Abstract

Nowadays, nature is something foreign to the human being. It is material that the human being uses, makes available, and exploits without scruples. But the human being is never a subject outside of space: he is always in lived and experienced relations to space, which determine and influence him. The individual is a member of a community of interdependent parts. In order to fulfil his or her life, the human being has to be able to listen to the voice of nature, and abstain from the wish to control it. In such a field the lost reverence for the living world can be cultivated. Responsibility for nature is not an empty phrase, but a moral imperative that is directly connected with human life and survival. This is why we must protect the integrity of nature, and demand there be a better relationship between the human being and nature. This paper discusses the bioethical principle of ‘reverence’ (German Ehrfurcht) for the living world, a concept initially presented by Albert Schweitzer using anthropological–pedagogical methods. The point of view advanced here is based on the anthropological approach of the philosopher and pedagogue O. F. Bollnow, and makes use of work by the pedagogue Yukichi Shitahodo about the anthropological preconditions of relations between a human being and the exterior world. The thesis that ‘reverence’ could be the basic bioethical principle governing the relationship between a human being and his environment is also founded on the modern bioethics, particularly the ‘principle of responsibility’ and the ‘ethical imperative of prudence’ as these have been formulated by philosophical biology and anthropology.

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