![An Ethics of Biodiversity: Christianity, Ecology, and the Variety of Life](http://img.images-bn.com/static/redesign/srcs/images/grey-box.png?v11.9.4)
An Ethics of Biodiversity: Christianity, Ecology, and the Variety of Life
240![An Ethics of Biodiversity: Christianity, Ecology, and the Variety of Life](http://img.images-bn.com/static/redesign/srcs/images/grey-box.png?v11.9.4)
An Ethics of Biodiversity: Christianity, Ecology, and the Variety of Life
240Paperback
-
PICK UP IN STORECheck Availability at Nearby Stores
Available within 2 business hours
Related collections and offers
Overview
An Ethics of Biodiversity argues that these facts should inspire careful reflection and action in Christian churches, which must learn from earth’s vast diversity in order to help conserve the natural and social diversity of our planet. Bringing scientific data into conversation with theological tradition, the book shows that biodiversity is a point of intersection between faith and ethics, social justice and environmentalism, science and politics, global problems and local solutions. An Ethics of Biodiversity offers a set of tools for students, environmentalists, and people of faith to think critically about how human beings can live with and as part of the variety of life in God’s creation.
Product Details
ISBN-13: | 9781589016453 |
---|---|
Publisher: | Georgetown University Press |
Publication date: | 04/20/2010 |
Pages: | 240 |
Product dimensions: | 5.40(w) x 8.40(h) x 0.80(d) |
Age Range: | 18 Years |
About the Author
Table of Contents
PrefaceIntroduction: Christian Ecological Ethics and Biodiversity
Part I: Defining Biodiversity
1. The Variety of Life
Part II: Why Biodiversity Matters
2. Valuing Life & Ecosystems
3. The Sacramental Value of the Variety of Life
Part III: The Levels of Biodiversity
4. Scaling Conservation
5. Multiscalar Christian Ecological Ethics
Part IV: Political and Morally Formative Conservation
6. Regulating Biodiversity: The Endangered Species Act and Political Conservation
7. Christian Care for Biodiversity: Moral Formation as Conservation
Part V: Social Justice and the Conservation of Biodiversity
8. Biological and Cultural Diversity
9. Diversities and Justice
Conclusion: The Work of Conserving Biodiversity
Bibliography
Index
What People are Saying About This
An excellent book that makes a distinctive contribution to a critically important and timely issue, and advances the task and agenda of Christian environmental ethics in several important ways. O'Brien explains clearly the central concepts and debates in ecology and conservation biology around conservation of biodiversity, and shows how and why they are central to a Christian ethics of biodiversity. The scientific scholarship and ethical analysis are both first-rate. This is a terrific book!
"An excellent book that makes a distinctive contribution to a critically important and timely issue, and advances the task and agenda of Christian environmental ethics in several important ways. O'Brien explains clearly the central concepts and debates in ecology and conservation biology around conservation of biodiversity, and shows how and why they are central to a Christian ethics of biodiversity. The scientific scholarship and ethical analysis are both first-rate. This is a terrific book!"Dan Spencer, associate professor of environmental studies, University of Montana
"An Ethics of Biodiversity not only lays out the arguments and criticisms around the ecological values in biodiversity, but also lays out theological arguments for biodiversity as having sacramental value. The concept of biodiversity as revealing God to us is powerful, even as O'Brien validates the many questions about the goodness of biodiversity, given its dependence upon conflict and suffering. The book is accessible to undergraduates, compelling in its arguments, and recommends itself as carefully balanced in a field replete with opposing claims."Christine Gudorf, professor and chair, Department of Religious Studies, Florida International University
"A welcome addition to ecological ethics! This lucid and compelling book integrates scientific understanding of biodiversity with concern for conservation, cultural diversity, and social justice to develop a valuable Christian ecological ethic for moral formation, discernment, and action. It is especially useful for thinking about the multiple scalelocal, regional, globalof ecological ethical issues."Pamela Brubaker, professor of religion and ethics, California Lutheran University
A welcome addition to ecological ethics! This lucid and compelling book integrates scientific understanding of biodiversity with concern for conservation, cultural diversity, and social justice to develop a valuable Christian ecological ethic for moral formation, discernment, and action. It is especially useful for thinking about the multiple scale—local, regional, global—of ecological ethical issues.
An Ethics of Biodiversity not only lays out the arguments and criticisms around the ecological values in biodiversity, but also lays out theological arguments for biodiversity as having sacramental value. The concept of biodiversity as revealing God to us is powerful, even as O'Brien validates the many questions about the goodness of biodiversity, given its dependence upon conflict and suffering. The book is accessible to undergraduates, compelling in its arguments, and recommends itself as carefully balanced in a field replete with opposing claims.