Getting Back on Track to Being Human

Cooperation and compassion are forms of intelligence. Their lack is an indication of ongoing stress or toxic stress during development that undermined the usual growth of compassion capacities. Though it is hard to face at first awareness, humans in the dominant culture tend to be pretty unintellig...

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Main Author: Darcia Narvaez
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Minnesota Libraries Publishing 2017-03-01
Series:Interdisciplinary Journal of Partnership Studies
Subjects:
Online Access:https://pubs.lib.umn.edu/index.php/ijps/article/view/151
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spelling doaj-b4f5f3de667945c9b726881904b82fa82020-11-24T22:34:55ZengUniversity of Minnesota Libraries PublishingInterdisciplinary Journal of Partnership Studies2380-89692017-03-014110.24926/ijps.v4i1.151Getting Back on Track to Being HumanDarcia Narvaez0University of Notre Dame Cooperation and compassion are forms of intelligence. Their lack is an indication of ongoing stress or toxic stress during development that undermined the usual growth of compassion capacities. Though it is hard to face at first awareness, humans in the dominant culture tend to be pretty unintelligent compared to those from societies that existed sustainably for thousands, sometimes tens of thousands, of years. Whereas in sustainable societies everyone must learn to cooperate with earth’s systems to survive and thrive, in the dominant culture this is no longer the case. Now due to technological advances that do not take into account the long-term welfare of earth systems, humans have become “free riders” until these systems collapse from abuse or misuse. The dominant human culture, a “weed species,” has come to devastate planetary ecosystems in a matter of centuries. What do we do to return ourselves to living as earth creatures, as one species among many in community? Humanity needs to restore lost capacities—relational attunement and communal imagination—whose loss occurs primarily in cultures dominated by child-raising practices and ways of thinking that undermine cooperative companionship and a sense of partnership that otherwise develops from the beginning of life. To plant the seeds of cooperation, democracy, and partnership, we need to provide the evolved nest to children, and facilitate the development of ecological attachment to their landscape. This will take efforts at the individual, policy, and institutional levels. https://pubs.lib.umn.edu/index.php/ijps/article/view/151Partnership CultureSocial MoralityNeurobiological DevelopmentUndercareDevelopment Ethical Ecological PracticeBiodemocratic
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Darcia Narvaez
spellingShingle Darcia Narvaez
Getting Back on Track to Being Human
Interdisciplinary Journal of Partnership Studies
Partnership Culture
Social Morality
Neurobiological Development
Undercare
Development Ethical Ecological Practice
Biodemocratic
author_facet Darcia Narvaez
author_sort Darcia Narvaez
title Getting Back on Track to Being Human
title_short Getting Back on Track to Being Human
title_full Getting Back on Track to Being Human
title_fullStr Getting Back on Track to Being Human
title_full_unstemmed Getting Back on Track to Being Human
title_sort getting back on track to being human
publisher University of Minnesota Libraries Publishing
series Interdisciplinary Journal of Partnership Studies
issn 2380-8969
publishDate 2017-03-01
description Cooperation and compassion are forms of intelligence. Their lack is an indication of ongoing stress or toxic stress during development that undermined the usual growth of compassion capacities. Though it is hard to face at first awareness, humans in the dominant culture tend to be pretty unintelligent compared to those from societies that existed sustainably for thousands, sometimes tens of thousands, of years. Whereas in sustainable societies everyone must learn to cooperate with earth’s systems to survive and thrive, in the dominant culture this is no longer the case. Now due to technological advances that do not take into account the long-term welfare of earth systems, humans have become “free riders” until these systems collapse from abuse or misuse. The dominant human culture, a “weed species,” has come to devastate planetary ecosystems in a matter of centuries. What do we do to return ourselves to living as earth creatures, as one species among many in community? Humanity needs to restore lost capacities—relational attunement and communal imagination—whose loss occurs primarily in cultures dominated by child-raising practices and ways of thinking that undermine cooperative companionship and a sense of partnership that otherwise develops from the beginning of life. To plant the seeds of cooperation, democracy, and partnership, we need to provide the evolved nest to children, and facilitate the development of ecological attachment to their landscape. This will take efforts at the individual, policy, and institutional levels.
topic Partnership Culture
Social Morality
Neurobiological Development
Undercare
Development Ethical Ecological Practice
Biodemocratic
url https://pubs.lib.umn.edu/index.php/ijps/article/view/151
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