Hey everyone. New account because I forgot my password and we can't seem to find a way to recover it. Sorry about that. I'll try to respond to a few of your comments now:
First, a question for funkyanarchy. Can you explain what you mean by the "dogmatic/ideological" character of wildism? I don't necessarily disagree when it comes to the core points, but I just don't fully understand why so many anarchists say they are against "ideology." No matter how hard I try, I can't make heads or tails of it. What is the alternative, and is it possible?
Dot, you asked about new words. Funny story. I actually agree with you in general. I hate neologisms with a passion, so I didn't like "wildism" at first. In fact, early on I just used the word "primitivism" -- without the "anarcho-" -- because, well, I agreed with you. But then two things happened.
First, the primitivists were up in arms. Kevin Tucker in particular went all out in attacking me, as he does. Zerzan completely ignored me. It was a frustrating experience.
Second, the people I was working with, some Spaniards who work with Kaczynski, refused to adopt the name. As a popularizer of their ideology at the time, I said that we needed SOME kind of name, and they recommended "indomitismo," which means "ideology of indomitability" or "wildism" or whatever. So I went with that.
Later I went off and did my own thing, keeping the name "wildism" because, as it turns out, the indomitistas didn't want to be called anything. Also, the website is already wildism.org, and I don't want to change it. And besides, it's useful to have the name, because while I like "eco-radical" or "eco-anarchist" or even, sometimes, plain-old "primitivist," the term "wildist" conveys in a very direct manner what the philosophy is about, and through questions about wildism I, as a popularizer, am better able to accent the unique aspects of the ideas.
In regards to the questions about "nature":
It's important to understand that there are two mutually exclusive definitions of the word "nature" that are relevant here. The first is capital-N Nature, synonymous with all of reality. This definition is popular in many of the hard sciences, like physics, a holdover from the Enlightenment when natural philosophers needed a word for the world without the supernatural.
Another definition of "nature" is in contrast to "artificial," and these are categories WITHIN the material world, like "Jew" and "Gentile." This contrast between naturalness and artificialness is important in many biological fields, like conservation, sociobiology, and ecology; and it is also the meaning of "nature" in environmental ethics.
If it helps, there is an alternative discourse used by the indomitistas. They only use Nature to refer to the material world, or reality. Then, they speak of "wild Nature" or "the wild" in contrast to "the artificial." I don't use this only because the "nature/artifice" discourse that I use is so common already, and in fields that I draw on to articulate many of my points. It would be too confusing to have a new discourse entirely.
Someone also brought up the "is-ought" problem. There isn't one here. It would be a problem if I equated what "is" with what "ought" to be, but that's not quite what occurs. Instead, we apply our value of "wildness" to the "is," and from this we can an "ought." Not an objective "ought," mind you, but an "ought" that is our own, based on our individual values.
There's another aspect of this that I don't often bring up, but "wildness" is basically a negating value, not a positive one. It is a call to NOT control, to NOT dominate nature. This negation is characteristic of the pessimistic philosophers, from whom we derive most of our critique of Progress. This isn't entirely relevant to the question, but I thought you'd find it interesting nonetheless.
Finally, there was a question about what constituted "control" and "made." This is a complicated question. Like I said, these terms are just to provide a rough language for talking about our values. In general, I would recommend "Refocusing Ecocentrism" by Nedd Hettinger and Bill Throop. In it, they describe what makes qualities more wild (i.e., natural) and the opposite, more artificial. For instance, although a baby is "made" by humans, this can only be confused with the artificial kind of "made" because of the messiness of language. Clearly childbirth has enough of a quality of naturalness that it would be considered part of human nature. It is a process we generally discern as mostly outside of human and technical control.
If you want a better answer, I wrote some stuff on it in "The Foundations of Wildist Ethics," pp. 33-34 ("The Social Progressivists' Trick") and "Misanthropy."
If anyone wants to avoid all the academic reading and just get on to how this would look in practice, I recommend looking into Individualidades Tendiendo a lo Salvaje and the eco-extremists. Although we used to be divided on them regarding the question of "revolution," I've recently been convinced of their position, so we no longer disagree on that point. And with that gone, I'd say that the philosophical foundations -- pessimism, fatalism, etc. -- are nearly the same. And their modus operandi is decidedly non-, even anti-, humanist. There is one major and obscure difference between ITS and my own position, but not enough for me to not recommend them or republish their stuff.