A Call for Intellectual Adaptability in Times of Transformation
From left-wing utopianism to right-wing denialism, ideological echo chambers across the world are eroding the capacity for original, reasoned, and systemic thinking. The United States’ drawn-out electoral process has once again brought out the worst in political tribalism. However, it has also provided an unexpected opportunity: a laboratory for intellectual rebellion and the formation of new, potentially enduring coalitions. Rather than fuel the fevered shouting matches across alternate-reality filter bubbles, can ecological economics play a role in bridging fractured worldviews?
Political tribalism is not merely an American phenomenon, but a primal psychological defense mechanism. Human beings fearfully hunker down in times of change. Precarity and revolution breed groupthink, leading to the collectivization of identity as a threat-mitigation strategy. Democracy suffers as a result. Today, as many bear existential concerns about the biosphere, pandemics, escalating debt crises, mass migration, AI, and war, society is retreating into anxious collectivist hovels. Fundamentally, though, we’re fighting our inner nature, not one another.
The present wave of global fear and conflict has arisen partly because of sputtering growth, energy constraints, and associated demographic change. Limits to growth, in other words. Industrialized countries can no longer solve their issues with easy new salvos of mass production or resource extraction, especially as populations are beginning to shrink. This has led many of us to contract into scarcity mode, becoming more competitive and nativist in the process. Lately, the scramble for easy growth has resulted in hubristic agendas, like inflationary money printing, housing inflation, war, and sideways investments.
Meanwhile, social media and partisan mass media appear to have created hermetically sealed environments. They have little to do with information exchange and everything to do with fearful blame-broadcasting, scapegoating, and priming us to accept a predetermined order. In today’s environment, it feels like a minor miracle that humans ever transcended their base instincts to engage in something resembling rational discourse. something resembling rational discourse.
The ideological filter-bubble influences what we understand about one another and the world around us (image generated by You.com).
Monochromatic Thinking in Ecological Economics
At the risk of stating the obvious, and poking a bear in the process, ecological discourse features its own anxious collectivism. Post-growth inquiry emerged from impactful critical insights about the limitations of neoclassical economic thinking. My hope is that it will someday outgrow this critical mode as its primary means of knowledge-making. However, the analytical lens of post-growth inquiry seems to have narrowed through a prism of a progressive political framework. The result is poor thinking, which fuels precisely the kind of anti-intellectualism the academy would otherwise be poised to address.
The gravitational pull of ecological economics toward off-the-shelf criticism and leftist political ideology simultaneously empowers and constrains its long-term potential. The potential constraint lurks in the left’s more fearful pitfalls and landing points. These include suppression of dissent, increasing central authority and coercion in the name of “justice,” and the stifling of original, creative ideas. Philosopher Alex DeToqueville believed that the totalitarian impulse (“despotism”) would manifest in contemporary democracies through a thick, stifling bureaucracy. He describes it as:
“…a network of small complicated rules, minute and uniform, through which the most original minds and the most energetic characters cannot penetrate, to rise above the crowd. The will of man is not shattered, but softened, bent, and guided; men are seldom forced by it to act, but they are constantly restrained from acting. Such a power does not destroy, but it prevents existence…”
Prescient, perhaps, depending on one’s experience of the world at present. Technologically-mediated access to just about everything facilitates a dubious paternalistic safety apparatus and an endless web of demoralizing restraint. This web of restraint can also be applied to energy and resource conservation, if we’re not careful. It can build a culture of begrudging, short-term compliance and simmering opposition rather than an enduring turn toward meaningful reform.
Alexis DeTocqueville: French diplomat, political scientist, and historian (painting by Théodore Chassériau, Wikimedia Commons).
Even more dangerously, however, recursive leftist logic can sow the seeds of its own demise with predictability, uniformity, and ungrounded, even fanciful moralizing. In other words, it gets old. It’s a sure-fire way to cause an audience to grow tired and tune out. At its worst, the resulting ideology is , potentially nihilistic, and even self-destructive, which produces a paucity of hope. At its best, the critical discourse can foster creative and reasoned thinking that transcends divides and continually incorporates new information. Going forward, how can ecological economists leverage the best of critical discourse while avoiding soul-sucking ideologies?
In the spirit of biomimicry, I propose that ideological diversity can serve as an antidote to the extremes of conspiratorial, softly totalitarian, or fanciful thinking. It can help us reimagine economic systems with just enough daring, and without the trap of predictably self-destructive, anxious narratives.
A Respected Lineage of Critical Insight
I don’t mean to completely tar the critical impulse, so let’s unpack this criticism of critique. The pull toward the left in ecological economics is neither accidental nor simplistically ideological. Rather, it stems from a complex intellectual genealogy. The field has grown to incorporate critical thought beyond a critique of market fundamentalism, including Marxist economic analysis, feminist economic theory, and postcolonial environmental studies.
Perhaps this orientation will, in time, be seen as a phase of intellectual development preceding what many regard to be the fourth industrial revolution. It tends to draw folks who exhibit higher tolerance for complexity, greater empathy for systemic vulnerabilities, and a willingness to interrogate existing power structures. Yet by predominantly recruiting from academic and activist circles that already share a relatively homogeneous worldview, ecological economics risks developing blind spots as significant as those it critiques. The resulting danger is, somewhat ironically, that ecological economics will merge with a set of preexisting filter bubbles. We can’t address challenges stemming from mass media with simply another form of it.
