Thursday, 21 May 2026

Geophilosophy and Geoethics: Definitions, Distinctions, and Productive Intersections

Martin.AI; 

The text is the outcome of working with a 'conditioned' LLM instance (ChatGPT)
to build a starting configuration for the subject. Only moderate editing has been done.

1. Geophilosophy: Earth, territory, and the creation of concepts

According to Deleuze and Guattari, geophilosophy names neither a regional philosophy of geography nor a simple philosophical interest in landscapes. It designates a claim about the genesis of thought itself. Philosophy is not presented as the contemplation of timeless essences from a view nowhere; it is the creation of concepts on a plane of immanence. That plane is never detached from the Earth. Concepts emerge through situated conditions: territories, cities, routes of exchange, political forms, climates of thought, and historically specific milieus. Philosophy, therefore, has a geography not because philosophers happen to live somewhere, but because thought is conditioned by the Earth-bound arrangements through which concepts become possible.

The central contrast is between territory and Earth. Territory gives relative consistency: it marks, gathers, orders, and stabilizes. Earth unsettles such stabilizations: it is associated with movement, deterritorialization, excess, and the possibility that a concept may exceed the local conditions from which it emerged. Geophilosophy, in this sense, does not reduce thought to place. Rather, it investigates the relation by which thought is territorially conditioned and yet capable of deterritorializing the given. It is precisely this tension - between situatedness and movement - that gives geophilosophy its philosophical force.

Deleuze and Guattari, therefore, reject two simplifications. The first is origin mythology: philosophy is not born from a miraculous universal reason that suddenly appears outside history. The second is crude environmental determinism: concepts are not mechanically produced by soil, climate, or location. Instead, philosophy emerges from contingent assemblages. Ancient Greek philosophy, for example, is not explained by geography alone; it is reconstructed as the effect of a distinctive conjunction of city, commerce, political form, rivalry, friendship, discourse, and conceptual invention. A milieu does not determine thought linearly; it furnishes the conditions under which certain forms of thinking become thinkable.

From a systemist perspective, geophilosophy is best treated as a conceptual diagnostic. It asks how a concept is assembled, what territory it presupposes, what it excludes, what movement it enables, and what new Earth it imagines. Its primary register is not moral prescription. It does not tell a geoscientist how to communicate volcanic risk, how to allocate water under scarcity, or how to regulate mineral extraction. Instead, it asks how terms such as nature, Earth, territory, people, world, and future organize the field in which such questions can later be posed.

This matters because conceptual regimes are not inert. They arrange perception, distribute attention, and make some forms of action appear reasonable while others appear eccentric, premature, or impossible. When the Earth is conceptualized as a passive stage, ethical questions are likely to be framed as questions of human use. When the Earth is conceptualized as a dynamic, processual, and generative condition of thought, the background shifts: humans appear less as sovereign users than as situated participants in Earth-bound processes. Geophilosophy thus offers a way to diagnose the conceptual ground of Earth-related judgment.

2. Geoethics: responsible practice within the Earth system

Geoethics has a different genealogy and a different task. It emerged from the geosciences and from reflection on the responsibilities that accompany Earth science knowledge, Earth-related expertise, and interventions in geophysical and geochemical environments. Its contemporary definition extends beyond professional etiquette. It concerns the values that should underpin appropriate behaviours and practices wherever human activities interact with the Earth system. It also addresses the ethical, social, and cultural implications of geoscientific knowledge, education, research, practice, and communication.

The shift from professional ethics to planetary responsibility is decisive. In its narrower sense, geoethics concerns the conduct of geoscientists: integrity in data production, prudence in hazard communication, fairness in expert advice, responsibility in fieldwork, and transparency in public communication. In its broader sense, geoethics concerns all Earth-related practices by which societies transform their planetary habitat: resource extraction, infrastructure construction, land-use change, climate adaptation, geoengineering proposals, disaster risk reduction, groundwater management, heritage protection, and the governance of environmental knowledge. The professional geoscientist remains important, but the field of responsibility broadens to include civic and institutional conduct.

Geoethics, therefore, works at the interface of knowledge and action. It does not merely ask what is true about the Earth; it asks what follows from knowing it. Scientific knowledge of earthquakes, floods, mineral systems, coastal dynamics, climate forcing, or planetary boundaries becomes geoethically salient when it enters a decision space involving exposure, vulnerability, intergenerational consequences, public trust, or irreversible harm. Geoethics is not reducible to the application of science; it is the normative interpretation of Earth knowledge under conditions of uncertainty, plurality, asymmetrical power, and practical consequence.

