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E-grāmata: Integral Ecology for a More Sustainable World: Dialogues with Laudato Si'

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  • Formāts: EPUB+DRM
  • Izdošanas datums: 25-Oct-2019
  • Izdevniecība: Lexington Books
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781498580069
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  • Formāts: EPUB+DRM
  • Izdošanas datums: 25-Oct-2019
  • Izdevniecība: Lexington Books
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781498580069

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Laudato Si insists on a revolutionary human response to the public challenges of our time concerning the ecological crisis. The volume takes up the revolutionary spirit of Pope Francis and speaks to the economic, technological, political, educational, and religious changes needed to overcome the fragile relationships between humans and Earth. This volume identifies various systemic factors that have produced the anthropogenic ecological crisis that threatens the planet and uses the ethical vision of Laudato Si to promote practical responses that foster fundamental changes in humanitys relationships with Earth and each other. The essays address not only the immediate behavioral changes needed in individual human lives, but also the deeper, societal changes required if human communities are to live sustainable lives within Earths integral ecology. Thus, this volume intentionally focuses on a plurality of cultural contexts and proposes solutions to problems encountered in a variety of global contexts. Accordingly, the contributors to this volume are scholars from a breadth of interdisciplinary and cultural backgrounds, each exploring an ethical theme from the encyclical and proposing systemic changes to address deeply entrenched injustices. Collectively, their essays examine the social, political, economic, gender, scientific, technological, educational, and spiritual challenges of our time as these relate to the ecological crisis.
Preface: The Evolution of the Concept of Integral Ecology in Papal Teaching xi
Cardinal Peter Kodwo Turkson
Introduction 1(10)
Dennis O'Hara
Matthew Eaton
Michael Ross
PART I LAUDATO SI' IN CONTEXT
11(28)
1 Laudato Si': Social Analysis and Political Engagement in the Tradition of Catholic Social Thought
13(16)
Christopher P. Vogt
2 A Compassionate Science: Pope Francis, Climate Change, and the Fate of Creation
29(10)
Stephen Bede Scharper
PART II THE THROWAWAY CULTURE: CONSUMPTION AND ECONOMICS
39(70)
3 Growth is an Idol in a Throwaway Culture: Ecotheology against Neutrality
41(16)
Timothy Harvie
4 Pope Francis Contra Twenty-First-Century Capitalism: The Power of Joined-Up Social Ethics
57(20)
Gerard Mannion
5 Wealthy Hyperagency in the Throwaway Culture: Inequality and Environmental Death
77(14)
Kate Ward
6 The Peril and the Promise of Agriculture: An Agroecological Reading of Laudato Si'
91(18)
Matthew Philipp Whelan
PART III THE GOSPEL OF CREATION: THEOLOGY AND ANTHROPOLOGY
109(68)
7 The "Brown Thread" in Laudato Si': Grounding Ecological Conversion and Theological Ethics Praxis
111(16)
Dawn M. Nothwehr
8 Ecological Conversion in the Light of Ecofeminist Concerns: A Post-Lonergan Dialogue
127(16)
Susan Rakoczy
9 Reframing Ecotheological Anthropology within a More Integral Ecology
143(16)
Dennis Patrick O'Hara
10 Locating Laudato Si' along a Catholic Trajectory of Concern for Nonhuman Animals
159(18)
Charles Camosy
PART IV THE TECHNOCRATIC PARADIGM: SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY
177(58)
11 From Galileo to Laudato Si'
179(16)
Brother Guy Consolmagno
12 Cosmology, Theology, and Laudato Si'
195(14)
John F. Haught
13 The Technocratic Paradigm: Diagnosis and Therapy
209(12)
Neil Ormerod
14 Personhood, Bodies, and History in Google's Manifestation of the Technocratic Paradigm
221(14)
Brianne Jacobs
PART V SOCIAL ECOLOGIES: POLITICS AND ACTIVISM
235(64)
15 Ecological Citizenship and the New Habitus
237(14)
Anne Marie Dalton
16 Preservationism, Environmental Justice, Smart Growth: Care for Our Common Home
251(16)
Laura Stivers
17 Resisting Nuclear Energy in South Africa: Drawing Inspiration from Laudato Si'
267(14)
Andrew Warmback
18 An Integral Issue: Population and Birth Control in Laudato Si' and Roman Catholic Teaching
281(18)
Michael Taylor Ross
PART VI NEW LIFESTYLES: EDUCATION AND SPIRITUALITY
299(60)
19 Placing Integral Ecology at the Heart of Education: Transformative Learning, Laudato Si', and Cooperation
301(16)
Christopher Hrynkow
20 Laudato Si': The Ecological Imperative of the Liturgy
317(20)
Peter McGrail
21 Understanding Catholic Engagement on Global Warming
337(22)
Nicholas Smith
Conclusion: Ecocide as Deicide: Eschatological Lamentation and the Possibility of Hope 359(14)
Matthew Eaton
Index 373(8)
About the Editors 381(2)
About the Contributors 383
Matthew Eaton is assistant professor in the Department of Theology at Kings College.

Dennis Patrick OHara is associate professor of ecotheology and ethics and director of the Elliott Allen Institute for Theology and Ecology.

Michael Taylor Ross is PhD candidate at the University of St. Michaels College in the University of Toronto/Toronto School of Theology and senior editor for Yale Universitys FERNS journal.