The Liberation of Life: From the Cell to the Community, by Charles Birch and John B. Cobb, Jr., is primarily about the liberation of the concept of life and secondly about the liberation of the life of humans and nonhumans alike. It is based firmly on biological science, but at the same time rejects biology's dominant model of mechanism or materialism in favor of an "ecological model of life." This new ecological model provides an ethical, philosophical, and humane perspective which materialism cannot give. It brings together science, ethics, philosophy, religion, sociology, and political economy and casts new lifht on the problems raised by the contemporary issues of genetic engineering, abortion, euthanasia, conservation, economics, women's liberation, the limits of growth, and the future sustainability of the global society. Based on the lifetime experience and wisdom of its biologist and philosopher authors from two sides of the world, it speaks cogently and urgently to the critical needs of our time in a language all can understand.
"The Liberation of Life is a compelling and challenging journey from the cell to the community by way of the central problems of our age" (Warwick Fox, The Ecologist).
ISBN 0-9626807-0-2, paper: $21.00
ix, 353 pages, bibliography, index
Research for Beyond Spaceship Earth: Environmental Ethics and the
Solar System, edited by Eugene C. Hargrove, was supported by the Ethics and Value Studies Program of the National
Science Foundation. The contributors to this landmark study--including experts from NASA,
NOAA, and the U.S. Congress, engineers, ecologists, philosophers, writers, artists, and
medical and legal authorities--consider a broad range of topics related to the extension
of environmental and ethical concepts to our planetary environment, including the social,
medical, and economic implications of space exploration for human life, helath, and welfare;
Earth orbital pollution; ecological problems related to possible colonies in space and on
other planets; the commercial and industrial use of space; the exploration and utilization
of the Moon; near-Earth orbital asteroids, and other planetary bodies; the moral status of
extraterrestrial life; the preservation of nonliving natural value in the solar system;
the theological implications of space exploration; and the dangers of the military uses of
space.
ISBN 0-9626807-1-0, hardcover: $14.95
xv, 353 pages, index, color illustration section
The Beauty of Environment: A General Model for Environmental
Aesthetics, by Yrjo Sepanmaa, is the first comprehensive book on environmental aesthetics. It
Sepanmaa compares artistic beauty and natural beauty extensively and argues that it should be possible to develop a class of nature aesthetics experts that can provide objective testimony comparable to that of art experts. The difference is simply that although an appropriate terminology has been developed for art, it has not yet been developed for natural beauty.
ISBN 0-9626807-2-9, paper: $14.95
xv, 191 pages, index, bibliography
Originally published in 1972, Is It Too Late? A Theology of
Ecology, by John B. Cobb, Jr., was the first single-authored book-length environmental ethics text to deal
with the ecological crisis. As relevant today as it was over two decades ago, it serves
as a clear warning that the questions it addresses still urgently need to be answered!
Written for the Christian lay public and other concerned citizens, it is an excellent
introduction to key philosophical, theological, and ecological issues that require no
technical background in environmental philosophy. John B. Cobb, Jr. is professor of
philosophy at the School of Theology at Claremont in California. He is a pioneer
not only in environmental ethics, but is also process philosophy and theology. He
is co-founder of Process Studies and author of numerous books and articles.
". . . an updated classic with a massive new
bibliograpy that alone is worth the price of the book" (Herman E. Daly, School of Public
Affairs, University of Maryland).
ISBN 0-9626807-3-7, paper: $12.50
"Foundations of Environmental Ethics . . . establishes the existence of a strong tradition
of naturalism--fostered and nourished by a creative interaction of field naturalists and
nature artists--that predates the individualistic animal welfare and animal rights
traditions. It is this anthropocentric, mainly aesthetic tradition, Hargrove shows,
which has shaped contemporary environmentalism, its rhetoric, and its thought, and which
provides a natural foundation for its future flourishing" (Bryan G. Norton, Georgia Institute of
Technology)
"The book is sensational, not merely good. It makes environmental ethics clear and
accessible to those new to the field, but also advances the understanding of those who are
the most familiar with it. The book captures environmental philosophy at its current state
of development and prepares students and scholars to make further contributions to it"
(Mark Sagoff, Institute for Philosophy and Public Policy)
"Hargrove effectively combines the scholarly sleuthing of a historian with the analytic
acumen of a philosopher to produce a study unique in the field of environmental
ethics. . . . Foundations of Environmental Ethics is a monumental scholarly and
philosophical achievement" (J. Baird Callicott, University of North Texas)
ISBN 09626807-4-5, paper: $14.95
Essays cover conservation politics, environmental science, economics and the corporation, environmental
philosophy and religion written by some of North America's leading environmental thinkers: Susan Bratton,
Elinor Gadon, Pete A. Y. Gunter, Eugene Hargrove, Dolores LaChapelle, Max Oelschlaeger, Robert Paehlke,
George Sessions.
