Arne Næss
Self-realisation through the wider ecological Self — the equal intrinsic worth of all living beings
Næss began his career as an analytic philosopher of science and language (the "Interpretation and Preciseness" project, 1953) before the 1969 paper "The Shallow and the Deep, Long-Range Ecology Movement" articulated the distinction that founded deep ecology. The 1985 "Deep Ecology: Living as If Nature Mattered" (with George Sessions and Bill Devall) codified the Eight Points platform: the intrinsic worth of all living beings, biodiversity's contribution to that worth, the illegitimacy of human reduction of biodiversity except for vital needs, the policy implications, and the ethical demand on those who agree. The substantive philosophy ("Ecology, Community and Lifestyle," 1989) integrates a Spinozist non-dualism (Næss wrote his doctoral thesis on Spinoza) with Gandhian non-violence (his other major influence) and the ascetic-contemplative tradition of Norwegian mountain culture. He spent much of his philosophical-personal life at Tvergastein, his stone cabin at 1500 metres on Hallingskarvet, which he regarded as the necessary practical condition of his thought.
Key works
- Interpretation and Preciseness (1953)
- "The Shallow and the Deep, Long-Range Ecology Movement" (Inquiry, 1973)
- Deep Ecology: Living as If Nature Mattered (1985, with Devall and Sessions)
- Ecology, Community and Lifestyle (1989)
- Life's Philosophy: Reason and Feeling in a Deeper World (2002)
Declared Influences
Deep Ecology 65%
Spinozist Pantheism 20%
Naturalism 10%
Buddhism 5%
Næss is the founder. The shallow/deep distinction, the Eight Points platform, the doctrine of the ecological Self, and the priority of biodiversity all originate here.
"The flourishing of human and nonhuman life on Earth has intrinsic value. The value of nonhuman life forms is independent of the usefulness these may have for narrow human purposes." (Eight Points, 1984, with Sessions)
Næss's doctoral and lifelong philosophical engagement with Spinoza — particularly the Ethics' Part III account of the conatus by which each thing strives to preserve its being — is the metaphysical substrate of his ecological philosophy.
"The deep ecology movement's ultimate norm is Self-realization with a capital S — the realization of an ever-wider Self that includes all beings." (Ecology, Community and Lifestyle, 1989)
A working naturalist commitment to ecological science as the proper descriptive substrate of philosophy — Næss's deep ecology is not romantic against science but proceeds from it.
"The essence of deep ecology is to ask deeper questions." ("The Shallow and the Deep," 1973)
A working sympathetic engagement with Buddhist philosophy (especially the doctrine of dependent origination) as a parallel resource for thinking the ecological Self — Næss participated in the late-twentieth-century Buddhist-Western philosophical dialogue.
"Earth does not belong to humans." (Eight Points, ch. 1)
Internal Tensions
Deep ecology has been criticised from the political left (eco-socialists, social ecologists like Murray Bookchin) for what they read as ahistorical misanthropy that elides differential responsibility for environmental harm; and from environmental pragmatists for what they read as utopian inflexibility on tradeoffs. Næss himself was an irenic figure who emphasised the platform (the Eight Points) as a working consensus across which deeper philosophical differences could coexist, and the tension between programmatic ambition and pragmatic flexibility was something he treated as productive rather than requiring resolution.
I. Time
Conventional modern, with the ecological inflection that the relevant time-horizons (centuries, millennia, geological epochs) are far longer than political-economic ones. Deterministic in the Spinozist sense.
Attributes
II. Space
Conventional modern cosmological. The substantive philosophical work is done in the ecological-spatial register — bioregions, watersheds, the mountain.
Attributes
III. Matter
Emergent in the Spinozist sense — matter is one of the attributes of the one substance.
Attributes
IV. Observer
Singular at the deepest level — the ecological Self that includes all beings is the realisation of the one substance. Both physicality (embodied in particular ecosystems) and Both agency (the wider Self acts through and beyond the narrow ego). Cosmic-ordering metaphysical agency: the Spinozist Deus sive Natura.
Attributes
V. Energy
Substantival, conserved, irreversible in the ecological-thermodynamic sense. The Tvergastein cabin's ascetic energy budget is itself a philosophical practice.
Attributes
VI. Information
Conserved at both scales. The ecological inheritance — biological, cultural, philosophical — is what we owe the future.
Attributes
Classified works
Works in the atlas that Arne Næss authored or that draw on this persona's writings, with full attribute fingerprints of their own.
Computed school proximity
The persona's attribute fingerprint scored against all 202 schools using the same quiz scorer. Useful as a sanity check on the hand-curated influences above.
Philosophical neighbors
Other personas whose attribute fingerprint sits closest to Arne Næss's — intellectual neighbors across traditions and eras.
How Arne Næss resolves each dilemma
57 resolved positions across 4 dimensions, including 38 distinctive where the majority of schools go the other way.
Each dimension is sorted so minority positions come first. Mainstream positions are folded into an expandable list.
Time · 9 dilemmas · 5 distinctive
Persistence, the future, and the direction of becoming.
4 mainstream positions
Matter · 7 dilemmas · 5 distinctive
What stuff is — fundamental, relational, or appearance.
Observer · 37 dilemmas · 5 distinctive
Mind, agency, and the knower's relation to the known.
32 mainstream positions
Information · 4 dilemmas, all mainstream
Films Referencing This Persona (8)
Either directly referenced in the film, or reading the film through one of this persona's top schools.
Experiments Engaging This Persona's Schools
Surface via influence-schools that respond to the experiment. Each entry shows the school through which the connection runs.