

VOLUME ONE
- SPRING 1979
- Holmes Roston, III: Can and Ought We to Follow Nature?
- John N. Martin: The Concept of the Irreplaceable
- Charles Hartshorne: The Rights of the Subhuman World
- Philip M. Smith and Richard A. Watson: New Wilderness
Boundaries
- Donald C. Lee: Some Ethical Decision Criteria with Regard
to Procreation
- J. Baird Callicott: Elements of an Environmental Ethic:
Moral Considerablity and the Biotic Community
- SUMMER 1979
- Richard A. Watson: Self-Consciousness and the Rights
of Nonhuman Animals and Nature
- Aldo Leopold: Some Fundamentals of Conservation in the
Southwest
- Susan L. Flader: Leopold's Some Fundamentals of Conservation:
A Commentary
- John B. Cobb, Jr.: Christian Existence in a World of
Limits
- Don Howard: Commoner on Reductionism
- FALL 1979
- Don E. Marietta, Jr,: The Interrelationship of Ecological
Science and Environmental Ethics
- Eugene C. Hargrove: The Historical Foundations of American
Environmental Attitudes
- R. V. Young, Jr.: A Conservative View of Environmental
Affairs
- Kathleen M. Squadrito: Locke's View of Dominion
- R. J. Nelson: Ethics and Environmental Decision Making
- WINTER 1979
- Klaus M. Meyer-Abich: Toward a Practical Philosophy of
Nature
- William Godfrey-Smith: The Value of Wilderness
- Peter Heinegg: Ecology and Social Justice: Ethical Dilemmas
and Revolutionary Hopes
- Robert C. Oelhaf: Environmental Ethics: Atomistic Abstraction
or Holistic Affection?
- Edwin P. Pister: Endangered Species: Costs and Benefits
- Roland C. Clement: Watson's Reciprocity of Rights and
Duties
- Eric Katz: Utilitarianism and Preservation
- P. Aarne Vesilind: What Is and What Is Not Natural