The eco-catastrophes that we are witnessing today starkly demonstrate how the interests of the Earth’s currently dominant species are in lockstep with those of nature’s wider whole. Simply stated, humans and the more-than-human world have a shared fate. Just as humanity’s unrestrained overreach in the ecosphere is driving a mass extinction event and causing the devastation of lifeforms and places, so it is also jeopardizing the prospect of a human future worth living. There is no ‘humans versus nature’ tradeoff: the wellbeing of both is inseparably entwined. Solutions to the shared predicament of all Earth’s beings will thus necessarily be those that strive for harmony between human presence and the rest of nature. This applies to the philosophy we adopt for agriculture, the ways in which human economies operate, our patterns of consumption, and numerous other intertwined threads of our existence. This anthology argues that harmony between humanity and our home planet must be built on the pillars of restraint, respect, and reverence.
Mục lục
Acknowledgments
Foreword
Stephanie Mills
Introduction: Undoing Earth’s Humanization
Eileen Crist and Joe Gray
Section One: Restraint
1. Restoring Balance through Procreative Responsibility
Nandita Bajaj and Kirsten Stade
2. Restraint in Consumption
Luke Philip Plotica
3. Technologies Fit for an Ecological Future
John Michael Greer
4. Social Ecological Transformation of Economies: Where the Environmental Movement Went Wrong and What Is Needed
Clive L. Spash
5. Artful Descent: An Aesthetics of Existence
Samuel Alexander
Section Two: Respect
6. Is It the Call of the Wild . . . or of Deep Law? What Is the Moral Heart of Conservation?
Freya Mathews
7. Protecting, Restoring, and Rewilding Ecosystems
Reed F. Noss
8. Coexisting with Africa’s Carnivores
Tarik Bodasing
9. For the Bounteous Beauty of the Living Seas
Eileen Crist
10. The Future of Food Production
Ryan D. Andrews
11. Human Identity, Oppression, and the Rigors of Hope
Chelsea Batavia
12. Respecting Nonhuman Life: The Guide for a Better Pathway in Outdoor Recreation
Joe Gray and Ian Whyte
Section Three: Reverence
13. Enchantment, Modernity, and Reverence for Nature
Patrick Curry
14. There Are Gods Here Too: For an Inhumanist Animal Aesthetics
Matthew Calarco
15. Rediscovering Tree Sentience and Our Reverence for Life
Simon Leadbeater and Helen Kopnina
16. Seeking Ecosocial Cultural Change: Boldly Going beyond Nature Deficit Disorder
Sean Blenkinsop
17. Gratitude Is a Way of Life
Kathleen Dean Moore
List of Contributors
Index
Giới thiệu về tác giả
Joe Gray is an Associate Editor of
The Ecological Citizen.
Eileen Crist is Associate Professor Emerita of the Department of Science, Technology, and Society at Virginia Tech.