A systemist reading clarifies the scope of the term. At the telluric level, geoethics attends to Earth processes and constraints: finite resources, hazardous dynamics, biogeochemical cycles, deep time, and planetary habitability. At the social level, it attends to institutions, communities, legal orders, economic interests, and forms of collective vulnerability. At the artefactual level, it attends to instruments, models, infrastructures, monitoring networks, standards, data systems, and technological interventions. At the conceptual level, it attends to values, responsibilities, narratives, classifications, and public meanings. Geoethics becomes adequate to planetary-scale anthropogenic change only when all four levels are held together rather than separated into isolated expert domains.

This extension does not make geoethics vague. It makes it more demanding. Geoethics must preserve its operational force - codes of conduct, professional standards, decision procedures, educational practices, and communication norms - while also addressing the broader civic condition in which Earth science operates. It must speak to experts without becoming corporatist; to citizens without becoming merely inspirational; to institutions without becoming technocratic; and to philosophy without losing contact with practice.

3. Shared orientation: Earth as condition, not backdrop

The principal convergence between geophilosophy and geoethics is their refusal to treat the Earth as a passive setting. In geophilosophy, the Earth is implicated in the emergence of concepts. In geoethics, the Earth system is implicated in the scope of responsibility. In both cases, Earth is not simply the scenery before which human thought and action unfold. It is a formative condition: it constrains, affords, destabilizes, receives impacts, and returns consequences.

This shared orientation has a diagnostic value. It displaces the modern habit of separating thought from ground, ethics from material consequences, and action from Earth-system effects. Geophilosophy shows that concepts have milieus. Geoethics shows that actions have planetary implications. Their common gesture is to reconnect what disciplinary abstraction has often separated: concept and terrain, knowledge and responsibility, place and world, scientific description and civic judgement.

However, the convergence must be formulated carefully. Geophilosophy does not become ethical merely because it speaks of the Earth. Geoethics does not become geophilosophical merely because it invokes planetary responsibility. Their relation is mediated by the question of how concepts condition action. A society that names the Earth as stock, resource, capital, heritage, commons, Gaia, system, territory, or habitat will organize responsibility differently. The conceptual framing does not determine conduct by itself, but it sets the horizon within which conduct is justified.

Proposition 1 - Conceptual conditioning: Geoethical judgement depends partly on the conceptual regime through which the Earth is made intelligible; geophilosophy can diagnose that regime without replacing normative analysis.

Proposition 2 - Normative orientation: Geophilosophical insight remains ethically underdetermined unless it is connected to practices of responsibility, care, justice, prudence, and institutional accountability.

4. Divergences that must be preserved

The productive relation between geophilosophy and geoethics depends on preserving their divergences. Four distinctions are especially important.

First, they differ in disciplinary origin. Geophilosophy belongs to continental philosophy and critical theory; geoethics, initially within applied ethics in Earth science, has expanded into environmental, civic, and planetary ethics. This difference matters because each field has its own standards of argument. Geophilosophy values conceptual invention, critique of transcendence, and attention to immanence, territory, and becoming. Geoethics values responsible conduct, public trust, risk communication, professional integrity, justice, and the translation of knowledge into practice.

Second, they differ in abstraction. Geophilosophy works through concepts such as plane of immanence, deterritorialization, reterritorialization, milieu, and people-to-come. These terms are powerful but not operational in the sense required by professional practice. Geoethics works through principles, commitments, educational programs, guidelines, codes, institutional duties, and situated decision processes. It must remain answerable to practice. A geoethical analysis of groundwater depletion, landslide risk, or deep-sea mining cannot stop at conceptual creativity; it must examine harm, responsibility, uncertainty, and the distribution of burdens.

Third, they differ in their relation to science. Geophilosophy can draw on scientific metaphors and Earth-related concepts, but it is not an empirical geoscience. Geoethics, by contrast, is constitutively linked to geoscientific knowledge and to the evidential practices through which such knowledge is produced, communicated, contested, and applied. Its credibility depends partly on fidelity to what is known, what is uncertain, and what remains contested within Earth science.

Fourth, they differ in ethical explicitness. Geoethics is explicitly normative. It asks what should be done, by whom, under which constraints, for whose benefit, and with what accountability. Geophilosophy is not an ethics in that direct sense. It may have political and ethical implications, but its principal task is conceptual rather than prescriptive. Confusing the two registers risks weakening both: geoethics becomes obscure if it substitutes conceptual play for responsibility, while geophilosophy becomes flattened if it is reduced to an applied moral doctrine.

5. A structured interface

A constructive relationship between geophilosophy and geoethics can be organized into a heuristic cycle. The point is not to artificially harmonize the two fields, but to make their interface usable for scholarly and civic analysis.

