The value of ‘naturalness’ in organic agriculture
Abstract
Producers, traders and consumers of organic food regularly use the concept of the naturalnatural to characteri ze
organic agriculture or organic food. Critics sometimes argue that such use lacks any rational (scientific)
basis and only refers to sentiment. We carried out research to (1) better understand the content and the
use of the concepts of nature and the natural in organic agriculture, (2) to reconstruct the value basis
underlying the use of the concept of the natural in organic agriculture, and (3) to draw implications for
agricultural practice and policy. A literature study and the authors’ own experience were used to produce
a discussion document with explicit statements about the meaning of natural in the different areas of
organic agriculture. These statements were validated by means of qualitative interviews with stakeholders.
The concept of nature or the natural appeared to be value-laden. The value basis is a normative reconstruction that cannot just be derived from the use of the word natural by organic stakeholders. For
this reconstructed concept the word naturalness is used. Naturalness thus becomes an ethical value for
organic agriculture, an inspirational guide for organic stakeholders. The value of naturalness refers to
a basic respect for the intrinsic value of nature, i.e., the value nature has, independent of the benefits
it may have for humans. This manifests itself in three ways: (1) in the use of natural substances, (2) in
respecting the self-regulation of living organisms and ecosystems, and (3) in respecting the characteristic
(species-specific) nature of living organisms. If organic stakeholders limit themselves to using natural
substances it is called the no-chemicals approach. If they also respect the self-organization of living organisms the authors call it the agro-ecological approach. If also the normative element of naturalness is
included, it is called the integrity approach.
organic agriculture or organic food. Critics sometimes argue that such use lacks any rational (scientific)
basis and only refers to sentiment. We carried out research to (1) better understand the content and the
use of the concepts of nature and the natural in organic agriculture, (2) to reconstruct the value basis
underlying the use of the concept of the natural in organic agriculture, and (3) to draw implications for
agricultural practice and policy. A literature study and the authors’ own experience were used to produce
a discussion document with explicit statements about the meaning of natural in the different areas of
organic agriculture. These statements were validated by means of qualitative interviews with stakeholders.
The concept of nature or the natural appeared to be value-laden. The value basis is a normative reconstruction that cannot just be derived from the use of the word natural by organic stakeholders. For
this reconstructed concept the word naturalness is used. Naturalness thus becomes an ethical value for
organic agriculture, an inspirational guide for organic stakeholders. The value of naturalness refers to
a basic respect for the intrinsic value of nature, i.e., the value nature has, independent of the benefits
it may have for humans. This manifests itself in three ways: (1) in the use of natural substances, (2) in
respecting the self-regulation of living organisms and ecosystems, and (3) in respecting the characteristic
(species-specific) nature of living organisms. If organic stakeholders limit themselves to using natural
substances it is called the no-chemicals approach. If they also respect the self-organization of living organisms the authors call it the agro-ecological approach. If also the normative element of naturalness is
included, it is called the integrity approach.
Keywords
concept of nature and naturalness; environment; ethics; farm ecology; health; integrity of life, organic food
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