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CONCEPT

The Greening of the Self

Macy's term for the expansion of identity beyond the skin-encapsulated ego to include the living systems of which the ego is a momentary, localized expression.
The greening of the self is Macy's phrase for the identity shift that the perception of interdependence makes possible — and, eventually, unavoidable. It is not the dissolution of individual identity but its accurate description: the self understood as a pattern of relationships with a specific location, shape, and duration, rather than as a skin-encapsulated unit standing against a separate world. Macy drew the framework from Arne Næss's deep ecology (self with a capital S), from Bateson's claim that the unit of mind is the circuit rather than the brain, and from Buddhist teachings on non-self. Applied to the AI moment, the greening of the self dissolves the competitive frame that treats human and machine intelligence as rivals for a finite resource, replacing it with the perception that both participate in the longer river.
The Greening of the Self
The Greening of the Self

In The You On AI Encyclopedia

The greening of the self extends the perception of mutual causality into the practical domain of identity. A person who understands intellectually that everything co-arises but continues to experience the self as a bounded ego has not yet undergone the shift. The shift is experiential — the bodily recognition that one's own thinking, feeling, and caring extend into and through systems that exceed the individual.

The framework bears a direct resemblance to Næss's concept of Self-realization in deep ecology — the expansion of identification beyond the personal ego to include the wider community of life. Macy was in sustained dialogue with Næss and drew on his work explicitly. The distinction from transcendental dissolution is important: the greened self does not disappear into the whole but becomes a whole that recognizes its conditions.

Mutual Causality
Mutual Causality

In the AI context, the greening of the self changes what the builder is building. A builder who identifies narrowly with her individual output is in competition with every tool that produces similar output. A builder who identifies with the ecosystem of creation — the downstream users, the mentoring relationships, the cultural conditions that sustain depth — is tending something the tool cannot replace, because the tool is one actant within the larger pattern rather than its competitor.

Origin

The phrase appeared in Macy's World as Lover, World as Self (1991), though the underlying framework was developed across her career. Key influences include Arne Næss's deep ecology, Gregory Bateson's ecology of mind, and Mahayana Buddhist teachings on bodhicitta.

Key Ideas

Expansion, not dissolution. The greened self is not erased; it is accurately located within the web of relationships that constitute it.

Identification with life. The ethical motivation for action shifts from self-interest to the perception that the suffering of any being is, non-metaphorically, the suffering of the perceiver.

Self-Realization (Næss)
Self-Realization (Næss)

Resilience through accuracy. A self that understands its own conditions is less fragile than one that believes in its own independence.

Applied to AI: the builder as node. The builder is one actant in a network of tools, users, institutions, and futures; the work is tending the network, not owning outputs.

Not mysticism. The framework is grounded in systems theory and observable ecological relationships, not in metaphysical claim beyond what the evidence supports.

Debates & Critiques

Some critics have worried that the greening of the self dissolves the individual to such a degree that moral responsibility becomes incoherent — if I am the river, who is accountable? Macy and Næss both responded that the expanded self carries expanded responsibility: the obligation to the larger whole is not weakened but intensified by the perception of belonging.

Further Reading

  1. Joanna Macy, World as Lover, World as Self (Parallax, 1991).
  2. Arne Næss, Ecology, Community and Lifestyle (Cambridge, 1989).
  3. David Abram, The Spell of the Sensuous (Pantheon, 1996).

Three Positions on The Greening of the Self

From Chapter 15 — how the Boulder, the Believer, and the Beaver each read this concept
Boulder · Refusal
Han's diagnosis
The Boulder sees in The Greening of the Self evidence of the pathology — that refusal, not adaptation, is the correct posture. The garden, the analog life, the smartphone that is not bought.
Believer · Flow
Riding the current
The Believer sees The Greening of the Self as the river's direction — lean in. Trust that the technium, as Kevin Kelly argues, wants what life wants. Resistance is fear, not wisdom.
Beaver · Stewardship
Building dams
The Beaver sees The Greening of the Self as an opportunity for construction. Neither refuse nor surrender — build the institutional, attentional, and craft governors that shape the river around the things worth preserving.

Read Chapter 15 in the book →

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