Environmental Ethics in Indian Philosophy: Lessons for Sustainable Development


Context

  • Ancient Indian philosophy and Ayurveda embed environmental ethics in water, soil, and spirit.
  • As India advances climate resilience and sustainable farming, these teachings offer a moral framework for governance and policy.
  • UPSC relevance: Connects philosophical thought, sustainability, and climate action.

1. Environmental Ethics: Core Principles

  • Nature as consciousness: Caring for Earth is a sacred duty (Dharma).
  • Holistic worldview: Pancha Mahabhutas link human and planetary health.
  • Moral stewardship: Harm to soil, water, or air = harm to self.
  • Ahimsa & interdependence: All beings, elements, and microbes deserve non-violence and respect.
  • Spiritual sustainability: Practices like rainwater harvesting, seasonal cropping, and sacred groves arise from this ethos.

2. Perspectives from Indian Traditions

  • Vedic/Upanishadic: Universe as a sacred organism; “Mata Bhumih Putro Aham Prithivyah” promotes Earth stewardship.
  • Ayurveda: Environmental health is essential for human well-being; soil, water, and air are living entities.
  • Jainism: Ahimsa extends to all life; Aparigraha models restraint and coexistence.
  • Buddhism: Nature is interdependent; compassion (Karuna) guides sustainable action.
  • Sikhism: Guru Nanak’s “Pavan Guru, Pani Pita, Mata Dharat Mahat” teaches environmental care as devotion (Seva).

3. Global Environmental Philosophies

  • Deep Ecology: All life has intrinsic value; supports ecocentrism.
  • Utilitarian Environmentalism: Decisions weighed by human benefit; e.g., cost-benefit analyses.
  • Ecofeminism: Links exploitation of nature and women; emphasizes care and interconnectedness.

4. Challenges

  • Commercialisation of spirituality (Ahimsa/Dharma reduced to marketing).
  • Urban alienation: Loss of connection with natural rhythms.
  • Policy-practice gap: Laws measure compliance, not ethical responsibility.
  • Cultural dilution: Pollution and overconsumption violate Vedic ecological principles.
  • Climate-modernity dilemma: Balancing growth and ecological restraint.

5. Way Forward

  • Education: Include Vedic ecology, Panchabhuta harmony, and Ahimsa in NEP 2020.
  • Policy fusion: Link Ayurveda principles with Jal Jeevan, Namami Gange, PM-PRANAM.
  • Community stewardship: Engage temples, panchayats, faith trusts.
  • Technology for wisdom: Use AI, GIS, satellite mapping to protect sacred sites.
  • Global advocacy: Showcase Ecological Dharma at COP-30 and UNESCO.

Conclusion

  • Prakriti (Nature) and Atman (Self) reflect a unified consciousness.
  • Harmonising water, soil, and spirit transforms environmental protection into spiritual evolution.
  • India can pioneer a global ethic of compassionate sustainability, integrating moral duty and ecological stewardship.

Source : Times of India

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