Nuclear Heresy: Environmentalism As Implicit Religion By
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Nuclear heresy: environmentalism as implicit religion By: Caroline McCalman A thesis submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy The University of Sheffield Faculty of Social Sciences Department of Urban Studies and Planning November 2018 Nuclear heresy: environmentalism as implicit religion By: Caroline McCalman A thesis submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy The University of Sheffield Faculty of Social Sciences Department of Urban Studies and Planning November 2018 Abstract | Nuclear heresy: environmentalism as implicit religion This thesis is a discourse study of environmentalism in the UK. The research indicates how reframing environmental issues using religious concepts and language can deepen our understanding of people’s relationship to the environment and environmentalism. The thesis suggests that this process of reframing may be important for the social sciences, by illuminating new ways to engage with and understand the controversies and debates at hand. The data supporting this reframing analysis was obtained through in- depth, semi-structured one-on-one interviews with individuals identified as being ‘environmentally concerned’ and was analysed first thematically, and then using the researcher’s ‘discourse toolkit’. Nuclear power is treated as an emblematic issue to provide a concrete focus for a topic prone to abstraction; viewing environmentalism as a form of religion encouraged interdisciplinary working. By developing ideas from Bailey’s implicit religion (Bailey, 1997) I provide a language for environmentalism-as-religion, wherein pro-nuclear heretics challenge an anti-nuclear orthodoxy. Linking environmental discourses to enduring cosmologies shows that ‘superficial’ conflict over climate change mitigation is acrimonious precisely because it deals with manifestations of deeper convictions on the human-nature relationship. Updated versions of existing ‘nuclear discourses’ are analysed in combination with environmental-religious discourses, showing that ideas about public understanding and acceptance of nuclear power, even when rebranded as ‘sustainable’, are still best understood in terms of ancient cosmological ideas about the ‘natural’ or ‘proper’ way for humanity to approach and interact with the environment. Key environmental discourses were overtly religious and or even direct reformulations of Christian mythoi, with important implications for the movement’s stagnation and inherent contradictions. This thesis argues for the social sciences to take religion seriously, as the religious impulse – both implicit and explicit – is an important social phenomenon which shows no sign of fading and remains an important factor in modern society. Acknowledgements Thanks and acknowledgements go to the following people who have tirelessly supported the completion of this thesis: My supervisors Dr Steve Connelly and Dr Russell Hand; My husband Dr Nikolay Ogryzko and my parents Kevin and Carol McCalman; And all those who were so kind as to host me in Sheffield during the last three months: Dr Anna Krzywoszynska and Dr Kevin Marples; Matthew Cooper; Dr Lauren Buck; Holly Feast and Robbie Burrell. Contents Abstract | Nuclear heresy: environmentalism as implicit religion ....................................................................... 3 Acknowledgements ...................................................................................................................................................... 4 List of Figures ............................................................................................................................................................... 9 Chapter 1 | Introduction ............................................................................................................................................ 1 1.1 Foreword ............................................................................................................................................................ 1 1.2 Key Concepts ..................................................................................................................................................... 3 1.3 The Research ..................................................................................................................................................... 5 1.3.1 Research aim and Premises ...................................................................................................................... 5 1.3.2 Justification of the research ..................................................................................................................... 6 1.3.3 Approach to the research ......................................................................................................................... 7 1.4 Structure of the Thesis ..................................................................................................................................... 9 Chapter 2 | Discourses of Religion ........................................................................................................................ 11 2.1 Introduction ..................................................................................................................................................... 11 2.2 Discourse: loquela tua manifestum te facit ................................................................................................. 11 2.2.1 Doing discourse analysis ......................................................................................................................... 13 2.2.2 Contested concepts ................................................................................................................................. 14 2.3 (Implicit) Religion ........................................................................................................................................... 18 2.3.1 Defining (explicit) religion: a creed, a code, a cult ............................................................................. 18 2.3.2 Implicit Religion ...................................................................................................................................... 22 2.3.3 Environmentalism as Implicit Religion ................................................................................................ 25 2.4 Cosmologies ..................................................................................................................................................... 28 2.4.1 Classical Cosmologies: Divine Order, Organic, Mechanistic ........................................................... 29 2.4.2 Modern Environmental Cosmologies: ecocentric versus technocentric ........................................ 32 2.4.3 Christian Cosmologies: Dominion vs Stewardship ............................................................................ 34 2.5 Chapter conclusion ......................................................................................................................................... 36 Chapter 3 | History of Science and Religion ........................................................................................................ 39 3.1 Introduction ..................................................................................................................................................... 39 3.2 Foundations of Western Thought ................................................................................................................ 40 3.2.1 Schism! ...................................................................................................................................................... 42 3.3 The last 500 years ............................................................................................................................................ 44 3.3.1 The Protestant Reformation .................................................................................................................. 44 3.3.2 The Scientific Revolution ....................................................................................................................... 45 3.3.3 The Enlightenment ................................................................................................................................. 47 3.3.4 The Industrial Revolution ...................................................................................................................... 49 3.4 The secularisation thesis................................................................................................................................. 50 3.4.1 Irrational religion ..................................................................................................................................... 52 3.4.2 Remaining religion ................................................................................................................................... 55 3.4.3 Necessary religion .................................................................................................................................... 56 3.5 New Atheism and scientific authority ......................................................................................................... 58 3.6 Chapter conclusion ......................................................................................................................................... 61 Chapter 4 | Modern Environmentalism & Nuclear