Nationality: Norwegian

Born: 1912
Died: 2009

Arne Næss

Summary: The father of 'Deep Ecology' - ecosystem-centric rather than human-centric philosophy with humans seen as part of nature rather than separate from it or superior to it.

Biography

Appointed Professor of Philosophy at Oslo University at the age of 27, a post he held for most of his life. He was also a noted mountaineer.

Not just an academic philosopher he also took practical action. He was inspired by Rachel Carson's book 'Silent Spring (1962) and in 1970 with a number of other activists he chained himself to rocks at the site of a proposed dam. In 1988 he was the founding chairman of Greenpeace Norway and in 2005 stood as a Norwegian Green Party candidate in the General Election in Oslo.

Deep Ecology was attacked by Murray Bookchin,the social ecologist, as a white male academic concern with elements of occultism and paganism and verging on eco-fascism.  On the other hand the Earth First! group used his ideas to justify violent green luddism and programmes of population control which appalled him.

Næss steered a middle course between these competing claims.

He was a visiting teacher at Schumacher College in the UK