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Deep Ecology and theLessons from an
Ecovillage
Author: Brindusa Birhala
Supervisor: Dr. Norbert Anwander (Humboldt
Universitt zu Berlin)
Project Year 2008/2009
European College of Liberal Arts
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Deep Ecology and the Lessons from an Ecovillage
Standing up, majestic in his anger, Rainforest continues:
Your greed and folly shortensyour own life as a species. When you leave me wasted
and smoldering, you foretell your own death. Don't you
know that it is from me that you have come? Without my
green world your spirit will shrivel, without the oxygenmy plant life exhales, you'll have nothing to breathe. You
need me as much as your own lungs. I am your lungs.
(fragment from a Council of All Beings ritual)
1. Introduction
As I was sitting across the wooden table from her and discussed about ecology, Gabi
Bott, one the persons in charge of leading several seminars in the village was telling me that
there is no recipe, no sure path on which to lead others into becoming an environmentalist. Eitheryou understand and feel it, or you dont. It is not a matter of external compulsion, but rather a
strong inner drive. I immediately realized that she had another understanding than the commonly
shared impressions about ecology, one which in that moment appeared quasi religious, or forwhich one needs a speck of belief at least. I asked her if she had ever read Arne Naess, to which
she said no; but she had heard of him as the originator of the philosophy called deep ecology,
and she had taken part in a course of Johanna Macy, one of his American disciples. She then
made a gesture to show me that I was close to squashing an ant in one of the table cracks. Myheart skipped a beat and I blushed. Why are you here, then? I asked her. Because this is the
future! Gabi retorted.
Living in a small community grounded on environmental principles presupposes more
than concern for the environment. Starting from a particular example, an eco- village in
Germany, I want to examine the grounding reasons for which people chose to live in acommunity centered on ecological values and how deeply ingrained in their consciousness stand
these values. I posit that this example goes beyond environmental ethics as observance of a
moral code in regard to nature, and presupposes a personal transformation in the manner inwhich one conceives his or her relation with nature. For the purpose of the present investigation,
one question dominates all: why did these people become the inhabitants of an eco-village?
Inquiring into the philosophical and social characteristics of the environmental philosophicalstrain entitled deep ecology, I realized that they seem to fit almost perfectly the unwritten
ideological background of such a community project. Certainly, they have arrived at such
conclusions which to our eyes might appear radical. Is there only their personal inclination to
understand existence in a new, different way, or is anybody able to achieve such atransformation? On closer scrutiny, there is nothing new in conceiving nature as intrinsically
valuable, this being the outlook of many primitive societies, many of which nurtured animist
beliefs, but the 'transformation' that deep ecology professes addresses the behavioral patterns of2
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modern Western society. The underlying deep ecological assumption is that 'development' is
wrongly understood and practiced, centering only on the human individual whose constitutive
ties with nature have been unlawfully cut, leaving the two disparate, into a subject-objectrelationship. Under the intuition that the lifestyle of an eco-community is tightly linked with
spiritual and metaphysical insights of this kind, I will try to look at the role played by these in the
social organization of the community. Nonetheless, the fact that this is an 'artificially created'community, and not a village in which the inhabitants decided to change their lifestyle in
observance of heightened environmental awareness, bears a significant importance.
I had the chance to visit the village Sieben Linden in May 2008, and to attend a seminar
especially organized to present the eco-project to those who desire a closer look from within. The
17 participants (me included) have been hosted in one of the guests houses and shown around the
principal parts of the village. We also interacted with the locals, albeit only with a very smallpart of the over 100 inhabitants who live and work together, and have been given the whole
story, from the origins to the present, by one of the initiators of the village-project. The weekend
requested a considerable fee from each participant, and during the presentation most of theemphasis fell on practical and organizational aspects, from housing to gardening and the
education of children. In spite of that, I am ready to pin down deep ecology as the conceptual
background of everyday living in this village. There was no mentioning of deep ecology in theofficial presentation of the project, thus the task becomes more adventurous, and it amounts to
interpreting formal characteristics of the village organization in the light of deep ecological
insights. In order to resolve the conundrum of why eco-villages are being created, the principal
focus of the inquiry will be on the development of what deep ecologists name an environmentalconsciousness. The resounding question underneath my written exploration of both the
philosophical current of deep ecology and the exemplary community in Sieben Linden will be:
How close is the lifestyle of the inhabitants of the eco-village to the 'deeply ecological' ideal?
I find it also relevant to the research that the concept of eco-village has spread
internationally and is promoted by means of a Global Environmental Network. They have drawnfour pillars which support the organization of each village project: Ecology, Social, Economy
and Worldview. To the big public, the Sieben Lindeners describe their project as an aim to
provide a model for a future way of life in which work, leisure, economy, ecology, urban andrural culture can find a balance1. Further on, I will hypothesize and then investigate how the
four pillars could be described as holding together in a deep ecological substratum. The first part
of my paper will be focused on an account of deep ecology as a branch of environmental
philosophy (with theoreticians such as Arne Naess, George Sessions, Warwick Fox, JoannaMacy as main spokespersons) Pursuant to lying out of the theoretical grounding, I am offering
further explanations regarding one of the leading ideas- the transformation of consciousness and
how it plays into the life of the environmental community. Some critical standpoints will be
visited before I give an actual account of the life in Sieben Linden, containing issues of socialorganization, and the role of technology. The last part will present various answers to how do
environmentalists of different deeply ecological veins conceive the emergence of anenvironmental consciousness.
1.2. Framing deep ecology
1http://www.siebenlinden.de/content.php?p=2000
3
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Often perceived 'in the field' as the odd one out, deep ecology does not align itself within
regular environmental ethics, because it presupposes a philosophical stance and it emphasizes
that environmentalism cannot be anthropocentric if it is to aim at fundamental changes. Itsinitiator, Norwegian philosopher Arne Naess had stressed the contrast between shallow
ecology which aims solely at taking certain practical measures against specific environmental
problems and his vision of 'deep' questioning about the real causes behind environmentalproblems and a need to reinterpret modernity and its damaging contribution. He holds
anthropocentric attitudes responsible for what amounts to a present ecological crisis and posits
manners in which to rediscover in a genuine light the relation between humankind and nature,starting from the individual, and arriving at the universal. Having been a scholar of Ghandi,
Buddhism and Spinoza, Naess does not shy away from introducing metaphysical elements in his
environmental philosophy to the extent to which he proposes a different ontology, which mingles
issues of individuality, equality and wholeness of existence.
