Cajete describes the importance of
the geography of the Americas in native American worldviews. The relationship
to the place(s) of their ancestors, to the animal and plant worlds is central
to the sense of the sacred in these cultures. The expression "Look to the
mountains" reminds native Americans to think of the long-range impact on
future generations when deciding what to do. Materialist modern ways often
fail to take the long-range impact into account.
The Pueblo theology of place is "the
complex of relationship, symbolism, attitude, and way of interacting with
the land." The expression "that place that the People talk about" refers
not only to a physical place but also a spiritual place. One's environment
is not simply a passive object; it is alive and dynamic. Each person belongs
to a place, and it is the place that makes people what they are.
Hunting and planting are viewed as
part of the transformation of nature. The "hunter of good heart" is one
who brings life to his people. This requires an intimate understanding
of the animal and a knowledge of the animal's importance in the ecological
cycle. An animal's life is sacrificed to continue human life. The hunter
of good heart teaches that humans repay animals through the death of their
own flesh for the purpose of perpetuating animal life.
Much philosophy of indigenous peoples
is passed on through story and proverb. A story that relates how the cricket
and the hare tricked the opossum into shaving his tail--believing it would
make him more beautiful--"is a reflection on how people can get carried
away by egotistical desires." The Pueblo proverb, "We are all kernels on
the same cob of corn," expresses the commonality of all people.
In a "post-modern" world, many indigenous
people have experienced a split or schizophrenic existence. Problems with
alcoholism, suicide, and abuse of self and others reflect the anxiety that
comes from the cultural split between ancient and modern ways. Indigenous
artists have depicted this division or paranoia. The re-learning of the
ecological ways of indigenous peoples is an avenue to overcoming this split
in the psyche of people mired in materialist pursuits.