Volume 8 No 2 (2010)
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Making Connectivities: Neuroanthropology and Ecological Ethics
Arthur Saniotis
Abstract
As the human brain is the organ of cognition and behavior it is important to
understand environmental ethics and conservationism in relation to
neuroanthropology which examines the tie between brain and culture. While this
field shows great promise it needs more theoretical investigation. In this paper I
will examine ecological ethics in relation to Merleau‐Ponty’s idea of the ‘Visible
and the Invisible’. I will argue that humans need to create connectivities with the
natural world. In the later section I will propose that environmental ethics may be
informed by the cognisized environment – processes of mind which are
immanent in nature in a Batesonian sense
Keywords
neuroanthropology, ecological ethics, connectivity, neurognosis, metapatterns, holos consciousness
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