Gaianist
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Noun
[edit]Gaianist (plural Gaianists)
- An adherent of Gaianism.
- 1992, A. M. Mannion, S. R. Bowlby, editors, Environmental Issues in the 1990s, Wiley, →ISBN, page 166:
- Gaianists derive their ideas from the recent theory of James Lovelock, who argues that the biosphere operates as if it were a single living entity which he calls Gaia, after the Greek Goddess of the earth (Chapter 1).
- 2000, Martin Phillips, Tim Mighall, Society and Exploitation Through Nature, London, New York, N.Y.: Prentice Hall, →ISBN, page 30:
- Rather than talk of increasing control of nature, deep ecologists and Gaianists, for example, warn of the ‘revenge of nature’, a notion that has also started to appear in some recent environmental histories such as that of Murphy (1994).