Truly transformative thinking must transcend traditional political binaries. The field ought to be less about ideological purity—a self-perpetuated, communitarian anxiety response—and more about analytical frameworks that navigate the relationships among economic activity, social systems, and energetic constraints. This approach often resonates more strongly with left-leaning perspectives. However, there is a rich history of conservative conservationism, if you will. This type of conservative thought is often driven away from impractical, hostile intellectual forums. Yet, as a professor, I’ve observed that the next generation of dissenting “critical thinkers” is likely to come from the rising lineage of conservative conservationism.
Bridging Ideological Divides: Making Room for Conservative Conservationism
Conservative environmental perspectives reveal a rich and nuanced ecological ethos that extends far beyond simplistic political caricature. Many of these perspectives emerge from ancient philosophical traditions that emphasize stewardship, preservation, sacredness, and intergenerational responsibility. At their core, conservative ecological approaches connect environmental management to fundamental values of heritage, appropriately scaled technological innovation, and spiritual reverence for natural systems.
The principle of small government aligns with ecological thinking. Decentralized governance might more effectively manage resources through community-based, context-specific strategies rather than top-down, energy-intensive bureaucratic interventions. The principle of subsidiarity states that decision-making ought to occur at the most local, intimate level of social organization. This approach not only enhances resource use but also generates a rich ecosystem of intellectual diversity among isolated communities, allowing multiple perspectives, cultural approaches across the landscape.
This framework views environmental protection not as a progressive political project, but as a fundamental expression of traditional values. Land management becomes an act of cultural conservation, appropriate technological use represents economic wisdom, and environmental stewardship reflects a profound spiritual commitment to the natural order. These lenses are critical for whole-planet flourishing.
A collaborative “middle-way” approach to ecological economics and its related fields represents a sophisticated intellectual balancing act, deliberately holding multiple perspectives in productive tension rather than seeking ideological resolution. The latter is a natural perfectionistic impulse, but one that needs to be held in check.
A centrist ecological thinker can be a systemic mediator, understanding that meaningful environmental progress emerges from carefully negotiated compromises that respect diverse ways of knowing. Such a thinker might simultaneously value market-driven and business-oriented technological innovations, community-based ecological management, and structured regulatory frameworks. Though often seen as contradictory, these strategies can be complementary tools in a sophisticated framework.
By maintaining intellectual flexibility and a commitment to empirical observation over ideological dogma, we can re-create an intellectual culture that prioritizes practical outcomes over theoretical consistency. This culture requires the development of adaptive strategies that evolve with changing environmental and social conditions, including demographic decline, new forms of energy, ”humachination,” and the very real possibility that some doom-filled predictions are so far off the mark as to be laughable. The task is a form of dynamic pragmatism: always provisional, constantly evolving, and fundamentally committed to finding workable solutions in a world of irreducible and accelerating complexity.
Moral Foundations and the Potential for Collaboration
On the surface, the economic divide between left- and right-wing constituencies centers around the market. Simplistically, those on the political right tend to adhere to market fundamentalism, while left-wing factions tend to grasp at radical Marxism. But this ideological balkanization is not simply a philosophical disagreement. The reality is that we have a mixed economy where neither extreme will function without peril. The ideological divide is a complex psychological phenomenon where political identity increasingly serves as a primary mechanism of self-definition and belonging as other markers of group identity—such as nationhood, ethnicity, and religion—diminish.
Jonathan Haidt’s moral foundations theory offers a helpful lens for comprehending these divisions. Rather than viewing political differences as a battle between good and evil, Haidt reveals that conservatives and progressives draw from a shared moral palette, albeit with different emphases or “tastebuds.” Progressives tend to prioritize care and fairness, while conservatives give more weight to loyalty, authority, and sanctity.
This insight is a useful tool for bridge-building. Instead of dismissing conservative perspectives outright, ecological economics can develop communication strategies that resonate with diverse moralities. A broadly inclusive approach to environmental stewardship, for instance, might emphasize the preservation of heritage, respect for traditional land management, and intergenerational responsibility. To succeed at this approach will require a radical form of intellectual empathy: the capacity to understand that different political perspectives are not simply wrong, but are expressing legitimate moral concerns through different cultural and psychological lenses.
A Call for Intellectual Courage
We are navigating a profound period of technological and social transition, characterized by unprecedented complexity and existential uncertainty. The Big Tech revolution represents more than a series of innovations; it is a fundamental restructuring of human experience. This moment of flux triggers a physiological response: a contraction of possibility, where uncertainty and fear-cum-bureaucracy can stifle experimentation.
To protect themselves from profound change, social groups reduce their loci of control. This psychological retrenchment has an overlooked cost: It systematically diminishes our capacity for innovation, subsidiarity, and adaptive thinking. By seeking safety through centralization and control, we inadvertently suppress the very mechanisms of resilience and creativity that could help us navigate complex transitions.
My call to action is both simple and revolutionary: embrace complexity and cultivate genuine dialogue. Develop the intellectual humility to acknowledge that our survival depends on our ability to adapt, collaborate, and think beyond tribal boundaries amid profound, transformational change.