Since its apparition in the 1970s, a lot of ink was spilled over deep ecology, as it attracted
the attention of environmental theorists, and permeated the curricula of environmental ethicsuniversity courses. It is also to be recognized in practice, in numerous protest cases in which
activists referred to the deep ecological movement, subsumed in the eight points of the Deep
Ecological Platform, stated in terms sufficiently general that people from many differentreligions and philosophical traditions-such as Christianity, Buddhism, Spinozism- can join.2 A
hard to conceive formal element about deep ecology is the constant desire to separate betweenthe movement(which deals with asking for rapid decisions to urgent environmental threats) and
thephilosophicalconstruction which presupposes the understanding and individual developmentof certain particular features, like identification with non-human beings. The DEP constitutes the
programmatic arm of deep ecology and was devised by Arne Naess and George Sessions in 1984
to offer an articulation to the common position which deep ecological activism should practice.Naess recognizes that one cannot remain in the realm of philosophical speculations when nature
is urgently endangered, reason for which he endorses the existence of a movement inspired from
basic principles of his environmental philosophy. He concentrated the philosophical insightsaround his interpretation of the human-nature relationship into eight poignant formulations called
the platform of the deep ecology movement. The present paper will not dwell on the
'movement' itself but only on the philosophical intuitions in deep ecology. One might argue thata social project infused with deep ecological ideas subscribes to the movement, as a practical
manifestation of deep ecology philosophy. However, I will refer to the character of the
community in view without pursuing an analysis of the movement or of the platform.
There is, nevertheless an entire social philosophy which accompanies deep ecology as a
result of arriving at the insights it puts forward. What I intend to conceive in the present paper isnot another 'for' or another 'against' portrayal of deep ecology, but rather an investigation of what
I consider the central and most vital point of this philosophical endeavor- the transformationwithin the individual. Through the present case-study, it should pervade how environmental
consciousness translates into the life of a community. Moreover, I consider that even if
deciphering what stands behind an ecologically enlightened self, could seem like a quest for the
2 Michael Zimmerman, Contesting Earths Future. Radical Ecology and Postmodernity,
University of California Press, pp.20
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Holy Grail, it might become the most pertinent solution to constant environmental degradation
severely felt today, because it reaches beyond the immediate. Therefore, an interesting upshot of
looking at the ecovillage of Sieben Linden is to find the practical consequences which wouldaccompany an environmental consciousness. The high value placed on a particular metaphysics
which tampers with the human-non-human divide and the focus on community living will be
treated as the variables which both nurture and are determined by the deep ecologicaltransformation of consciousness.
The present inquiry does not aim at embracing the deep-versus-shallow outlook onenvironmentalism, but will display its admiration for the manner in which deep ecological
conceptualization allows a non-anthropocentric ideal be intertwined with deep care for human
society. Likewise, the case-study should not be regarded as compelling counter-cultural model,
which all environmentalists have to observe, but rather as an interesting response to theconundrum posed by the direction in which modernity should develop so as to maintain (or
reach) a balance with its natural environment. My personal inclination might attract arguments to
polarize around the need to investigate our individual relation to non-human beings before westart devise ethical paths in environmental thinking. It is not hard to notice that this represents a
standpoint inspired by deep ecology, and it represents the sole and most poignant manner in
which the present paper will take sides in any environmental ethics debate. Warwick Fox, one ofthe philosophers to follow and support deep ecology described it focusing on changing the way
in which we experience the world, [...].(i.e. changing our ontology) rather than upon what we
might term the conceptual fix approach of bigger and better ethics. This attempt to shift the
primary focus in environmental philosophical concern from ethics to ontology clearly constitutesa fundamental or revolutionary challenge to normal environmental philosophy. It is (and should
be) deep ecology's guiding star. 3
2. Transformation of the consciousness from self to 'Self'
My compassion for animals did not derive from the Buddhistic trimmings of Schopenhauers philosophy, but
rested on the deeper foundation of a primitive attitude of mind- on an unconscious identity with animals. At thetime, of course, I was wholly ignorant of this important psychological fact.
(C. G. Jung, Memories, Dreams, Reflections)
First and foremost, Naess wants to devise a philosophy which describes and guides
mankinds current role in the ecosphere, and through it, to guide towards the necessarytransformations in consciousness. He wishes to go from ethics to ontology and back, meaning
3Warwick Fox, Guiding Stars of Deep Ecology, pp. 173
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that our opinions about what oughtto be done are highly dependent upon ourhypotheses as to
how the world is organized.4 This would be a novel movement in the domain of environmental
ethics because it does away with sense of compulsion. One would not act ethically-i.e. self-less ,thus non-anthropocentric- against his or her own immediate interest in order to protect nature,
but rather the 'correct' decision would follow naturally from the understanding of the world, as
proposed by deep ecologists. One of the features of this understanding is the equal worth ofhuman and non-human life and the interconnectedness of all living forms. Having incorporated
this special (deep) ontology, the competition regarding who holds the primacy of importance is
annulled, and the decisions in favor of non-human beings could be as easily taken as thoseserving human individuals.
