| Literature DB >> 34207248 |
Abstract
The study investigates the current trends that manifest themselves in two areas that have common origins in antiquity, found in the Hellenistic concept of Sophia: present in philosophy, where it expresses the love of wisdom, but also in theology where it represents divine love. Looking at this approach, the Sophia has manifested various orientations, either toward the field of ecology and the environment through the emergence of new concepts, such as ecophilosophy and ecotheology, but also toward the practice applied to the person, through the philosophical counseling or spiritual or pastoral counseling. This paper analyzes the characteristics of the applied trends, ecophilosophy and ecotheology, through their comparative analysis, along with a bibliometric study on papers published on these topics in indexed databases in the last 45 years. The paper presents the openness to innovation, through the emergence of the two concepts analyzed which created methods and tools specific to philosophical or spiritual counseling, and adaptations of these practices to the needs of contemporary society. Therefore, the innovation is sustained by creating a new specialization in community counseling practice, called eco-counseling for community (EC4com), with the new ecological trend, which can be included in the philosophical and spiritual practices applied in communities through individual counseling, for groups or community.Entities:
Keywords: Sophia; applied ecology; community; ecophilosophy; ecotheology; environment; innovation; philosophical counseling; spiritual counseling
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34207248 PMCID: PMC8296511 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph18126572
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Figure 1Connections between the trends developed by both areas analyzed.
Figure 2Interaction of three domains generates hybrid concepts.
Comparative elements of the spiritual and philosophical counseling.
| Comparative Elements/Features | Spiritual Counseling | Philosophical Counseling |
|---|---|---|
| The context of the activity | Belonging to the church/cult | Without determined context |
| The purpose of the action | Permanent active service, parish type, with missionary vocation | Practices based on instruments of philosophy and transferred by philosophers to counseling |
| The destination of the action | Christian community | Customers individuals or groups of people |
| The object of the action | The person’s relationship with the divinity. It produces changes in counselee thinking | The life examined/supports the clarification of the vision about the world and the person’s life |
| Main way of working | It is based on listening/dialogue | Through individual/collective dialogue |
| The professionalism | No deontological norms | A code of ethics is applied |
| The trend of professionalization | Remains attached to the church/parish | It can be regulated as a specialized public service |
| Operator training | The specialist comes from the parish, has theological studies no continuous training required | Philosophers who become practitioners or specialists trained in philosophical counseling, they need to follow continuous training |
| Freedom of conscience of the operator | In agreement with love for/relationship with the divinity (agape) | It derives from the worldview of the philosopher/client |
| Organizational destination | Less/Can be applied to groups of parishioner | Applies to organizations/institutions/communities |
| The meaning of the action | What does the world of the believer looks like? | Analysis of life in all its forms |
| Listening of the persons by the operator | With empathy/warm/encouraging. Try to reveal the person’s past in his approach | It is included in the dialogue of the parties, a compassion is manifested, in the form of a friendship of intellectual nature |
| How one can activate the person’s resources | By stigmatizing negative actions | By stimulating positive actions |
| Operating requirements | Attached to the church/parish, using the existing material base | Requires a location/office set up for counseling process |
| Type of the service provided | Free of charge | Onerous, the fee payment |
Source: The information is summarized by the author from reference [78].
Figure 3Number of papers published in the last 10 years. Source: Generated by the Web of Science analysis report.
Figure 4Keywords visualized. Source: Computed in VOSviewer by the author.
Clusters.
| Cluster 1 (Red) | Cluster 2 (Blue) | Cluster 3 (Green) |
|---|---|---|
| Ecotheology | Ecophilosophy | Ecology |
| Nature | Sustainable development | Environment |
| Religion | Deep ecology | Earth |
| Creation | Climate change | Eco-criticism |
| Theology | Environmental ethics | Technology |
Top authors by citations.
| Author | Documents | Citations | Average Citations | Topic |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Latour, B. | 1 | 45 | 4.02 | Ecotheology |
| Harrison, P. | 1 | 41 | 2.28 | Religion |
| Whitney, E. | 2 | 37 | 3.01 | Ecotheology |
| Fairweather, P.G. | 1 | 33 | 1.47 | Ecophilosophy |
| Francis, G. | 1 | 25 | 1.11 | Ecology |
| Hull, Z. | 2 | 24 | 5.45 | Sustainable development |
| Rozzi, R. | 1 | 24 | 7.38 | Ecology |
| Riley, M. T. | 3 | 17 | 9.62 | Ecology |
| Wersal, I. | 1 | 16 | 2.09 | Environmental ethics |
| Fox, W. | 1 | 13 | 3.25 | Ecophilosophy |
| Bratton, S. | 2 | 11 | 2.11 | Ecotheology |
| Skrimshire, S. | 1 | 11 | 2.40 | Climate change |
| Booth, A. | 2 | 10 | 2.44 | Environmental spirituality |
| Piatek, Z. | 3 | 10 | 5.14 | Ecology |
Figure 5Eco-trend and practical counseling for communities.
Figure 6Initiation of the community counseling practice program.
Figure 7Application topics of community counseling.
Figure 8Evolution toward innovation and adaptation of the analyzed fields.