The ancient Greek goddess of Earth; also used in modern science to refer to Earth as a single living system.
From ancient Greek 'Gaia,' one of the primordial deities in Greek mythology who personified the Earth itself. Modern scientists revived the term in the 1970s with the 'Gaia hypothesis,' suggesting Earth functions as a self-regulating organism.
Scientist James Lovelock revived the Gaia concept in 1972 when computers let him model Earth as an interconnected system—and it's mind-blowing that ancient people personified Earth as a goddess at all, almost as if they intuitively understood ecological interconnectedness thousands of years before science proved it.
Gaia (Earth goddess) reframed in 1970s-80s as 'Mother Earth' archetype. While reclaiming feminine cosmology, it can reinforce earth-as-nurturing-womb essentialism, limiting earth's agency to reproductive/caretaking roles.
Use 'Gaia hypothesis' or 'Gaia principle' for the scientific concept. When discussing Earth, balance feminine metaphors with acknowledgment of Earth's dynamic, destructive, and autonomous agency.
["Earth","biosphere","planetary system"]
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