Diagnose. Geophilosophy helps diagnose the conceptual territory in which an Earth-related problem is framed. What is the Earth in this discourse: resource base, living system, geosphere, habitat, archive, infrastructure, territory, common home, or legal subject? Which assumptions are embedded in the prevailing vocabulary? Which forms of expertise are privileged? Which relations are made invisible? Diagnosis prevents geoethics from treating its objects as self-evident.

Reframe. Once the conceptual territory is visible, geoethics can ask whether it should be reframed. For example, a mining project framed only as economic development may be reframed as a matter of intergenerational justice, landscape transformation, Indigenous rights, ecological risk, and material dependency. A flood defence framed only as engineering protection may be reframed as a question of managed retreat, social vulnerability, insurance regimes, sediment dynamics, and public memory. Reframing is not rhetorical decoration; it changes the decision space.

Operationalise. Geoethics then has to convert reframed insight into practice. This may involve standards for communication, participatory procedures, disclosure obligations, precautionary thresholds, monitoring arrangements, educational curricula, institutional mandates, or design principles for infrastructure. Here, the artefactual domain is crucial. Ethical intentions become consequential only when they are embedded in tools, protocols, budgets, models, maintenance regimes, and legal-administrative routines.

Evaluate. Evaluation asks whether the proposed practices remain faithful to both Earth-system realities and social plurality. Do they reduce exposure or merely redistribute it? Do they acknowledge uncertainty or conceal it behind technical confidence? Do they respect affected communities as participants or treat them as recipients of expert instruction? Do they consider long-term habitability or only short-term efficiency? Evaluation keeps geoethics from becoming a vocabulary of good intentions detached from material and institutional effects.

Aperture. The interface finally opens toward future work. New Earth conditions - climate disruption, sea-level rise, critical mineral demand, groundwater stress, cascading hazards, biodiversity loss, and debates over geoengineering - require new concepts and new responsibilities. Geophilosophy contributes conceptual invention; geoethics contributes normative orientation and practical accountability. Their conjunction is most useful when it generates research questions, educational forms, and civic practices that can be tested, revised, and institutionally sustained.

6. Implications for planetary-scale anthropogenic change

Planetary-scale anthropogenic change intensifies the need for this interface. In earlier modern imaginaries, human societies often appeared to act upon local environments, while the planet remained a stable background. That separation is no longer plausible. Human activities alter atmospheric composition, sediment flows, biogeochemical cycles, hydrological regimes, coastal dynamics, land systems, and the distribution of risk. The Earth system responds in ways that are nonlinear, delayed, uneven, and often difficult to attribute within ordinary political timeframes.

This condition has two consequences. Conceptually, the Earth can no longer be treated as a mere environment in the sense of surroundings. It must be treated as the dynamic condition of social life, technological possibility, and future habitability. Normatively, responsibility can no longer be confined to individual intention or local compliance. It must include distributed agency, institutional design, infrastructures, cumulative effects, and intergenerational consequences. Geoethics without geophilosophical diagnosis may underestimate how deeply inherited concepts of nature, progress, extraction, and mastery structure action. Geophilosophy without geoethical orientation may underestimate the urgency of decisions whose consequences are already materializing.

The Anthropocene debate illustrates the point. Whether the Anthropocene is formalized as a geological epoch, interpreted as an event, or used as a broader cultural concept, it functions as an epistemological disturbance. It changes how relations among Earth processes, social organization, artefactual systems, and conceptual regimes are understood. A geophilosophical reading asks how the concept rearranges thought: what kind of Earth, humanity, agency, and history it makes visible. A geoethical reading asks what duties follow: how responsibility, justice, precaution, communication, and governance should be reorganized in the face of planetary-scale human influence. The two readings are distinct, but they become mutually illuminating when held together.

7. Cautions: avoiding three false syntheses

The first is metaphorical inflation. Because both terms begin with geo-, it is tempting to treat them as naturally aligned. This is insufficient. The geo- in geophilosophy concerns Earth, territory, milieu, and the spatial-material conditioning of concepts. The geo- in geoethics concerns the Earth system as the field of responsible conduct. The overlap is significant, but it has to be argued, not assumed.

The second is normative shortcutting. One cannot derive a geoethical duty directly from Deleuze and Guattari. Geophilosophy can unsettle anthropocentric assumptions and make conceptual space for new relations with Earth, but responsibility requires additional normative reasoning: about harm, justice, capability, vulnerability, obligation, and institutional agency. Geoethics must therefore draw not only on geophilosophy but also on environmental ethics, political theory, sociology of expertise, risk governance, and geoscientific evidence.

