

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