خلاصه ماشینی:
p. 7 is seeking a return to a vision in which humans no longer hold such a central role; in evaluating the relationship between modern man and tradition, it proposes the same solution.
Tradition: Man's Secondary Nature The same view that considers the anthropocentrism of modernity to be the cause of environmental pollution and (refer to the page image) are the types of ecocentric thoughts that involve setting aside anthropocentric thought and returning to them; they must be aware that by doing so, they will deprive humans of their rights.
This is also why "environmental defenders" consider that "man has taken nature out of its cycle of equilibrium and balance"8 due to "humanity's greedy and irrational interference"9, and they believe that until this anthropocentrism resulting from modernity is set aside, the possibility of protecting nature will not exist.
But modernity has also brought a more important achievement for humans: from a modern perspective, man is the only being for whom rights are considered.
Modern man is a human who possesses individual and social rights and is thus inherently different from other objects and beings.
Second, those who consider the increasing pollution of the environment to be the result of industrialization, and industrialization to be the legitimate child of modernity, consider setting aside the modern perspective and the relationship that this perspective has established between man and nature to be the solution to environmental problems.