The insights of scientific and empirical modes of knowing are indispensable for understanding and responding to our contemporary environmental crisis. So also, we will need environmental approaches, such as law, economics, and technology. We recall, too, that other cognitive ways of knowing are manifest in culturally diverse pathways that treasure emotional intelligence and affective insight. What is especially noteworthy is traditional environmental knowledge found among Indigenous peoples that have both observational and affective components. Indigenous people often speak of the natural world as filled with kin relationships requiring reciprocity and gratitude. Science-that-sees-the-whole is beginning to appreciate these other ways of knowing without giving over its foundational empirical approach. In addition, there is a growing appreciation for the multiple “intelligences” in the world. This conference aimed to explore some of those intelligences from plants and animals, to trees and forests, to fish and birds. It recognized the value of Indigenous, artistic, and modern ecological ways of knowing in which organic interconnectivity is acknowledged and affirmed.