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Our dominant ways of life are guided by an underlying worldview that has been the main driver behind climate change, pandemics and extinction rates. Overwhelming evidence reveals that our original Indigenous, nature-based worldview is an antidote. Supporting and Re-embracing this interconnected way of living is the most urgent course of action we must take.
From the book’s epigraph:
According to the United Nations 2019 Global Assessment Report on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services:
“The findings of this Assessment…are based on an unprecedented collection of evidence, integrating natural and social science perspectives, a range of knowledge systems and multiple dimensions of value. This is the first global-level assessment to systematically consider evidence about the contributions of indigenous and local knowledge and practices to the enhancement and maintenance of wild and domesticated biodiversity and landscapes.” (1)
“The report shows that 75% of the land-based environment and about 66% of the marine environment have been significantly altered by human actions. On average, these trends have been less severe — or avoided — in areas held or managed by Indigenous Peoples.” (2)
“The notion of a good life that most Indigenous Peoples share is deeply relational: the relation to the land with all its interconnected human and nonhuman inhabitants constitutes their collective self-understanding as community. Livelihoods sovereignty is an essential condition to keep this bond. These contributions of nature to notions of a good life may be under threat as access to nature—or key components of nature—are lost.” (3)
“Consumption patterns area fundamental driver of material extraction, production, and flows, but they too are driven—by worldviews and notions of good quality of life.” (4)
“The loss of Indigenous languages is potentially a major problem for value diversity and authenticity. In many regions, community values that support sustainable trajectories using indigenous knowledge are at risk of extinction, which results in the loss of biodiversity. The value of the knowledge-practice-belief complex of Indigenous Peoples relating to conservation of biodiversity are central to the sustainable management of ecosystems and biodiversity.” (5)
Sociocultural framings, norms, worldviews and relational values influence the outcomes of sociotechnological innovations enormously. Nevertheless, these factors remain largely overlooked in studies on sustainable sociotechnological transformations. (6)
From Restoring the Kinship Worldview by Wahinkpe Topa (Four Arrows) and Darcia Narvaez, published by North Atlantic Books, copyright © 2022 by Wahinkpe Topa (Four Arrows) and Darcia Narvaez. Reprinted by permission of North Atlantic Books.
By Four Arrows and Darcia Narvaez, PhD
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Four Arrows leads a lively discussion with members of Veterans For Peace on using the Worldview Chart for a 90-day self-study or community learning, with a follow--up survey.
Restoring Our Kinship Worldview: Indigenous Voices Introduce 28 Precepts For Rebalancing Life On Planet Earth – A Podcast Interview With The Authors, Four Arrows and Darcia Narvaez.
Four Arrows and Darcia Narvaez introduce the Worldview Chart they explore in their current book, Restoring the Kinship Worldview: Indigenous Voices Introduce 28 Precepts For Rebalancing Life On Planet Earth. This book is about worldview and the consciousness it creates and reflects. It is a topic of utmost importance for the continuation of humanity. “Worldview is a concept ‘whose time has come, ’and its increasing appearance in the contemporary climate change and global sustainability debates can be understood as both response to, and reflection of, the challenges of our time and the solutions they demand.” Everyone acts according to their worldview, an implicit set of assumptions that guide behavior.
Listen to the authors of Restoring the Kinship Worldview talk about reclaiming our millions year-old embodied wisdom through Indigenous Worldview. Most philosophical positions are rooted in western enlightenment assumptions of human superiority to and separation from nature, the notion of human cultural progress, and individualism—all part of what anthropologist Marshall Sahlins called the ‘western illusion of human nature.’ Virtually all prior and contemporaneous cultures had a different orientation, one of human interconnectedness and partnership with the biocommunity and a cyclical panpsychism. Social anthropologist Robert Redfield concluded that there are essentially two worldviews—a set of implicit assumptions that guide one’s values, philosophy, and attitudes towards life. We name these the dominant and the Indigenous worldviews.