Naess describes his philosophy as a system meaning its postulates, norms and goals fit
together and great insistence falls on seeing the world as an interconnected whole, which wouldinspire a coherent vision of all life aspects, from political to religious. But to encourage
systematizing does not imply encouraging system dogmatism- the tendency to herald one system
as the sole truth and eternal truth...Point for point, the system cannot be extended down to all
decisions.5In this type of freedom lies the positive valuation of differences in personal ethical
outputs and the maxim of unity in diversity, often heralded by deep ecologists. What Naess is
trying to make us aware of, is the fact that even if each individual develops his or her own'ecophilosophy', there is an urgency to connect concrete environmental decisions with strong
basic philosophic and religious positioning. His intuition foresees that these fundamental
backgrounds could not be so heterogeneous, as to justify unsolvable disputes at the level of
practical measures. Nonetheless, we should acknowledge that the difficulty lies with making theputative opponent trace his opinions back to some deeply seated values and norms6 and that
those will bear for him or her a non-anthropocentric interpretation. Unfortunately, both
conditions do not come easy, but as long as particular norms do not become isolated from theirphilosophical base, and then universalized, communication of values is possible and will be
fruitful: For each participant in the debate, the starting point is twofold: our own system or
world-view and that or those views we find to be meaningful in our surroundings. Our actionstake place in a social field and we must and will consider the evaluations and the interpretations
of the facts, or the lack of knowledge thereof which reigns in a particular context.7
Unsurprisingly, they like norms as general as possible and with no dogmatic aura around
them. This consideration stems from a total rejection of doctrinaire thinking and the negative
reaction towards specific environmental norms without a deeper justification, like Always ride
your bike to work instead of driving! From a deep ecological point of view, the multitude ofsuch norms seen as necessarily unbending add up to environmental babelization or to
unwarranted intrusions into private life. Hence, one accepted attitude would be: as few norms
with a purely instrumental character as possible. At this point in the description of the concept,
one could sense the pull away from dogmatism and the push towards total world-views as thegrounding of personal 'ecosophies'. In the same manner, the intransigent enforcement of
4 idem, pp. 74
5Naess, Ecology, Community and Lifestyle, pp. 73
6idem
7idem, pp. 77
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environmental measures and policies channeled through sheer green parties' propaganda turns
people away from environmentalism as a cultural choice. Naess observes that many nature
magazines and associations should be kelp largely free of political and moral propaganda. Theyfoster and encourage nature-lovers, but membership tends to fall unduly if a stern political line is
enforced with pages of distressing news, and long, tedious meetings are required.8
A top norm(Naess' terminology) is proposed, - Self-realization-which refers both to the
process of in which the self transforms, and to the perfect state of human and non-human
existence. One could only hope that this mystical resounding concept could be achieved easierthan is can be explained. According to Naess, Self-realization is used to indicate a kind of
perfection. It is conceived as a process, but also as an ultimate goal, in a rather special usage of
ultimate. It is logically ultimate in a systemic exposition of Ecosophy T. The term includes
personal and community self-realization, but is conceived also to refer to an unfolding reality asa totality.9Ecosophy T is the name he devised for his personal eco-philosophy, thus
emphasizing the freedom of the individual to walk his or her own path while having a common
objective in view: Self-realization. It represents a development of the personal self (small sbecause it stands to mean ego) to comprise all living creatures and their environments,
therefore the entire nature as an integrated whole. The fundamental requirement for a
transformation in consciousness should be the expansion of the self to the Self. The termrealization was preferred to preservation, due to its active quality and indicates to the
Spinozist conatus as well as to Henri Bergsons elan vital10. This Self appears as the
epitome of individuality and subjectivity, and at the same time it engulfs everything, having been
devised out of Naess' fascination with Buddhism. Competition with other selves hinders therealization, because we need not cultivate the ego and the notion of winning over others in order
to realize our potentialities. Nor we need ignore or suppress the ego in order to broaden and
deepen the self in contact with the Self.11
The transformation of consciousness becomes the task to find a form of togetherness
with nature which is to our own greatest benefit.12 However, this phrasing, our own benefitdoes not open the dangerous possibility of a purely hedonist and anthropocentrist ethic, because
its meaning has been previously reversed to something which surpasses the subjectivity of the
individual, but does not disregard it. It presumes the transition from inner-self to greater-Self, inorder to make human desire for happiness consistent with the preservation of nature as a
desirable goal.
How does the transformation come about? A starting point could be the philosophicalimplications of modern ecological empirical findings- the connections within ecosystems denote
the interdependence of life forms; thus the human individual is offered a cognitive basis for his
feeling of belonging to the ecosphere as a unitary whole. Nevertheless, perceiving nature as a
8Arne Naess,Ecology, Community and Lifestyle, CAU, 1989, pp. 91
9 idem, pp. 84
10 idem, pp. 85
11 idem, pp. 86
12 idem, pp. 168
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coherent self-sustaining living sphere does not prevent humans from imagining hierarchies
which place them above what is exterior to them. Some of these prevalent vantage points, in
which man represents the pinnacle of the development of life on Earth might have evenoriginated in various interpretations of evolutionist theory. The force with which they penetrated
present consciousness describes for deep ecologists the damaging measure of contemporary
world views. Treating mankind as superior to non-humans annuls the effect of identification withnature, and justifies egotistic behavior on the part of human beings. It also impedes the objective
evaluation of theirperipheralneeds in comparison to the vitalneeds of other species.
Because Self-realization contains the Spinozist desire to persist in one's being (conatus)
deep ecology posits that it characterizes non-human beings as well, the only difference would be
that humans consciously perceive the urge other living beings have for self-realization, and that
we must therefore assume a kind of responsibility for conduct towards others.13 Evidently, thesense of responsibility in human individuals would not follow this perception about nature with
necessity, if we would not presuppose an existing tendency to identify with it and aim at
realizing the full potential of the self in this manner. Deep ecology also looks at limit situationsto which there is no denying that human existence and those of other human individuals are
nearer to us, thus we have greater obligation towards them. According to Naess, this tension
resolves itself when from the identification process stems unity, and since the unity is of agestaltcharacter, the wholeness is attained. It offers a framework for a total view, or better, a
central perspective,14 which should guide with necessity towards the right choice in what for
others would be genuine ethical dilemmas. In this insight lies the difference between deep
ecology and environmental ethics: from perceiving nature as indistinct from the self, oneundertakes beautiful actions in a Kantian sense, not out of duty (morally or immoraly), but as
organic and reflex as breathing.15
Further on, I will start presenting aspects of the environmental village I consider tightly
connected to the basic deep ecological insights - contained in pieces of information available to
the public, but also on the basis of my own observations during the weekend seminar. I hope thatby doing so, I can renounce my concerns about deep ecology being extremely place-specific and
limited to those who have the material means to approach nature otherwise than a source of
nourishment and resources for survival. Does living in contact with nature change peoplesattitudes irrespective of their economic necessities to transform it? Deep ecology presumes that
a deep and enduring identification can develop though work, play and understanding.16 Sieben
Linden exhibits a model of community which has surmounted its cohesiveness challenge through
its members working and resting together in nature. This feature is most impressive to theaverage urban dweller that comes in direct contact with nature rather rarely. The village-project
plays an important role in encouraging a different perception of physical labor in the outdoors,
like traditional agriculture and in promoting appreciation for the spiritual serenity it brings. The
program for activities to which outsiders can participate and become acquainted with the lifestyle13 idem, pp. 170
14 idem, pp. 173
15Arne Naess- Self Realization: An Ecological Approach to Being in the World in John Seed, Joanna Macy et al.
Thinking Like a Mountain,pp 21
16 idem, pp. 176
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in Sieben Linden is quite vast, ranging from visiting the Sunday cafe for two hours to spending a
week-long family vacation. From this perspective Sieben Linden could be classified as belonging
to the deep ecology movement, not only as an embodiment of thephilosophy because it displaysa militant voice- a successful experimental project on display for the environmental education of
mainstream society.
