A Short Note on Human Ecology
Received: 02-May-2022 / Manuscript No. jety-22-63230 / Editor assigned: 04-May-2022 / PreQC No. jety-22-63230 (PQ); / Reviewed: 11-May-2022 / QC No. jety-22-63230 / Revised: 16-May-2022 / Manuscript No. jety-22-63230 (R); / Accepted Date: 23-May-2022 / Published Date: 23-May-2022 DOI: 10.4172/jety.1000128
Editorial
Human Ecology is the study of the relations between mortal and non-human nature in different societies. Human Ecology combines the ideas and styles from several disciplines, including anthropology, sociology, biology, profitable history and archeology. Our multidisciplinary approach enables us to exhaustively address issues of environmental justice, sustainability and political ecology [1].
The term ecology was chased by Ernst Haeckel in 1866 and defined by direct reference to the frugality of nature. Like other contemporary experimenters of his time, Haeckel espoused his language from Carl Linnaeus where mortal ecological connections were more apparent [2].
Human Ecology studies mortal life and mortal exertion in different ecosystems and different societies in the present and in the history in order to gain a better understanding of the factors which impact the commerce between humans and their terrain [3].
The ambition to achieve a more complete view requires an intertwined perspective that transcends traditional boundaries between the humanities, social lores, natural lores, andtechnology.A abecedarian issue in mortal ecology is how people's artistic beliefs about the nature affect and are affected by their livelihoods and the social order [4].
While artistic beliefs come into focus in the influential ultramodern lores like economics, mortal ecologists examine the ultramodern generalities of profitable growth and technological development from an anthropological perspective. By comparing those generalities with other scientifical perceptivity about environmental declination, climate change and global inequality, mortal ecology challenges the ideas that perpetuates an unsustainable and unstable global society [5].
Studies in Human Ecology give you a broad and theoretically deep understanding of the relations between man and nature in different times and in different corridor of the world. Of central significance is to understand how the mortal connections with the terrain are told by their history and their place in the world system [6].
Mortal ecology is an ideal subject for you if you want to make a career with broad openings in educational, environmental or philanthropic work. The capacity to communicate and negotiate issues of global sustainability will be decreasingly important for a wide range of professions, including careers in education, journalism, public and private operation, development aid, and non-governmental associations devoted to achieving a encyclopedically sustainable development. In these sectors, trans-correctional approaches combining perspectives from both the natural and the social lores can be anticipated to be decreasingly in demand [7].
The mortal lores are balkanized into several social wisdom, humanistic, and mortal natural disciplines. Ecologists are used to allowing that systemic nature of individual organisms and populations of organisms mean that we generally have to understand how different corridor of the system operate together to produce gets. The traditional mortal wisdom disciplines take people piecemeal; mortal ecologists endeavour to put us back together. Breaking complex problems down to operationally compliant corridor is a great strategy, but only so long as some are comitted to puting them back together in the end! Second, mortal ecologists suppose that humans are subject to veritably analogous ecological and evolutionary processes as any otherspecies. Of course, humans are unique, and this fact has important consequences. Still, we think that the deep rifts between mortal biologists and social scientists (and between scientists and humanists for that matter) are a deeply embarassing reproach that honest scholars are obliged to repair as expeditiously as possible [8].
The roots of ecology as a broader discipline can be traced to the Greeks and a lengthy list of developments in natural history wisdom. Ecology also has specially developed in other societies. Traditional knowledge, as it's called, includes the mortal propensity for intuitive knowledge, intelligent relations, understanding, and for passing on information about the natural world and the mortal experience Linnaeus presented early ideas plant in ultramodern aspects to mortal ecology, including the balance of nature while pressing the significance of ecological functions (ecosystem services or natural capital in ultramodern terms). The work 2 of Linnaeus told Charles Darwin and other scientists of his time who used Linnaeus' language (i.e., the frugality and polis of nature) with direct counteraccusations on matters of mortal affairs, ecology, and economics. Ecology isn't just natural, but a mortal wisdom as well. An early and influential social scientist in the history of mortal ecology was Herbert Spencer [9].
Spencer was told by and recompensed his influence onto the workshop of Charles Darwin. The history of mortal ecology has strong roots in terrain and sociology departments of the late 19th century. In this environment a major literal development or corner that stimulated exploration into the ecological relations between humans and their civic surroundings was innovated in George Perkins Marsh's book Man and Nature; or, physical terrain as modified by mortal action, which was published in 1864. The first English- language use of the term"ecology"is credited to American druggist and author of the field of home economics, Ellen Swallow Richards. Richards first introduced the term as"oekology"in 1892, and latterly developed the term" mortal ecology" [10].
Acknowledgement
None
Conflict of Interest
None
References
- Hartig T (2008) The Lancet 372 (9650): 1614-1615.
- Huntington HP (2000) Ecol Appl 10(5): 1270-1274.
- Turner NJ, Ignace MB, Ignace R (2000) Ecol Appl 10(5): 1275-1287.
- Davis A, Wagner JR (2003) Hum Ecol 31(3): 463-489.
- Earce T (2010) J Hist Biol 43 (3): 493-528.
- Egerton FN (2007) Bull Ecol Soc Am 88: 50-69.
- Reid GM (2009) Taxon 58(1): 18-31.
- Foster J (2003) Environ Monit Assess 86 (1-2): 63-74.
- Stauffer RC (1957) Q Rev Biol 32(2): 138-144.
- Kormandy EJ, Wooster Donald (1978) Ecology 59(6): 1292-1294.
, ,
, ,
, ,
, ,
, ,
,
, ,
, ,
Citation: Hamidi K (2022) A Short Note on Human Ecology. J Ecol Toxicol, 6: 128. DOI: 10.4172/jety.1000128
Copyright: © 2022 Hamidi K. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
Share This Article
Recommended Journals
天美传媒 Access Journals
Article Tools
Article Usage
- Total views: 1108
- [From(publication date): 0-2022 - Jan 10, 2025]
- Breakdown by view type
- HTML page views: 794
- PDF downloads: 314