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Glossary›Biophilia

Glossary

Biophilia

The innate human tendency to seek connections with nature and other forms of life, rooted in evolutionary biology and essential to physical and psychological well-being.

What is Biophilia?

Biophilia is the hypothesis that humans possess an innate tendency to seek connections with nature and other forms of life. More precisely, biophilia is defined as “our innate tendency to focus upon life and life-like forms and, in some instances, to affiliate with them emotionally.” The concept proposes that this affinity is not culturally learned but biologically embedded—a product of millions of years of human evolution in natural environments. Biophilia is not a human given but a human potential, one that requires cultivation and conscious engagement to fully manifest.

The biophilia hypothesis rests on two fundamental constructs: fascination and affiliation. These are operational elements that can be measured and studied, making biophilia more than philosophical speculation. The theory argues that our nervous systems, cognitive architecture, and emotional responses evolved in close relationship with the natural world, and that disconnection from nature exacts measurable psychological and physiological costs.

Origins & Lineage

The term biophilia was first used by German-born American psychoanalyst Erich Fromm in The Anatomy of Human Destructiveness (1973), which described biophilia as “the passionate love of life and of all that is alive.” Fromm had introduced the concept earlier in The Heart of Man: Its Genius for Good and Evil (1964), defining it as “The love of life and all that is alive.” For Fromm, biophilia represented a psychological orientation toward growth, life, and connection—contrasted with necrophilia, an attraction to death and decay.

Edward O. Wilson introduced and popularized the hypothesis in his book, Biophilia (1984). Wilson, a Harvard entomologist and evolutionary biologist, reframed the concept through the lens of sociobiology and conservation ethics. Both Fromm and Wilson agree that biophilia has a biological basis and that it is fundamental to develop harmonious relationships between humans and the biosphere.

In 1993, Stephen R. Kellert and Edward O. Wilson co-edited The Biophilia Hypothesis, published by Island Press, which assembled interdisciplinary evidence from biology, psychology, anthropology, and architecture. Kellert, a Yale professor of social ecology, went on to develop biophilic design as an applied field. Stephen Kellert was one of the pioneers of biophilic design and with Elizabeth Calabrese published The Practice of Biophilic Design. His work translated Wilson’s theoretical framework into actionable principles for architects, urban planners, and designers.

How It’s Practiced

Biophilia is practiced both as direct nature engagement and as design philosophy. The most direct contemporary practice is forest bathing (shinrin-yoku), a Japanese practice reconnecting people with nature, alleviating effects of stress and burnout, developed in the 1980s during tech boom. Forest Therapy evolved from the practice of Shinrin-Yoku in Japan, which literally translates to “Forest Bathing”. Instead of actual bathing in nature though, we are spending our time immersing ourselves in the forest in a slow, mindful way. The practice includes a series of “invitations” to engage the body senses, often guided by certified forest therapy practitioners.

In the built environment, biophilic design applies the hypothesis to architecture and urban planning. Biophilic design is the deliberate attempt to translate an understanding of the inherent human affinity to affiliate with natural systems and processes—known as biophilia (Wilson 1984, Kellert and Wilson 1993)—into the design of the built environment. Practical applications include incorporating natural light, living plants, water features, natural materials, organic forms, and views of nature into buildings. The framework “14 patterns of biophilic design: Improving health and well-being in the built environment” by Terrapin Bright Green offers specific implementation strategies.

Biophilic design requires repeated and sustained engagement with nature. Biophilic design encourages an emotional attachment to particular settings and places. Biophilic design promotes positive interactions between people and nature that encourage an expanded sense of relationship and responsibility for the human and natural communities.

Biophilia Today

Contemporary seekers encounter biophilia through multiple channels. Forest bathing experiences are offered by certified guides trained through organizations like the Association of Nature and Forest Therapy Guides and Programs (ANFT). Urban nature therapy programs bring biophilic practices to city parks and green spaces. Wellness retreats incorporate nature immersion as core programming.

In design, biophilic principles now influence healthcare facilities, schools, workplaces, and residential buildings. Green building certification systems increasingly include biophilic criteria. Research institutions study measurable outcomes: new research supports measureable, positive impacts of biophilic design on health, strengthening the empirical evidence for the human-nature connection, including reduced stress hormones, improved cognitive function, faster hospital recovery times, and enhanced immune response.

Biophilia also appears in ecotherapy, horticultural therapy, wilderness therapy programs, and nature-based mindfulness practices. The concept has entered environmental education and conservation psychology as a framework for understanding why humans protect—or fail to protect—the natural world.

Common Misconceptions

Biophilia is not nature worship or romantic environmentalism. It is a scientific hypothesis about human evolutionary psychology, testable through empirical research. The concept does not claim that all humans automatically love nature or that nature contact is universally healing—biophobia (fear of nature) and individual variation are acknowledged within the framework.

Biophilia is not the same as sustainability or environmentalism, though it may support both. Biophilia is referred to as “the missing link in sustainable design”—suggesting that green building practices focused solely on resource efficiency may fail without attention to human psychological needs.

The hypothesis does not romanticize pre-industrial life or advocate abandoning technology. For more than 99% of our species history we biologically developed in adaptive response to natural not artificial or human created forces. Most of what we regard as normal today is of relatively recent origin—raising food on a large-scale just in the last 12,000 years; the invention of the city, 6000 years old. The framework accepts modern life while arguing that humans still carry ancient biological programming.

Finally, biophilic design is not simply adding plants to buildings. Superficial greenwashing—a potted plant in a windowless room—misses the deeper principles of pattern, light, complexity, and authentic connection that the hypothesis describes.

How to Begin

For direct practice, seek a certified forest therapy guide through the Association of Nature and Forest Therapy (anft.earth) or practice solitary nature immersion: find a natural setting, silence devices, walk slowly without destination, and engage all senses for at least 20 minutes.

For conceptual understanding, begin with Wilson’s Biophilia (1984), the accessible foundational text that introduces the hypothesis through personal narrative and evolutionary biology. Follow with The Biophilia Hypothesis (Kellert and Wilson, 1993) for interdisciplinary perspectives. For design applications, consult Kellert’s Nature by Design: The Practice of Biophilic Design (2018) or the Terrapin Bright Green report “14 Patterns of Biophilic Design” (freely available online).

In daily life, the simplest entry point is deliberate attention: notice your physiological and emotional responses to natural versus built environments, track where you feel most alert or most calm, and begin to recognize the patterns Wilson and Kellert documented. The hypothesis suggests this awareness is already latent within you, awaiting recognition.

Related terms

forest bathingecotherapynature connectionbiomimicrydeep ecologyecopsychology
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