In this interactive conversation, Jeremy Lent explores with Four Arrows (Wahinkpe Topa) and Darcia Narvaez some of the fascinating insights emerging from their recent book, Restoring the Kinship Worldview, covering an unusually broad range of topics—from gender roles to restorative justice, and from sacred competition to mutual dependence—that provide insights into the practices that have enabled Indigenous communities to live in harmony with each other and the nonhuman world for millennia.
When Andrea found the book, Restoring the Kinship Worldview, by Four Arrows and Darcia Narvaez, she found the worldview framing she needed to validate her choice to follow her wisdom and James’ lead. Narvaez’s book, The Evolved Nest, provided further scientific backing for Andrea, so much so that she recently presented her story to a group of Vanderbilt pediatricians in hopes of normalizing nurturing for disabled children and creating policy support for the families who care for them.
An essay inspired by the introduction to the new book by Four Arrows and Darcia Narvaez, Restoring Our Kinship Worldview: Indigenous Voices Introduce 28 Precepts For Rebalancing Life On Planet Earth.
“The idea that self-actualization is a long term process that few ever meet stands in contrast to an Indigenous worldview that sees self-actualization existing at birth. Mazlow’s perspective reflects the absence of Indigenous worldview and reflects the cause and consequence of a misguided dominant, hierarchical and materialistic worldview. There is evidence that Maslow knew this, self-actualization exists from the start and relevant efforts are about perpetuating it via the community.” – Four Arrows
This book is about worldview and the consciousness it creates and reflects. It is a topic of utmost importance for the continuation of humanity. “Worldview is a concept ‘whose time has come, ’and its increasing appearance in the contemporary climate change and global sustainability debates can be understood as both response to, and reflection of, the challenges of our time and the solutions they demand.”2 Everyone acts according to their worldview, an implicit set of assumptions that guide behavior.
Our researchers are some of the brightest minds in their fields, with years of experience and a passion for discovery. Meet the team behind our groundbreaking work and learn more about their areas of expertise.
What’s a worldview?
A worldview is a delocalized general sense of how the world works. It’s a cosmology about what humans are, what they should learn, how they should behave and their purpose; how humans relate to the rest of the manifest natural world; and what is our relation to the unmanifest, the spiritual?
Worldview and TEK
Worldview differs from traditional ecological knowledge (TEK) that is localized knowledge Indigenous/First Nation Peoples develops from deep experience in a particular landscape.
So, there are two kinds of Indigenous knowhow missing in the dominant culture that are apparent around the world in First Nation Peoples: the Kinship worldview and TEK. Our book focuses on the former.
How did we lose the Kinship worldview?
Our baselines for normality shifted over time in terms of child raising and cultural practices, downshifting human nature to primate levels. Allowing unfettered inequality has led to endemic Wetiko virus (cannibalistic greed). Modern societies operate trauma-inducing pathways instead of the wellness-promoting pathway we evolved.
How does the Kinship worldview differ from the dominant one?
See the Worldview Chart. Worldview” does not belong to a race or group of people, but Indigenous cultures who still hold on to their traditional place-based knowledge are the wisdom keepers of this original Nature-based worldview. All people are indigenous to Earth and have the right and the responsibility to practice and teach the IW precepts. All have the responsibility to support Indigenous sovereignty, dignity, and use of traditional lands.
“For non-Indians who are concerned about misappropriation, see the peer reviewed article,“The Indigenization Controversy: For Whom By Whom.”
The Worldview Chart and introduction was created by Wahinkpe Topa (Four Arrows), a.k.a. Don Trent Jacobs, Ph.D., Ed.D. and originally published in The Red Road (chanku luta): Linking Diversity and Inclusion Initiatives to Indigenous Worldview, 2020. The chart is featured in Restoring the Kindship Worldview, 2022, by Four Arrows and Darcia Narvaez, Ph.D.
You are invited to download this version of the Worldview Chart below, or purchase a poster-size version here. You can also find Spanish and German versions of the chart here. PLEASE READ the Seven Considerations for Using the Worldview Chart below.
Free to download as a PDF!
All of the instructions on this page are contained in this guide.
Copyright © 2024 Worldview Literacy Project - All Rights Reserved. An educational research project of Kindred World.
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