No one argues that continuing depredation of our environment threatens our planet and our existence on it, but conflict arises in finding a solution to the problem. Suggesting that the panacea offered by science and technology is too narrow, 15 philosophers, theologians, and environmentalists argue for a response to ecology that recognizes the tools of science but includes a more spiritual approach-one with a more humanistic, holistic view based on inherent reverence toward the natural world. Writers whose orientations range from Buddhism to evangelical Christianity to Catholicism to Native American beliefs explore ways to achieve this paradigm shift and suggest that "the environment is not only a spiritual issue, but the spiritual issue of our time."
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Product Description:
'the environment is not only a spiritual issue, bu the spiritual issue of our time'...
About the Author:
All editors are at the University of New Hampshire, where JOHN CARROLL is Professor of Environmental Conservation, author of Environmental Diplomacy (1983) and editor of Embracing Earth (1994). PAUL BROCKELMAN is Professor of Philosophy, Director of Religious Studies, and author of The Inside Story (1992). MARY WESTFALL is the university's Protestant Chaplain and an ordained Presbyterian minister.
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