TY - JOUR
T1 - LOS DERECHOS DE LA NATURALEZA Y LA NECESIDAD DE TRANSITAR HACIA UNA NUEVA ONTOLOGÍA
AU - Monteagudo, Cecilia
AU - Huyhua Muñoz, Sheyla Liliana
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2023, Pontificia Universidad Catolica del Peru. All rights reserved.
PY - 2023
Y1 - 2023
N2 - The utilitarian approach, normalized by humans as a way to relate with other non-human forms of life has led us to build a lifestyle that has generated irreparable and irreversible environmental damages. In such context, this article offers a complex view from some voices of contemporary hermeneutics about the relationship between nature and its possibility of accessing rights. For this purpose, research is divided into four sections. We initially propose a review of the links between anthropocentrism, modern law and the construction of the modern subject’s identity. Next, an interpretation of the search and production of knowledge as an activity capable of causing destructive effects to the environment is offered in relation to the previous ideas. Then, such perspective is complemented by a reflection on the myth of scientific objectivism, as a homogenizing attitude that colonizes different cultural spheres. Finally, we address the domination of nature by human beings as a practice that reflects the utilitarian bond through which we have organized our way of life. This invites us to think about the need to move towards a new ontological paradigm that allows us to build a non-hierarchical and non-exclusive approach to non-human forms of life.
AB - The utilitarian approach, normalized by humans as a way to relate with other non-human forms of life has led us to build a lifestyle that has generated irreparable and irreversible environmental damages. In such context, this article offers a complex view from some voices of contemporary hermeneutics about the relationship between nature and its possibility of accessing rights. For this purpose, research is divided into four sections. We initially propose a review of the links between anthropocentrism, modern law and the construction of the modern subject’s identity. Next, an interpretation of the search and production of knowledge as an activity capable of causing destructive effects to the environment is offered in relation to the previous ideas. Then, such perspective is complemented by a reflection on the myth of scientific objectivism, as a homogenizing attitude that colonizes different cultural spheres. Finally, we address the domination of nature by human beings as a practice that reflects the utilitarian bond through which we have organized our way of life. This invites us to think about the need to move towards a new ontological paradigm that allows us to build a non-hierarchical and non-exclusive approach to non-human forms of life.
KW - Hermeneutics
KW - Ontology
KW - Peru
KW - Philosophy
KW - Rights
KW - Utilitarian approach
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85160219935&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.18800/kawsaypacha.202301.A005
DO - 10.18800/kawsaypacha.202301.A005
M3 - Artículo
AN - SCOPUS:85160219935
SN - 2523-2894
VL - 2023
JO - Revista Kawsaypacha: Sociedad y Medio Ambiente
JF - Revista Kawsaypacha: Sociedad y Medio Ambiente
IS - 11
M1 - A-005
ER -