Undoubtedly, a transformation of consciousness in the manner professed by deep ecology
remains a matter for the grassroots movements and inspirational philosophies to materialize; but
the caveat which this philosophical idea might be encounter could target its very core- theemphasis on spirituality and the quasi-religious aspect. Here is the difficult ridge to walk: to the
left we have the ocean of organic and mystic views, to the right, the abyss of atomic
individualism17Perhaps self-realization through identifying with the whole of nature would be
too difficult to promote straightforwardly through such a project like Sieben Linden, and thusthey do not emphasize it as the foundational value of the project. However, the intuitions which
have inspired the concept must be present in the minds of all people committed to living in an
eco-community.
2.1 Criticism around deep ecology
Deep ecology has been deemed postmodern environmentalism and accordingly, asreflecting the assumptions, analytical forms, and styles of postmodern discourse18; similar to
the reactions postmodernism triggered in its initial moments, many environmentalists do not find
it easy to accept deep ecology as the obvious contemporary expression of 'green thinking'. Many
of the ground premises of its philosophical 'system' lend themselves to considerable controversy.This stems from the main theoreticians' insistence on intuitional knowledge which comes
contrary to scientific inquiry and the primacy of objectivity. It becomes problematic ontheoretical grounds given the paramount role of natural and social sciences in contemporary
society, which deep ecology appears to disregard. Practically, many of the features of a full-
fledged ecovillage are conquests of modern technology (e.g. solar energy) and the present thrust
in scientific research aimed at diminishing the damage brought by human industrial activity andresource depletion cannot be disregarded. However, deep ecology sets its predominant spiritual
character to the forefront, and is adamant about distinguishing itself from anthropocentric
shallow ecology.
On ethical grounds, deep ecologists posit value-laden statements without offering a
reasoned account thereof. Puzzled by the affirmation according to which nature has intrinsicvalue, Jerry A. Starks straightforwardly asks How do we know? He affirms in response that
17 idem, pp.165
18Jerry A. Stark, Postmodern Environmentalism: A Critique of Deep Ecology inEcological
Resistence Movements: The Global Emergence of Radical and Popular Environmentalism. State University of
New York Press, pp. 268
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intuitionism cannot reasonably address this question. If can only reformulate it as a condition ofbelief- eitherwe believe in the platform of deep ecology, or we do not.19 As previously
mentioned, deep ecology is not interested in establishing itself as an ethic, but as a worldview or
ontology in which ethics becomes redundant. Both cases attract a high level of mistrust, thus
from the perspective of environmental ethicists, the label nature mysticism befits both the
movement and the deep ecology philosophy.
The tension between having a common intuition of human-non-human relationship and
allowing each individual to develop his or her own ecosophy based on it, poses the problem ofgroup cohesion. Stark takes issues further by questioning the alleged universal egalitarianism
between species and even equality within the community: even if a group of people did share a
common spiritual vision, there is little in the history of politics or religion to assure one that a
community united around a spiritual vision would necessarily be a community based uponegalitarianism.20
The critique gets tougher, cutting to the possibility of having a communal organizationgrounded on deep ecological principles, with such implications as the inability to protect the
rights and values of individuals and nature due to a lack of legal and constitutional guarantees.Because they involve a high level of decentralization and autonomy, are spiritual and unlikely tooffer universalizing ethical parameters they would neither be able to derive a form of political
organization.
By narrowing down the focus to the life of an eco-community in Germany, I would liketo defuse the four points of critique through a display of elements on which the village continues
to function since its establishment in 1997. To begin with, I acknowledge the force of the first
two levels of critique which target the philosophical fundamentals of deep ecology, but considerthem to exaggerate in interpreting deep ecology as fully spiritual and not at all rational. Deep
ecology is not up against technologyper se, but draws attention to the danger of perceiving
reason (or mind) as opposed and superior to matter. In respect to appealing to intuition andspirituality to nurture a different ontology which re-binds the human and the non-human, I find
no other possibility of attaining an ecocentric perception. By remaining locked in the shell of our
own anthropocentric subjectivity, environmentalism does not reach its target because of thenecessity of making a moral effort each time we value the interest of a non-human element of
nature. While it is not difficult to find reasonable anthropocentric justifications in some cases,
like resource depletion, in other environmental issues, such as defending a species on the verge
of extinction, arguing for its worth becomes increasingly harder under the compulsion to ensurehuman welfare primarily. Lastly, I consider the task of community building a Herculean act of
social entrepreneurship, but which does not take place in a vacuum. The village of Sieben Linden
has been established according with the requirements of German legislation and its life is far
from being isolated from society. It is dependent on outside society's functions for its economic,legal, and political wellbeing. Therefore there is no need for founding members to 'reinvent the
wheel' and come up with a particular ethic or new a form of political organization in order tokeep the problems of the community at bay. In the section which deals with the social
19 idem, pp. 269
20ibidem, 272
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organization of the village, I will present a few examples which address the egalitarianism in the
village's social structure.
3. Eco-villages as communities. Introducing Sieben Linden
In their 1991 bookEcovillages and Sustainable Communities, Robert and Diane Gilman,
the founders of the Global Ecovillage Network, defined 'ecovillages' as Human-scale, full-featured settlements in which human activities are harmlessly integrated into the natural world,
supporting healthy human development, and which can be successfully continued into the
indefinite future. Subsequently, Gilman added the phrase with multiple centres of initiative,
as if to stress the importance of individuality bonded in harmonious communal living. Thisharmony in the pairing between the individual and the community echoes the successful co-
existence of different ecosophies starting from the same ontological trunk-i.e. the manner of
conceptualizing man as a part of nature.
