Description

Book Synopsis

The ecological crisis is a very real crisis for the many species that face extinction, but it is also a crisis of sensibility – that is, a crisis in our relationships with other living beings. We have grown accustomed to treating other living beings as the material backdrop for the drama of human life: the animal world is regarded as part of ‘nature’, juxtaposed to the world of human beings who pursue their aims independently of other species.

Baptiste Morizot argues that the time has come for us to jettison this nature─human dualism and rethink our relationships with other living beings. Animals are not part of a separate, natural world: they are cohabitants of the Earth, with whom we share a common ancestry, the enigma of being alive and the responsibility of living decent lives together. By accepting our identity as living beings and reconnecting with our own animal nature, we can begin to change our relationships with other animals, seeing them not as inferior lifeforms but as living creatures who have different ways of being alive.

This powerful plea for a new understanding of our relationships with other animals will be of great interest to anyone concerned about the ecological crisis and the future of different species, including our own.



Trade Review
‘Morizot is no armchair or Left-Bank café philosopher. He is a field philosopher, tracking the wolves of Provence, calling to them in their own vernacular, helping shepherds protect their flocks from them. Deeply informed by evolutionary biology, ecology, ethology, and anthropology, this book provides a loadstar for reviving a moribund discipline.’
J. Baird Callicott, author of Thinking Like a Planet

Table of Contents
Introduction: The ecological crisis as a crisis of sensibility

Chapter One: A season among the living

Chapter Two: The promises of a sponge

Chapter Three: Cohabiting with our wild beasts

Chapter Four: To the other side of the night


Epilogue: Adjusted Consideration


Afterword by Alain Damasio


Notes

Credits

Ways of Being Alive

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Order before 4pm today for delivery by Tue 23 Dec 2025.

A Paperback / softback by Baptiste Morizot, Andrew Brown

15 in stock


    View other formats and editions of Ways of Being Alive by Baptiste Morizot

    Publisher: John Wiley and Sons Ltd
    Publication Date: 11/03/2022
    ISBN13: 9781509547210, 978-1509547210
    ISBN10: 1509547215

    Description

    Book Synopsis

    The ecological crisis is a very real crisis for the many species that face extinction, but it is also a crisis of sensibility – that is, a crisis in our relationships with other living beings. We have grown accustomed to treating other living beings as the material backdrop for the drama of human life: the animal world is regarded as part of ‘nature’, juxtaposed to the world of human beings who pursue their aims independently of other species.

    Baptiste Morizot argues that the time has come for us to jettison this nature─human dualism and rethink our relationships with other living beings. Animals are not part of a separate, natural world: they are cohabitants of the Earth, with whom we share a common ancestry, the enigma of being alive and the responsibility of living decent lives together. By accepting our identity as living beings and reconnecting with our own animal nature, we can begin to change our relationships with other animals, seeing them not as inferior lifeforms but as living creatures who have different ways of being alive.

    This powerful plea for a new understanding of our relationships with other animals will be of great interest to anyone concerned about the ecological crisis and the future of different species, including our own.



    Trade Review
    ‘Morizot is no armchair or Left-Bank café philosopher. He is a field philosopher, tracking the wolves of Provence, calling to them in their own vernacular, helping shepherds protect their flocks from them. Deeply informed by evolutionary biology, ecology, ethology, and anthropology, this book provides a loadstar for reviving a moribund discipline.’
    J. Baird Callicott, author of Thinking Like a Planet

    Table of Contents
    Introduction: The ecological crisis as a crisis of sensibility

    Chapter One: A season among the living

    Chapter Two: The promises of a sponge

    Chapter Three: Cohabiting with our wild beasts

    Chapter Four: To the other side of the night


    Epilogue: Adjusted Consideration


    Afterword by Alain Damasio


    Notes

    Credits

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