Between History and Earth System Science
Deborah R. Coen, Fredrik Albritton Jonsson
Abstract
The Anthropocene is the signature concept of the new discipline of Earth System science (ESS). This essay argues that ESS is, first and foremost, a framework for interdisciplinary collaboration, and it considers the advantages and disadvantages to historians of adopting this framework. The authors conclude that the epistemological framework of ESS devalues the role of historical interpretation and evinces a self-defeating tendency toward Holocene nostalgia. A historically informed response to the present environmental crisis needs to attend to historical forces that remain invisible to ESS, such as the technological agency of nondominant actors.
Topics & Concepts
AnthropoceneAgency (philosophy)Interpretation (philosophy)Earth system scienceEnvironmental ethicsEpistemologySociologyHistoryPhilosophyGeologyLinguisticsOceanographyGeology and Paleoclimatology ResearchIndigenous Studies and EcologyHistory of Science and Natural History