Sieben Linden was founded by a man in search of a community, sociologist Dieter
Halbach, to whose initial suggestion of setting up a new community responded a fine selection
of human beings: half-enlightened, old hippies, single mothers, students in search of a suitable
subject for their thesis, retired people trying to find a fulfilling way to live the rest of their lives,
singles in search of a partner, jobless needing work, activists in need of a revolution 21
Further along the path to coagulating into a community, he realized that it takes a fine balance
act between finding a common goal and paying due reverence to all differences among the
members. The level of tolerance to differences of opinions could be prevalently seen in the social
organization of the village. Several neighbourhoods have gradually been formed inside the
village, according to common living preferences, age or necessities of the members; for instance,
vegans or young parents share the same house or vicinity. Remembering the process of buildinghis community, Halbach writes: the group should proceed to develop a basic concept which
formulates all essential common goals but which also allows for sufficient individual freedom. If
the projects fundamental goals and focal points are defined clearly enough, it becomes much
easier for interested people to decide whether or not to join. This also means that there will be
fewer rules, and less debate on how to implement them, as the community progresses. Rules on
communication, decisionmaking structures and the necessary steps toward realising the project
should be laid out at the beginning.22These consideration seem grafted on the core principle of
deep ecology: the vision and intuitions are common, but the ecosophies which each of us
develops from them might differ, but will not unrelentingly contradict. He also mentions that
internal peace work and personal growth are the essence of community formation.23
Connecting these individual requirements with a special dedication to life in nature, personal
21Dieter Halbach, The Community Seeker. A story, in Kosha Anja Joubert and Robin Alfred
(ed.), Beyond You and Me, Permanent Publications, Hampshire, UK, 2007, pp. 42
22 idem, pp. 47
23idem, pp. 47
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growth could translate into a resonance between the self, the community and its non-human
counterparts.
3.1 Social organization and spirituality
Individuality, not individualism, is the cornerstone of community. Individuality is
synonymous with uniqueness. This means that a person and his or her unique gifts
are irreplaceable. The community loves to see all of its members flourish and
function at optimum potential. In fact, a community can flourish and survive only
when each member flourishes, living in the full potential of his or her purpose
( Malidoma Som, writer, shaman and elder of the West African Dagara tribe )
In order to reach Sieben Linden, I descended the bus in the closest village (Poppau) and
then walked for a kilometer and a half following small wooden indicators by the side of the road.
Expectations, curiosity and anxiousness made the distance seem like a breeze, after which I
became overwhelmed by the first impressions of the place: vast and organized behind a hippie
appearance and the predominance of trees, grass and bushes. At the center point stands a two-
story big wooden house which includes the information center, meeting space and also kitchen
and cafeteria. In time, this has become more fitted to receive the many visitors through the
establishment of other important areas: the administrative office, a handmade jewelry shop, an
organic foodstuffs store, and a space for cultural events and relaxation. Finding one's way around
is not difficult, as upon arrival you are given a small plan of the entire settlement with basic
indications for the visitors, from cafeteria schedule to the request not to use cell phones on the
village premises. The plan shows smaller circles inside the village, each with its strange name:
Windrose, Strohpolis, Junge Leute, Experiment Club99, Globolo, an amphitheater, a
small lake and many other places I would quickly get acquainted to.
I met the other participants to the Project Information Days seminar. They were all
German, and very diverse, befitting the expression from all walks of life. Each with its reason
for having accepted the high seminar fee and with various expectations and levels of trust: a few
unemployed ladies, three families with 2 to 5 children, middle-aged single men and women.
Children of visitors benefitted from special looking after and experienced the joy of joining the
loud Sieben Linden children who mostly played around the main village square, in the area
provided for them.
We were told that the community itself is made out a different clubs- groups of 15 to
30 people who live together in the same house or neighborhood for different reasons: they have
about the same age, either because they have young children, or because they are all vegans. In
terms of legal status, it is an association of equal members who own the land property together
(77 hectares) and the houses built on it, albeit the clubs have different manners of managing
income and costs. The village acts as an independent-income community, with most members
employed either in jobs that do not require commuting to work ( e.g. book illustrator, translator)
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or are performed inside the community (e.g. conducting workshops, gardening ). However, some
work outside the village as well, but in the surrounding area: in local government, in the school
system or as a doctor nearby. They hope to be able to gradually develop an economy with more
opportunities for freelancers, artists, therapists and trainers, and small businesses. Currently, they
are in the process of investing in another building destined to host seminars, social events and the
community offices.
While guided around the village, we were shown the houses, which are passive-solar,
straw-bale and wood, yet very comfortable, the huge community garden irrigated with recycled
water, the spot for communal gatherings, the pond. In contrast to the rural areas I grew up in,
there is no common village church, but here and there you can catch a glimpse of small
Buddhas in the grass, or various flags, or small shrines. We were also taken to places of
meditation and rituals whose significance was not stressed upon with each left to imagine and
ponder upon the importance of these in the life of the community. My overall impression in
terms of organization was that the village has taken all aspects into consideration, aiming at a
good balance between the economic, the social and the spiritual. In an excellent essay which
refers to the collective intelligence of communal living in Sieben Linden, Kosha Anja Joubert
recognizes that social sustainability is a prerequisite for ecological sustainability, and also
financial security in communal living allows for the freedom to be concerned with matters of
spirituality.
Both Individual and community enjoy enough space to significantly support each other,
and the aim is to maintain a steady balance by constantly asking How can we allow for more
individual potential to unfold within the group setting?24One of the critiques targeted at the
social philosophy of deep ecology is fact that hierarchy in social organization cannot be
overcome, irrespective of the importance individual opinions bears in decision making. Sieben
Lindeners have no hierarchy, and they take decisions and govern themselves in committees and
all-group meetings, one more evidence that the village fulfills the deep ecological ideal in
practice. They need to reach consensus when voting in committee meetings and have no-one
opposing an idea in the course of all-group gatherings. To facilitate the connection between the
community members, three types of meetings are taking place, to which all members are invited,
but attendance is not mandatory: feeling meetings, idea meetings and business meetings. In the
first two, villagers share their feelings, hopes and fears and receive the moral support of their
peers; in idea meetings, they exchange world views or points of polemic which a book, a
journey or a conversation might have spurred. A Sieben Lindener herself, Joubert writes that theorganizational (or business) meetings loose impetus and trust if they are not intertwined with the
other two:
24Kosha Anja Joubert, Tapping Into Collective Intelligence. The Growing Edge in the
Ecovillage of Sieben Linden, in Kosha Anja Joubert and Robin Alfred (ed.), Beyond You and
Me, Permanent Publications, Hampshire, UK, 2007, pp. 115
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We have all taken a step and are willing to change our lifestyles in order to find an expression for our compassionfor life on earth. Our decision-making procedures are based on consensus, based on the belief that each person holds
a piece of the truth and that decisions become durable when supported by all. As our community grew, we
redesigned our organizational structures so as to delegate as much decision-making power as trust allowed to
subgroups (these work with consensus). Ideally, only more pertinent matters that concern us all now show up in our
general meetings. 25
Joubert makes referrence to Arthur Koestler's holon concept in trying to identify the
sociological structure of their community. She writes that Sieben Linden cannot be considered a
hierarchy, but perhaps an appropriate word for their type of community would be holarchy, in which
each unit (individual) is simultaneously part and whole,
We are coming to realize that elementary particles, humans and communities are all wholes that are
holographically nestled into larger wholes and can be seen as bundles of potential rather than inert matter: nothing
exists independently from how it is looked on by others. We are finding that we have power in evoking certain
qualities within each other and within the world. The community (and the world) we experience is a mirror of our
inner experience at any given moment. If we are in a state of trust and joy with life, our community seems to smile
back at us. If we are in a state of distrust, it often snarls.26
When you walk around the village you encounter a reoccurring symbol- a flag with the image of
the Earth seen from outer space, which acts as a reminder that all differences between individuals,
countries and cultures are surmountable in the light of this 'bigger picture' which indicates our common
identity. Sociologist Wolfram Nolte stresses the fact that people learn and understand best from
examples and what is so special about ecovillages and communities is that not only are theoretical
concepts of ecological social and human lifestyles being developed but their viability is being tested and
developed in real life. They become the most important fields of research, schools of life which society
badly needs if it wants to survive. They practise looking for, and finding, answers to the most serious
challenge of our time, namely, how to develop an attitude of all embracing love of the Earth and all her
creatures and to express this in the world.27 Through the manner of thinking and living they do not
represent the solution per se, but carry the paradigm for it, with the sole request that the others outside be
receptive and understand the compulsion behind this lifestyle choice.
