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Ethics for a Small Planet: New Horizons on Population, Consumption, and Ecology
Contributor(s): Maguire, Daniel C. (Author), Rasmussen, Larry L. (Author)

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ISBN: 0791436462     ISBN-13: 9780791436462
Publisher: State University of New York Press
OUR PRICE: $32.25  

Binding Type: Paperback - See All Available Formats & Editions
Published: January 1998
Qty:

Click for more in this series: Suny Series, Religious Studies
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Science | Environmental Science (see Also Chemistry - Environmental)
- Nature | Ecology
- Religion | Christian Theology - Ethics
Dewey: 241.691
LCCN: 97-9361
Series: Suny Series, Religious Studies
Physical Information: 0.41" H x 5.93" W x 8.95" L (0.50 lbs) 168 pages
Themes:
- Theometrics - Academic
- Religious Orientation - Christian
- Topical - Ecology
Features: Bibliography, Index, Table of Contents
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:
This book offers an original assessment of the crisis caused by the combined impact of overpopulation, overconsumption, and economic and political injustice. It summons religious scholarship into urgent dialogue with the other disciplines and with the world's policymakers. The authors seek a new understanding of religion and its power since, for good or for ill, the world's religions will be players in the crises relating to population and the threat of ecocide. Two-thirds of the world's people affiliate with these religions and the other third cannot escape the influence of these symbol-filled cultural powerhouses.

Ethics for a Small Planet offers complementary studies by two major social ethicists on these issues. Daniel C. Maguire indicts our male-dominated religions for the problems they have caused for our ecology and reproductive ethics. He raises the controversial questions of whether the very concept of God is a problem and whether Christianity's notions of afterlife and a divinized male have done more harm than good. Larry L. Rasmussen also recognizes that the problems of our planet are largely male-made and rich-dominated. He writes that Europeans packaged a form of earth-unfriendly capitalism and shipped it all over the world with missionary zeal. He ably scans the long history that led to the current manic rush to push the earth beyond its limits, and goes on to suggest moral norms and policy guidelines for sustainable communities and genuinely shared power.

Both authors argue that there are positive and renewable moral energies in the world's religions and that unless religion, understood as a response to the sanctity of life, animates our ethical debates, the prospects for the world are grim. The sense of the sacred is presented here as the nucleus of the good and the only force that can bring about the lifestyle changes and power reallocations that are necessary to prevent terracide.

 
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