Swami Vivekananda and the Environment: Ancient Wisdom for a Planet in Crisis
Climate change, biodiversity loss, polluted rivers, disappearing forests, these are often framed as problems of modern science and technology. Yet, at their deepest level, they arise from something far more fundamental: the way human beings understand their relationship with nature. Long before concepts such as ecology, sustainability, or environmental ethics entered academic and policy discourse, Swami Vivekananda spoke of oneness, harmony, restraint, and responsibility. When read today, his ideas offer a remarkably clear ethical and philosophical lens through which the contemporary environmental crisis can be understood. Swami Vivekananda (1863–1902) did not write treatises on environmental conservation in the modern sense. However, he consistently interrogated the human mindset that leads to exploitation, whether of nature, society, or fellow human beings. His philosophy addresses the roots of environmental degradation rather than its symptoms. Seen in this light, Vivekananda emerge...