Philosophy in the Contemporary World

Volume 3, Issue 2, Summer 1996

Michael P. Nelson
Pages 6-9

Rethinking Wilderness
The Need for a New Idea of Wilderness

The “received” concept of wilderness as a place apart from and untouched by humans is five-times flawed: it is not universalizable, it is ethnocentric, it is ecologically naive, it separates humans from nature, and its referent is nonexistent. The received view of wilderness leads to dilemmas and unpalatable consequences, including the loss of designated wilderness areas by political and legislative authorities. What is needed is a more flexible notion of wilderness. Suggestions are made for a revised concept of wilderness.