The historic nature of biodiversity: Conceptual elements of a crisis

Biodiversity is here considered both as a concept and as an ongoing problem. As a concept it expresses an entirely new form of seeing the world, being in the context of this new ontology where the associated crisis acquires its current social and political dimensions. The ontology of biodiversity re...

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Publicado: 2005
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Acceso en línea:https://bibliotecadigital.exactas.uba.ar/collection/paper/document/paper_03781844_v30_n4_p235_Pinillos
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_03781844_v30_n4_p235_Pinillos
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id paper:paper_03781844_v30_n4_p235_Pinillos
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spelling paper:paper_03781844_v30_n4_p235_Pinillos2023-06-08T15:39:26Z The historic nature of biodiversity: Conceptual elements of a crisis Ecology Ecosystems History Living systems studies Microorganisms Problem solving Social aspects Living systems Ontology Reticular interactions Schizophrnia Biodiversity Biodiversity is here considered both as a concept and as an ongoing problem. As a concept it expresses an entirely new form of seeing the world, being in the context of this new ontology where the associated crisis acquires its current social and political dimensions. The ontology of biodiversity responds to a new paradigm, the systemic paradigm, which sees reality as a complex and continuously mutating product of a netlike interaction among entities of different nature, which in turn, are the product of reticular interactions at a lower integration level. When reasoning regarding the implications of this paradigm for the understanding of living systems (organisms, ecological and socio-cultural systems), their ethical consequences are perceived, which are at the core of the discussion on how legitimate is the existing social project. It is concluded that biodiversity entails problems of a well defined historical nature: the cognitive schizophrenia of understanding the world in one manner and yet acting as if it were in an entirely different way, therefore building the foundations of a true existential crisis of humankind. 2005 https://bibliotecadigital.exactas.uba.ar/collection/paper/document/paper_03781844_v30_n4_p235_Pinillos http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_03781844_v30_n4_p235_Pinillos
institution Universidad de Buenos Aires
institution_str I-28
repository_str R-134
collection Biblioteca Digital - Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales (UBA)
topic Ecology
Ecosystems
History
Living systems studies
Microorganisms
Problem solving
Social aspects
Living systems
Ontology
Reticular interactions
Schizophrnia
Biodiversity
spellingShingle Ecology
Ecosystems
History
Living systems studies
Microorganisms
Problem solving
Social aspects
Living systems
Ontology
Reticular interactions
Schizophrnia
Biodiversity
The historic nature of biodiversity: Conceptual elements of a crisis
topic_facet Ecology
Ecosystems
History
Living systems studies
Microorganisms
Problem solving
Social aspects
Living systems
Ontology
Reticular interactions
Schizophrnia
Biodiversity
description Biodiversity is here considered both as a concept and as an ongoing problem. As a concept it expresses an entirely new form of seeing the world, being in the context of this new ontology where the associated crisis acquires its current social and political dimensions. The ontology of biodiversity responds to a new paradigm, the systemic paradigm, which sees reality as a complex and continuously mutating product of a netlike interaction among entities of different nature, which in turn, are the product of reticular interactions at a lower integration level. When reasoning regarding the implications of this paradigm for the understanding of living systems (organisms, ecological and socio-cultural systems), their ethical consequences are perceived, which are at the core of the discussion on how legitimate is the existing social project. It is concluded that biodiversity entails problems of a well defined historical nature: the cognitive schizophrenia of understanding the world in one manner and yet acting as if it were in an entirely different way, therefore building the foundations of a true existential crisis of humankind.
title The historic nature of biodiversity: Conceptual elements of a crisis
title_short The historic nature of biodiversity: Conceptual elements of a crisis
title_full The historic nature of biodiversity: Conceptual elements of a crisis
title_fullStr The historic nature of biodiversity: Conceptual elements of a crisis
title_full_unstemmed The historic nature of biodiversity: Conceptual elements of a crisis
title_sort historic nature of biodiversity: conceptual elements of a crisis
publishDate 2005
url https://bibliotecadigital.exactas.uba.ar/collection/paper/document/paper_03781844_v30_n4_p235_Pinillos
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_03781844_v30_n4_p235_Pinillos
_version_ 1768542742460235776