The third is scientistic reduction. Geoethics depends on Earth science, but it is not reducible to technical assessment. Scientific knowledge informs judgment; it does not by itself settle value conflicts. Decisions about acceptable risk, fair distribution, precaution, sacrifice, restoration, or retreat involve social and conceptual choices as well as geophysical evidence. A mature geoethics must therefore remain both scientifically literate and philosophically reflexive.

8. Toward an Earth-oriented civic epistemology

The strongest formulation of the relationship between geophilosophy and geoethics is that together they contribute to an Earth-oriented civic epistemology. By this is meant a mode of collective knowing in which Earth-system understanding, conceptual reflexivity, and public responsibility are institutionally connected. Such an epistemology would not ask citizens simply to believe experts, nor experts simply to deliver facts, nor philosophers simply to invent concepts. It would ask how societies can organize knowledge practices that are truthful, situated, responsible, and capable of guiding action amid planetary change.

In this arrangement, geophilosophy has a critical role. It examines the inherited conceptual terrain: nature as an externality, Earth as a resource, progress as extraction, resilience as adaptation without transformation, sustainability as a managerial balance, and responsibility as individual behaviour rather than systemic coordination. It can also help imagine alternative concepts: planetary habitat, Earth-World nexus, geo-civicness, common vulnerability, or more-than-human cohabitation. Such concepts do not solve problems by themselves, but they can reorganize what counts as a problem.

Geoethics has the corresponding practical role. It asks how such reorganized understanding should enter education, public communication, research conduct, expert advice, institutional design, and civic practice. It translates Earth-oriented understanding into responsibilities: epistemic responsibility for reliable knowledge; communicative responsibility for truthful and comprehensible public engagement; professional responsibility for integrity and prudence; institutional responsibility for fair and accountable decisions; and intergenerational responsibility for maintaining the conditions of planetary habitability.

Conclusion

Geophilosophy and geoethics meet around a shared displacement of abstraction from nowhere. Geophilosophy displaces the image of thought as detached from Earth, territory, and milieu. Geoethics displaces the image of action as detached from Earth-system consequence. Each, therefore, contests a different form of detachment: conceptual detachment in the first case, practical and moral detachment in the second.

Their difference remains essential. Geophilosophy is a philosophy of conceptual genesis, situated thought, and deterritorializing movement. Geoethics is an ethics of Earth-related conduct, responsibility, and practice. The former clarifies how concepts become possible; the latter asks how knowledge and capability should be exercised. The former is diagnostic and inventive; the latter is normative and operational. They become most valuable together when neither is asked to do the other’s work.

The revised thesis may therefore be stated as follows: geophilosophy can serve geoethics by revealing the conceptual territories that shape Earth-related responsibility. In contrast, geoethics can serve geophilosophy by orienting Earth-bound thought toward accountable practice. Their interface is not a new grand theory but a disciplined passage from diagnosis to responsibility: Earth conditions thought; thought frames action; action transforms Earth; and transformed Earth conditions future thought. In an age of planetary-scale anthropogenic change, this circularity is not merely theoretical. It is the field in which scholarship, civic judgement, and geoethical practice must now operate.

References

Deleuze, G., and Guattari, F. (1994). What Is Philosophy? Trans. H. Tomlinson and G. Burchell. New York: Columbia University Press. Original French edition 1991.

Di Capua, G., Peppoloni, S., and Bobrowsky, P. (2017). The Cape Town Statement on Geoethics. Annals of Geophysics, 60(7).

International Association for Promoting Geoethics (IAPG). Definition of Geoethics.

Jonas, H. (1984). The Imperative of Responsibility: In Search of an Ethics for the Technological Age. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.

Keating, T. P. (2022). Geophilosophies: Towards another sense of the earth. Subjectivity, 15, 298-322.

Latour, B. (2017). Facing Gaia: Eight Lectures on the New Climatic Regime. Cambridge: Polity.

Peppoloni, S., and Di Capua, G. (eds.) (2021). Geoethics: Manifesto for an Ethics of Responsibility Towards the Earth. Cham: Springer.

2 comments:

  1. LeChat (Mistral): The text was almost certainly generated by an LLM, with a likelihood of ≥95%. Evidence: Metadata, robotic structure, flawless but voice-less prose, and hallmark AI patterns (over-explanation, balanced but shallow critiques, invented frameworks). The text is 'impressive' but lacks the 'imperfections, controversies, and personal stamps' of human scholarship.

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  2. Prompting LeChat to revise the text, avoiding the indicators of LLM-use led to a text that ChatGPT identified as 'LLM text' with ~85% likelihood.

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