Warwick Fox's Transpersonal Ecology
Warwick Fox's Transpersonal Ecology
Warwick Fox's Transpersonal Ecology
In 1990 Fox published "Towards a transpersonal ecology: Psychologizing ecology:' The paper was a
milestone in the growth of transpersonal psychology because it demonstrated the relevance of
transpersonal psychological concepts to major issues in eco-philosophy. Conversely, the paper also
showed how eco-philosophical work could enrich theory in transpersonal psychology.
The central idea in Fox's attempt to psychologize ecophilosophy is his equation of transpersonal
ecology with a "this worldly realization of as expansive a sense of self as possible" (Fox, 1990a, p. 59). Fox
showed that a transpersonal sense of self was compatible with an ecological perspective of Self as an
organism embedded in a network of ramifying relationships which in turn define an ecosystem.
In referring to a self of the widest extent, Fox is applying the concept of "Self-Realization!" offered by
the founder of "deep ecology," Arne Naess (Naess, 1989). Both the capital "S" and the exclamation point
are significant in the presentation of this term. Little "s" self is the item of everyday discourse contained
in (or constituting) the individual's physical body and contrasted in experience with other persons and
things. On the other hand, big "S" Self is the outcome of an identification process in which the individual
grows to experience the whole world-plants, animals, climate, terrain, watersheds, and all-as interwoven
with or componential of herself or himself. The exclamation point functions after the fashion of the
factorial marker in mathematical notation: full realization (growth, development) of the self requires
recursively reaching for greater richness and inclusiveness in one's self definition. "Identification" in this
formulation is similar to the developmental psychology meaning of the term (Kagan, 1971). One comes
progressively to perceive a commonality with, relatedness to, and involvement with the rest of creation.
A Self-Realized! individual would not experience confusion over what is his or her own body or person
and what is a sparrow, tree, brook, or stone.
Identification is not identity in Fox's philosophy. Rather, a Self-realized person would experience
discomfort or loss when some part of the ecological environment is damaged or destroyed contra-
ecologically, presumably in recognition of the commonality between the person and the environment.
Fox presents Self-Realization as the basic transpersonal concept of deep ecology to contrast with the
standard personal division of the (little "s") self into desiring-impulsive, rationalizing-deciding, and
normative-judgmental aspects, corresponding closely with the Freudian id, ego, and superego. An
individual without access to the transpersonal self-experiences inner tension due to the disparate leanings
of these aspects with respect to inner impulses and elements of the surrounding world. She or he
performs behavior deriving from a process of inner negotiation, debate, deception, and power
manipulation. Right action, whether refraining from overeating, giving aid to a needy person, or caring for
the ecosystem, is performed because the normative-judgmental aspect commands enough influence to
dominate. One does one's duty.
On the other hand, a person who does have access to the transpersonal self, who is Self-Realized and
well-identified with the nonhuman world, will behave in harmony with the human and nonhuman worlds,
acting from inclination rather than duty.
Because right action derives naturally and without effort from the marriage of selfhood to the lively
and mutually inter-connected world beyond the self, Fox explains that traditional philosophical concerns
with instrumental and intrinsic value theory are irrelevant as they bear upon ecological concerns. Eco-
philosophy need not build an elaborate logical scaffolding to justify ecologically favorable human
behavior. Such conduct grows organically out of one's enlightened awareness of one's active role in the
living dance of matter and energy when one attains Self-Realization!
Fox then suggests that transpersonal ecology amounts to a maximally expansive sense of self that
includes the ecological web of the nonhuman world integrated with one's own being. Possessors of this
sort of Self will as a matter of course make choices and take actions that are ecologically positive.
Philosophically, this position constitutes a reorientation of value theory from instrumental and intrinsic
value explanations to ecological values as axiomatic.
The reorientation of value theory away from instrumental assumptions and towards ecological values
requires, according to Fox, the development of an expansive sense of self. He distinguishes the expansive
self from a non-transpersonal tripartite conception of self. As summarized above the tripartite self
consists of a desiring impulsive self, a rationalizing-deciding self and a normative acting judgmental self.
Fox's description of the expansive self, on the other hand, crucially includes more than just that self which
is the center of volitional activity:
[0ur sense of self can be far more expansive than that of being a center of
volitional activity. For example, I can experience my volitional self as part of a larger
sense of self that includes aspects of my own mind and body over which I do not
experience myself as having particularly much control. ... In turn, I can experience
this larger, but still entirely personal, sense of self as part of a still more expansive,
transpersonal sense of self that includes my family, friends, other animals, physical
objects, the region in which I live, and so on (Fox, 1990a, p. 69).
The defining characteristic (for Fox) of the transpersonal expansive self is the ability to make wider and
deeper identifications" How does one realize, in a this-worldly sense, as expansive a sense of self as
possible? The transpersonal ecology answer is: through the process of identification" (Fox, 199Qb, p. 249).
By identification Fox means the experience of commonality between myself and the world. An ecologically
sound life would be one that "sustains the widest and deepest possible identification" (Fox, 1990b, p.
249).
Fox delineates three types of identification: personal, ontological and cosmological. "Personally, based
identification refers to experiences of commonality with other entities that are brought about through
personal involvement with these entities ... " (Fox, 1990b, p. 249). Personally, based identification is the
most common form of identification. Transpersonal ecology, however, is more concerned with the other
two forms (the transpersonal forms) of identification. Fox implies that unless personal identification is
placed in the context of the transpersonal forms of identification, then it is likely to be destructive:
Transpersonally based identification prevents or at least puts a check on the destructive tendencies of
narrow egoistic forms of identification:
Transpersonal ecology therefore attempts to promote the proper integration of the three basic forms
of identification. From a theoretical point of view the objects of inquiry are ontologically based
identification and cosmologically based identification.
Transpersonal forms of identification are impartial insofar as the object is to identify impartially with
all that is, to experience all that is as "unity in process."
Ontological identification apparently allows one to experience the "suchness" of phenomena, to let
them stand forth without attempting to change or manipulate them in any way.
The basic idea that I am trying to communicate by referring to
ontologically based identification is that the fact-the utterly astonishing
fact-that things are impresses itself upon some people in such a profound
way that all that exists seems to stand out as foreground from a
background of nonexistence, voidness, or emptiness-s-a background from
which this foreground arises moment by moment (Fox, 1990b, pp.250-
51).
The other type of transpersonal identification extends the awe and astonishment one feels toward
existence as such to the realization or insight that all is one.
Although cosmological identification seems to depend on some kind of cognitive event (realization,
insight) as opposed to the experiential content of ontological identification, Fox makes it clear that
cosmological identification is more than just a cognitive accomplishment:
Since transpersonal forms of identification involve a sustained growth and deepening of these self-
same identification processes, i.e., in the gradual development of a lived sense of the unity of all that is,
we may be justified in conceiving of the process of the integration of personally based forms of
identification with the transpersonal forms of identification as nothing less than a spiritual transformation
of the individual. Fox, in fact, asserts that cosmologically based identification issues in