O Reino de Deus, mas não o Planeta B?

Fontes Religiosas e Seculares para Ação Comum na Adaptação Climática

Autores

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.15448/0103-314X.2023.1.44005

Palavras-chave:

Ética Ambiental, Pluralidade, Transcendência, Mudança Climática, Escatologia

Resumo

Cidadãos ambientalmente conscientes não pensam homogêneos. Suas diferentes percepções do mundo causam uma diversidade moral na política climática. O artigo mostra que as abordagens religiosas e não religiosas à adaptação climática remetem a uma variedade de noções  transcendentes de verdade. Reivindicações de validade resultam de imagens concretas do mundo, incluindo ideias de construção comunitária e noções orientadoras de ação, como o reino de Deus ou o ícone “Planeta Azul”. Portanto, não podemos esperar uma política climática homogênea em todo o mundo. Mas as noções de verdade não descrevem o mundo como ele é, mas mostram as imagens que as pessoas seguem. É por isso que mesmo concepções opostas de mitigação climática, como a demanda e a reclamação contra a energia nuclear, podem estar abertas a compromissos. Votando pela aceitação da pluralidade, o artigo sugere não ignorar a sabedoria cristã de Calcedônia que oferece um caminho, como lidar com os proclamas contrários. O artigo é originário do Centro Global para Segurança Hídrica e Mudança Climática.

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Biografia do Autor

Axel Siegemund, RWTH Aachen University, Institute for Catholic Theology, Aachen, Germany

Habilitação na Leibniz Universität Hannover (UNI-HANNOVER), Hannover, Alemanha. Professor do Instituto de Teologia Católica da Rheinisch-Westfälische Technische Hochschule Aachen University (RWTH), Aachen, Alemanha. Área de ensino e pesquisa para questões limítrofes de teologia, ciência e tecnologia.

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Publicado

2023-08-28