Using a unified vision of geology, consisting of equal parts geo-poetry, geo-politics, geo-theology, and geo-science, Geo-Logic redraws the boundaries between philosophy and the earth sciences. Although each discipline makes crucial contributions to contemporary environmental concerns, neither will fulfill its potential until it transforms itself by engaging the other. This book offers examples of how to relate environmental philosophy to science, public policy, and real world problems, and shows what is epistemologically distinctive about scientific work and how to respond to the cultural dynamics that are pulling these issues into the public sphere. Frodeman advocates humanizing the earth sciences and bringing philosophy into the field.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Preface
Acknowledgments
1. Introduction
2. Acid Mine Philosophy
3. Corrosive Effects: Environmental Ethics and the Metaphysics of Acid Mine Drainage
4. The Places of Science: The Heavens, the Lab, the Field, and the Screen
5. Earth Stories
6. The Philosophy of (Field) Science
7. Being and Geologic Time: The Meeting of Metaphysics and Politics
8. Science and the Public Self
Conclusion
Notes
Index
Über den Autor
Robert Frodeman, a philosopher with a background in the earth sciences, has worked for the U. S. Geological Survey for many years. He was the 2001–2002 Hennebach Visiting Professor in the Humanities at the Colorado School of Mines and is currently Research Scientist at the Center for Science and Technology Policy at the University of Colorado, where he is also the Director of the Global Climate Change and Society Program. He is the editor of
Earth Matters: The Earth Sciences, Philosophy, and the Claims of Community.