Abstract
The Humanistic Psychologist
2006, Vol. 34, No. 2, Pages 111-133
(doi:10.1207/s15473333thp3402_2)



The Ivory-Billed Woodpecker, Ecopsychology, and the Crisis of Extinction: On 
Annihilating and Nurturing Other Beings, Relationships, and Ourselves

Will W. AdamsĀ
Department of Psychology, Duquesne University




This study is an exploration of today's mass extinction of species and mass 
extinction of relationships: When species become extinct and ecosystems are 
destroyed, distinctive interrelationships are extinguished. Humans and 
nature are mutually impoverished. This crisis of consciousness and culture 
involves our exclusive identification as (supposedly) separate egoic 
subjects, dissociation of humans and nature, and anthropocentrism. An 
emerging psychocultural therapy may help us transcend such narcissistic 
alienation and realize our nondual intimacy with the rest of nature. The 
primacy of interrelating is explored via Merleau-Ponty's phenomenological 
ontology and Buddhist psychology. Direct experiences with nature interact in 
mutually enhancing ways with interpersonal relationships and sociocultural 
structures/discourses that value nature.We may thereby cultivate mutual 
intimacy, health, and justice in our intersubjective relationships with the 
natural world.


Stan Moore deduces from the abstract:  I think the author means the 
ivorybill/human interface could be deeply important to us (probably even if 
their existence is yet unproved)

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