Affiliation:
1. University of Alberta ddavidso@ualberta.ca
Abstract
Understanding that climate change poses considerable threats for
social systems, to which we must adapt in order to survive, social responses
to climate change should be viewed in the context of evolution, which entails
the variation, selection, and retention of information. Digging deeper into
evolutionary theory, however, emotions play a surprisingly prominent role
in adaptation. This article offers an explicitly historical, nondirectional conceptualization
of our potential evolutionary pathways in response to climate
change. Emotions emerge from the intersection of culture and biology to
guide the degree of variation of knowledge to which we have access, the
selection of knowledge, and the retention of that knowledge in new (or old)
practices. I delve into multiple fields of scholarship on emotions, describing
several important considerations for understanding social responses to climate
change: emotions are shared, play a central role in decision-making,
and simultaneously derive from past evolutionary processes and define future
evolutionary processes.
Cited by
8 articles.
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