@ARTICLE{Schetz_Adriana_Ecophilosophical_2020, author={Schetz, Adriana}, number={No 4}, journal={Przegląd Filozoficzny. Nowa Seria}, pages={587-595}, howpublished={online}, year={2020}, publisher={Komitet Nauk Filozoficznych PAN}, publisher={Wydział Filozofii Uniwersytetu Warszawskiego}, abstract={Roman Ingarden’s work is widely taken as promoting a philosophical anthropology in which considerations from philosophy of ecology, that is, ecophilosophy, have no secure place. I think this contention is too hasty, even though Ingarden himself did not undertake reflections on the responsibility of humans for their natural environment. It is true that here and there he was giving explicit expression to his conviction of the unimportance of biological origins of humans, and was putting a strong emphasis on culture and other intentional creatures of humanity. In my paper I have tried to trace and describe Ingardenian understanding of humans in relation to their environment, and especially to nature. I have made an attempt to show how free human actions are possible, which in turn enforces on humans some responsibility for their actions, including those that impinge upon the nature around them.}, type={Artykuły / Articles}, title={Ecophilosophical reading of some principles of Ingardenian anthropology}, URL={http://journals.pan.pl/Content/118095/PDF/2020-04-PFIL-36-Schetz.pdf}, doi={10.24425/pfns.2020.135093}, keywords={anthropology, ecophilosophy, R. Ingarden, monad, relatively isolated system}, }