Contesting the Radical Monopoly: a Critical View on the Motorized Culture from a Cyclonaut Perspective

In our motorized societies, the “radical monopoly” (Illich) of the automobile is the evidence that our engine culture dominates. At the socio-technical level, we are all beginning to be “motorcentric”, in the same way that we are egocentric, ethnocentric, and anthropocentric. I argue that traveling...

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Main Author: Damien Delorme
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: LED Edizioni Universitarie 2018-11-01
Series:Relations
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.ledonline.it/index.php/Relations/article/view/1345
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spelling doaj-96bafe5811bb4d3480149ec68b9f3feb2020-11-25T03:14:54ZengLED Edizioni Universitarie Relations 2283-31962280-96432018-11-016221523110.7358/rela-2018-002-delo1087Contesting the Radical Monopoly: a Critical View on the Motorized Culture from a Cyclonaut PerspectiveDamien Delorme0Ph.D. Student and Teaching Fellow Ph. D Student and IRPHIL, Université Lyon 3 Jean Moulin Faculté de théologie protestante, IRSE, Université de Genève Lyon and Genève - FranceIn our motorized societies, the “radical monopoly” (Illich) of the automobile is the evidence that our engine culture dominates. At the socio-technical level, we are all beginning to be “motorcentric”, in the same way that we are egocentric, ethnocentric, and anthropocentric. I argue that traveling on a bicycle – i.e. becoming a “cyclonaut” – engenders per se a decentering experience. It fosters a critical outlook on the norms and usages of engine culture. The cyclist perspective can provide a phenomenological experience that introduces levels of consciousness (sensitive, ethical and political), typically neglected in the status quo dominated by automobiles. The automobile radical monopoly contributes to the dependency on fossil fuels driving climate change. From an environmental virtue ethics standpoint, a cyclonaut’s experience promotes a new paradigm for mobility based on the re-appropriation of bodily-powered autonomous movement that broadens our social imagination and contributes to facing our current environmental crisis. It also promotes a positive shift in our value system that enables us to be an example of a richer experience. Contrary to the current irrational waste of energy, cycling can offer a joyfulness that reconnects us with the fundamental aspects of existence – self-awareness, connectivity to the world, nature, and beauty. This paper is based on reflections developed during the “Untaking Space Project”. a 6,000-mile philosophical cycling trip, from Miami to Vancouver, occurred between January and August 2016 (http://www.usproject2016.com).http://www.ledonline.it/index.php/Relations/article/view/1345Environmental EthicsEnvironmental Virtue EthicsField PhilosophyEnvironmental PhilosophyAutomobile Radical Monopoly, Motorcentrism, Cyclonaut, Ecological self, Voluntary Simplicity, Mindfulness
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Damien Delorme
spellingShingle Damien Delorme
Contesting the Radical Monopoly: a Critical View on the Motorized Culture from a Cyclonaut Perspective
Relations
Environmental Ethics
Environmental Virtue Ethics
Field Philosophy
Environmental Philosophy
Automobile Radical Monopoly, Motorcentrism, Cyclonaut, Ecological self, Voluntary Simplicity, Mindfulness
author_facet Damien Delorme
author_sort Damien Delorme
title Contesting the Radical Monopoly: a Critical View on the Motorized Culture from a Cyclonaut Perspective
title_short Contesting the Radical Monopoly: a Critical View on the Motorized Culture from a Cyclonaut Perspective
title_full Contesting the Radical Monopoly: a Critical View on the Motorized Culture from a Cyclonaut Perspective
title_fullStr Contesting the Radical Monopoly: a Critical View on the Motorized Culture from a Cyclonaut Perspective
title_full_unstemmed Contesting the Radical Monopoly: a Critical View on the Motorized Culture from a Cyclonaut Perspective
title_sort contesting the radical monopoly: a critical view on the motorized culture from a cyclonaut perspective
publisher LED Edizioni Universitarie
series Relations
issn 2283-3196
2280-9643
publishDate 2018-11-01
description In our motorized societies, the “radical monopoly” (Illich) of the automobile is the evidence that our engine culture dominates. At the socio-technical level, we are all beginning to be “motorcentric”, in the same way that we are egocentric, ethnocentric, and anthropocentric. I argue that traveling on a bicycle – i.e. becoming a “cyclonaut” – engenders per se a decentering experience. It fosters a critical outlook on the norms and usages of engine culture. The cyclist perspective can provide a phenomenological experience that introduces levels of consciousness (sensitive, ethical and political), typically neglected in the status quo dominated by automobiles. The automobile radical monopoly contributes to the dependency on fossil fuels driving climate change. From an environmental virtue ethics standpoint, a cyclonaut’s experience promotes a new paradigm for mobility based on the re-appropriation of bodily-powered autonomous movement that broadens our social imagination and contributes to facing our current environmental crisis. It also promotes a positive shift in our value system that enables us to be an example of a richer experience. Contrary to the current irrational waste of energy, cycling can offer a joyfulness that reconnects us with the fundamental aspects of existence – self-awareness, connectivity to the world, nature, and beauty. This paper is based on reflections developed during the “Untaking Space Project”. a 6,000-mile philosophical cycling trip, from Miami to Vancouver, occurred between January and August 2016 (http://www.usproject2016.com).
topic Environmental Ethics
Environmental Virtue Ethics
Field Philosophy
Environmental Philosophy
Automobile Radical Monopoly, Motorcentrism, Cyclonaut, Ecological self, Voluntary Simplicity, Mindfulness
url http://www.ledonline.it/index.php/Relations/article/view/1345
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