3.2. Technology and society. Lessons from Sieben Linden
To establish an eco-village, people need more than financial investments. In the less
developed world, villages with low level of energy consumption, bio agriculture, even straw bale
house are the order of the day and constitute environmental villages by default due to many
causes, the most visible being the lack of financial thrust in the community and the reduced
penetration of technology. An outward comparison of lifestyle between these settlements and
eco-villages would not reveal great differences, as if communities in Western capitalist society
25idem, pp. 131
26ibid. pp. 133
27Wolfram Nolte, From Local Communities to the World Community in Kosha Anja Joubert
and Robin Alfred (ed.), Beyond You and Me, Permanent Publications, Hampshire, UK, 2007,
pp. 290
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have come full circle and retuned to a previous stage of development through other means and
swimming against the tide. However, 'eco' and 'less developed' villages are so much unlike each
other, as fasting is from starving, albeit in both cases a simple living is symptomatic. The role
and future of this simplicity depends on what rationalization sustains it. If it rests on the sheer
lack of material means, it will vanish when the opportunity for development comes, but if
abstaining from living the life of modern urbanized areas comes out of criticism for its
consumption patterns and values, the simplicity in means will be regarded as a good in itself and
cherished as a meaningful lifestyle which is to be perpetuated in that particular community. The
inhabitants of an eco-village will tend towards the development of their community's social
functioning, and on devising more manners in which they can use less of nature as a resource-
provider, and be more personally fulfilled. The poor village, unwillingly ecological, will always
tend to become as close to urban comfort as possible, and will attempt to use up all that
surrounding nature has to offer.
This comparison leads us further into a closer investigation into technology's role in
modern lifestyle and then to view the manner in which technology is employed or avoided by an
eco-community, and for which reasons. I wish to stress here that in spite of the counter-cultural
or radical tendencies one might imagine to exist at the core of an eco-community, I still perceive
it as part and parcel of 'modern society', because theirs is not an attempt to go back into tribal
times, but a different interpretation of the necessities which modernity demands. A great amount
of disapproval from deep ecology side targets the manner in which the development of new
technology impacts on the lifestyle of individuals and societies. They justify their scorn for
increasing use of technology by pointing out the over-reliance on technology and blind trust in
the innovative and rescue power of scientific research. With the prevalence of technological
devices over human capacity for adaptation and self-sufficiency, the penetration of technologyoccurs also at the level of world-view. This shifts and diminishes the focal area of modern
societies at large, from defining and pursuing commonly recognized aims, to more and more
intricate means. There is no attention granted to voices shouting means to what?, but only
deeper preoccupation with advancements in technology to solve small-scale problems sometimes
connected to the persistence of human existence, sometimes aimless. To take only the most
obvious example of our times: who took the time to inquire about how the experiments inside the
Large Hadron Collider will improve life on Earth? and more importantly from a decisional point
of view, who asked for permission to conduct an experiment with unknown consequences forthe
entire life on Earth? Deep ecology mainly contests these manifestation of culture's submission in
the face of technology, while positing, that technological development brings alongmodifications into the patterns of social interaction; implicitly culture bears important
transformation: improvement of technique implies improvement within the framework of a
cultural pattern. That which threatens this framework should not be interpreted as improvement,
and should thus be rejected. In the industrial societies, these social consequences are not given
enough consideration. A lack of critical evaluation of technique is the harbinger of a society's
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dissolution. A technique has to be culturally tested28. Deep ecology does not advocate in this
instance a cessation of scientific searches and the stop of technological development, which
would in fact be contrary to human inquisitiveness, but draws attentions to the need to assure that
technological innovation does not significantly perturb the social and cultural fabric.
Another consequence of technological domination which deep ecologists abhor is theformation is an elite which, empowered by the asymmetry of information with 'the masses',
monopolizes the levers of decision regarding technological development. Consequently, society
become increasingly helpless. A manner to ameliorate this phenomenon would be to submit
technology to evaluation in normative systems. Social anthropology and related areas of study
supply instructive examples of how ideological, and particularly religious, attitudes influence the
direction taken by the technical change.29 Therefore, to be able to successfully resist the assault
of over-flowing technological novelties which do not serve an essential purpose in human life,
but have an impact on the health of its habitat, one has to appeal to deeper reservoirs in human
consciousness. If the deeper beliefs and world-views of the other people rest on an ontology
which pays no tribute to the connections between the human and the non-human elements of
nature and to the intrinsic value of its integrity, then this 'public opinion' should be assailed into
making a fundamental shift in its current ideology. Inevitably, this process boils down to
grassroots' action inspiring a wave of criticism towards the current state of affairs and the
theories or attitudes which support it.