Max Oelschlaeger is the author of The Idea of Wilderness, The Environmental
Imperative, and Religion in a
Time of Ecological Crisis and the editor of The Wilderness Condition.
"Despite much environmental action . . . the environment has gotten worse and something must be done to
change course. Oelschlaeger has brought together a wide range of topics . . . to set the new course."
- Science
"This is a collection of 16 . . . stimulating essays on the politics, science and philosophy of
conservation." - Publishers Weekly
ISBN 0-92939840-8, paper: $14.95
Beyond Spaceship Earth,
The Beauty of Environment, After Earth Day, and
Foundations of Environmental Ethics are each U.S. $14.95 plus shipping and handling: In the U.S., $2.00, book rate; $4.00, priority mail.
All other countries, $5.00, surface mail.
Is It Too Late? is $12.50, plus shipping and handling: In the U.S., $2.00, book rate; $4.00, priority mail.
All other countries, $5.00, surface mail.
"Is It Too Late? was one of the very few pioneering works in ecological
ethics and theology. It remains richly relevant, indicative of the author's seminal
insight and foresight. . . . Although written for a general audience, it is also an
essential resource for ecophilosophers and ecotheologians" (James A. Nash, The Churches'
Center for Theology and Public Policy).
111 pages, bibliography
Originally published in 1989 by Prentice Hall, Foundations of Environmental Ethics, by Eugene C. Hargrove, is an
investigation of the history of ideas behind environmentalism generally and environmental
ethics specifically:
"Hargrove, as editor of the journal Environmental Ethics, is arguably the most influential
philosopher in the field. . . . The status of the author alone would be enough to make this
an important contribution to the field of environmental philosophy, but it is also a
powerful argument concerning the roots of environmental ideals in the Western tradition.
In part, the book answers John Passmore's contention that a philosophy of nature
preservation is alien or marginal to Western culture. The rebuttal of Passmore involves a
far-ranging investigation of the intellectual history of environmental attitudes, both
those that have inhibited environmental thought (notably, the Western philosophical
tradition of idealism and the Anglo-Saxon conception of property rights) and those that
have supported preservationist intuitions (primarily, scientific and aesthetic ideals).
Based on the demonstrated existence of Western aesthetic intuitions, Hargrove presents a
detailed argument for the ethical foundations of preservationist policy. . . . Central to
this discussion is an excellent analysis of the attempted
human domination of nature and how this destroys the beauty and autonomy of the natural
world. 'The authenticity of nature arises out of the fact that its existence precedes its
essence.' In sum, Hargrove attempts to create a middle position between an instrumental
justification for environmental policy based on human interests and an intrinsic
justification based on the direct consideration of nonhuman value" (Eric Katz, New Jersey
Institute of Technology)
239 pages, index
After Earth Day celebrates the spirit of Earth Day as exemplifying the sustained commitments of many different
people and organizations to a common cultural effort: conservation itself. As the essays show, conservation
depends upon the continuing efforts of everyone: people in business, in the university, in science and
technology, and citizens in every community who act locally but think globally.
". . . contains contributions written by ten of North America's leading environmentalists . . . celebrating the
spirit of Earth Day one through twenty-one . . . exemplifying the sustained commitments of many different
people and organizations to a common cultural effort: conservation itself." - Bulletin of Science, Technology
& Society
264 pages, index
The Liberation of Life is U.S. $21.00 plus shipping and handling: In the U.S.,
$2.00, book rate; $4.00, priority mail.
All other countries, $5.00, surface mail.
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