When contemplating the current ecological discourse, we find attempts to draw attention to what Ibn Khaldun calls signs of extinction, extinction, principles of damage, and the weakening of the conditions of states and civilization. The face of modernity in the foreground lies not in its absence of intellectual postulates that are linked to ancient historical periods, but in the research psyche and intellectual ambition that makes it penetrate into the field of cosmic debate.

It is true that the question of the environment today has reached a degree of complexity that would not have been imagined by man in the pre-modern, pre-industrial and technological stages. But it is also no less correct to see that the answers to this question come not only from within the system that produced it, but from outside.