I consider Sieben Linden to embody such a critical statement and act as a laboratory of
applied ideas and practices of a different lifestyle, informed by something broader than the
modern-times' perspective, which means existing only in the present, and mainly for our own
sake as humans. The project emerged with a strong emphasis on the material and ecological
perspectives on sustainability, thus it occupied a critical stance to widespread modern
technological practices which they sought to replace with what deep ecologists would call soft
technology. This evolves out of a permanent preoccupation with the question Which
technologies satisfy maximally both the requirements of reduced interference with nature and
satisfaction of human vital needs?30 Evidently, this is not a question one can claim the ability to
answer, and diverse theories and investigations are still thrown in. This quest is not without
significance, because once devised, soft technology and the need to have it replace the big,
centralized, and damaging one will become standards. Sieben Linden was designed as a
settlement in the light of principles such as Treading softly on the earth and luxurious
simplicity which it seeks to promote on an international level. What they found so far assuitable to their soft technology ideas are straw-bale buildings with compost toilets, a closed
28Naess, Ecology, Community and Lifestyle, pp. 94
29idem, pp. 95.
30idem, pp. 98
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water cycle, solar energy, heating with wood from their forest and eating from their gardens.31
In practical terms, one of the major accomplishments would be the building of the largest
inhabited straw-bale construction in Europe called Strohpolis; they are also giving workshops
on how to employ this unconventional, yet natural material, and pushed lobby so far that it is
now approved by the German building authorities as certified material.
One other feature of soft technology is the replacement of mass production with self-
sufficient local production, within the boundaries of a particular community, to serve the needs
of that community. This type of organization empowers the community, by making it
independent from a centre of authority or supply. Living out of the products of your own labour
does not undercut trade, but in order to comply with standards of sustainability trade will be
restricted to the nearby vicinity; this economic behaviour appears extremely radical to a modern
society which has the model of market economy and the absolute necessity of mass production
deeply embedded in its social philosophy. For this reason, the dark outlook for an early
transformation to soft technology in Europe may be especially associated with three restraining
political factors: the fear for reduced industrial-economic profitability, the fear for reduced
material standard of living and the fear of unemployment.32 Statistics show that he the
unemployment rate in Sieben Linden is consistently inferior to the average one in its 'Land',
while the inhabitants declare themselves satisfied with their standards and conditions of living.
Clearly their fears and attention are focused on different criteria than those of the European
public opinion.
For example, year 2009 in Sieben Linden has as a common resolution a strive towards
conserving energy, while one of the neighbourhoods, Club 99 has been living according to this
principle since its inception, in 1999. They manifest it by having built a straw-bale house entirely
out of recycled material, only with volunteers' work-hand and no electrical tools, saving 90% of
the energy usage of a 'regular' building. I can testify that this house does not lack the comfort
modern man needs- from a wonderful division of living space to a stove kitchen and even a
piano; it is very well isolated to conserve heat and powered by a car batteries installation
underneath the house. The practical goal of using very few resources and emitting as little
quantity of pollutants as possible brought the members of this club together, as they are
considered the most ecologically progressive of the Sieben Linden community; they sought
consistency in their lifestyle -from the elementary vegan diet to using horse power as a means to
produce their foodstuffs. Monitoring the energy consumed informs and instigates the search to
replace modern 'conventional' tools and techniques, albeit faster, with soft technology ortraditional practices like working the land with draft horses-a more efficient practice in the light
of the set goal-to use as little carbon dioxide releasing energy as possible.
31Kosha Anja Joubert, Tapping Into Collective Intelligence. The Growing Edge in the
Ecovillage of Sieben Linden, in Kosha Anja Joubert and Robin Alfred (ed.), Beyond You and
Me, Permanent Publications, Hampshire, UK, 2007, pp. 115
32Arne Naess, Ecology, Community and Lifestyle, pp. 98
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The area that can be built on is limited to 16m per person, to keep the amount of soil
that is covered as small as possible, and maximising the ground area available for agriculture and
other activities.33we learn from the World Habitat, in whose 2007 competition the village wasamong the finalists. I perceive this as a beautiful example of establishing a standard of living
space comfort which does not thread unnecessarily heavy on the natural surroundings, but
neither expresses self-abnegation or a grand sacrifice. Point 3 in the Deep Ecology Platformstates that Humans have no right to reduce the richness and diversity of nature except to satisfy
vital needs.34 The last part of this phrase has always raised a few eyebrows, as the formulation
satisfaction of vital needs left to interpretation might accommodate all sorts of lifestylesdamaging to nature in a variety of forms. The measure of setting a sixteen square meters of
dwelling place per person indicates that humans who have gone beyond anthropocentric thinking
can establish a measure to balance their own needs and those of their habitat.
3.3 Developing an ecological consciousness- means and attempts
Most deep ecologists think that time spent in undefiled wilderness is the centralprerequisite for people developing deep ecological consciousness or an ecological selfthat
understands the sacredness and value of all life. But how is this possible in the modern world,
when, in the words of one activist, the Earth's sacred voices [and thus authentic human
consciousness] are paved over. Deep ecologists believe that there is no substitute for a direct
experience of the wild.35However, there are also those who claim that art, through its power to
stand against utility-maximizing industrialism, is able to come a close second to living within
nature in leading towards this transformation. Deep ecologist militants as the famous American
Earth First! movement often organize caravan tours and road shows in which they artistically
(through photographs, concerts, performances, poetry-reading) depict the importance of feeling
as an integrated part of nature. By exposing people to images of pristine nature alongside those
of industrial degradation they hope to convert the individual self of their audience to expand into
an environmental consciousness. I find this practice so simple, ingenious and yet compellingly
necessary to arouse the ecological sensibility of the city dweller; it solves and in the same time
avoids the problems which direct contact with nature might pose. I often wonder about the
practical effects of getting closer to nature of, for example, a very large group of people inspired
by the deep ecologists' call. It would mean on the one hand non-intentional degradation of nature
and on the other hand human life at peril, for those who desire a more intense closeness and
prepare only for a benign side of nature.
33http://www.worldhabitatawards.org/winners-and-finalists/project-details.cfm?
lang=00&theProjectID=740B4CEF-15C5-F4C0-99FC9EA83F00FB5C
34idem, pp. 29
35 Bron Taylor, Evoking the Ecological Self, inPeace Review: The International Quarterly of World
Peace, 5 (2), 225-230: June 1993, pp. 226
18
http://www.worldhabitatawards.org/winners-and-finalists/project-details.cfm?lang=00&theProjectID=740B4CEF-15C5-F4C0-99FC9EA83F00FB5Chttp://www.worldhabitatawards.org/winners-and-finalists/project-details.cfm?lang=00&theProjectID=740B4CEF-15C5-F4C0-99FC9EA83F00FB5Chttp://www.worldhabitatawards.org/winners-and-finalists/project-details.cfm?lang=00&theProjectID=740B4CEF-15C5-F4C0-99FC9EA83F00FB5Chttp://www.worldhabitatawards.org/winners-and-finalists/project-details.cfm?lang=00&theProjectID=740B4CEF-15C5-F4C0-99FC9EA83F00FB5Chttp://www.worldhabitatawards.org/winners-and-finalists/project-details.cfm?lang=00&theProjectID=740B4CEF-15C5-F4C0-99FC9EA83F00FB5C8/3/2019 Deep Ecology Sieben Linden Paper
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Unsurprisingly other methods of inspiring the participants into eco-centric
consciousness, and help them to think like a mountain consist in conducting rituals which
experiment with new ways of healing our separation from nature.36 One of the most famous
rituals in this category is A Council of All Beings, which includes group exercises in which the
participants imagine being inhabited by and inhabiting a non-human form of life and describe the
sufferings which human activity has brought them. The structure of the ritual consists in a
blending of different native traditional practices and requires outdoor meditation. The sense of
appreciating humanity as an integrated part of nature and relating to the other participants both in
their human and in their non-human 'masks' as identical and a part of the individual self
engenders peaceful and harmonious coexistence. Past, present and future human generations are
evoked in making a common appeal to their spiritual sensibility. Following on the footsteps of
deep ecology initiator, Arne Naess, nature activist and author Joanna Macy has been conducting
such rituals which have the form of community therapy and vary in length from one-and-a-half
hour sessions to weekend workshops. She writes that there is nothing esoteric about conducting
this form of group work. It is a natural and easy way to help people expand and express theirawareness of the ecological trouble we are in, and to deepen their motivation to act.37 The
various aims of the ritual amount to a common deep ecologist objective- performing a shift
from the shrunken sense of self, to which our mainstream culture and its institutions have
conditioned us, to a larger, more ancient and resilient sense of our true ecological Self.38
While researching into the anthropology of radical environmental movements, Bron
Taylor identifies even various form of nature writing, including novels, such as Edward Abbey's
Desert Solitaire, which are also assumed capable of evoking ecological consciousness.39 An
interesting feature of poetry or music created to serve in gatherings with an environmental
message is the humoristic ingredient that comes out of parodying dogmatism in various forms.Religious (some nature songs are crafted on the music of Christian chants, with other lyrics in
place) or political, they aim at softening the relation with their ideological opponents.
What does the ecophilosopher himself propose ? Naess writes that wildlife and forest
management, and other professions in intimate contact with nature, change people's attitudes. It
is only through work, play and understanding that a deep and enduring identification with nature
can develop, an identification deep enough to color the overall life conditions and ideology of asociety40Hardly probable that everybody can take his suggestion literally and get a job in
36John Seed, Joanna Macy, Pat Flemming, Arne Naess, Thinking Like a Mountain, New
Catalyst Books, USA, 2007, pp.7937idem, pp. 97
38ibidem, pp. 99
39Bron Taylor, Evoking the Ecological Self, inPeace Review: The International Quarterly of World
Peace, 5 (2), 225-230: June 1993, pp. 228
40ECL, pp. 176
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reservation parks, but a lifestyle which does not disregard the need to come in contact with
nature through various outdoor activities would be recommended. He does acknowledge that
many of the modern outdoor activities or sports involve an high interference of technology. Topresent a viable alternative, he introduces the idea offriluftsliv, a Norwegian word for outdoor
recreation which seeks to tamper with the integrity of nature as little as possible, and which he
translates as touching the Earth lightly- a positive kind of state of mind and body in nature, onethat brings us closer to some of the many aspects of identification and Self-realization with
nature that we have lost.41Guidelines to practicing it would be: to have respect for all life and
landscape, outdoor education that discourages competition, minimal strain upon the naturalcombines with self-reliance, the greatest possible elimination of apparatus from the outside, and
giving oneself time to adjust from urban to outdoor living before sensitivity for nature is
developed. Moreover, spending time in a Nordic cabin while growing up, as part offriluftsliv,
makes one very cautious about wasting resources and finding comfort in voluntary simplicity.Through their lifestyle, Sieben Lindeners have dissolved the border between working and
enjoying time off in the middle of nature. Physical labor is performed outdoors (with the
exception of cooking probably) and it is pleasant enough to be done by a self-appointed group;
for instance, the land is cultivated only as much as it is necessary (to feed a bit over 100villagers) and with as large a work-hand as to make the work itself non-strenuous. As for
instilling an environmental education, they have set ground to a villageForest kindergarten
where the children are encouraged to play and learn from their surroundings.
4. Closing Remarks
The self-evident break with normal consciousness and behavior, the transcendence of certain needs, and the self-
mastery of mind and flesh characteristic of metanormal functioning would, if realized by enough people, create a
new kind of life on this planet. This new life would involve new types of social interaction, new styles of energy
consumption, greater care for the physical environment, more wisdom in dealing with human aggressiveness, new
rituals of work and play. As it began to appear among large groups, such functioning might not appear at first so
dramatic that it comprised a new kind of evolution, but it would, I believe, eventually exhibit features andregularities we cannot predict from the patterns of ordinary human existence
(Michael Murphy, The Future of the Body, pp. 30 )
The present investigation into deep ecology and the life of an ecovillage has had as a
main objective the search for something hard to conceptualize, but intuitively recognizable-
environmental consciousness. I have advanced that the inhabitants of the ecovillage underscrutiny have coagulated into a community on the premises of an environmentally deep insight.
My conclusion would be that the 'conversion' rests on an initial penchant to accept nature as a
part of the individual self and vice-versa. After my visit there, I can safely claim that SiebenLinden itself acts as a centre of motivating the development of consciousness in the deep
ecological sense. I thus reassert my confidence in the example which eco-communities offer tohumanity at a time out of joint, when seeing a bigger picture than our immediate existence isobscured by a multitude of screens, from technology to politics. Nevertheless, if ecovillages are
such a great idea, why don't we already live in them? As a matter of fact, on a global scale,
simple living predominates in scale to industrial development, but it not accompanied by
environmental concerns in the same measure. The less developed areas of the world are prone to
41idem, pp 178
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the same man-versus-nature modern worldview in an effort to catch up with the rest. Going back
to the parallel between an ecovillage and a poor village, I would like to amend the previous
statement concerning modernity's return to traditional living. We have not come full circlethrough forming eco-communities, but are ascending an upwards spiral of new ecological
challenges, new paths opened by technological upheaval, and new levels of consciousness. The
tendency is encouraging, given that we begin to perceive ecovillages as communities whichherald a vital shift; through deep ecological philosophy in practice, it will take less time to bridge
the cultural separation between humans and the natural world in its entirety.
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