Fr. 192.00

Thinking Nature - An Essay in Negative Ecology

English · Hardback

Shipping usually within 3 to 5 weeks (title will be specially ordered)

Description

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Thinking Nature tracks the history of the concept of nature from the Hebrew Bible, through Renaissance philosophy and science, to Dark Ecology. Critical of the post-humanist trend in contemporary eco-criticism, Sean McGrath makes a compelling case for a new anthropocenic humanism - a humanism that is not at the expense of nature, and a naturalism that is not at the expense of the human.

Nature as the stable backdrop of human civilization appears to have vanished in the light of climate change, mass extinction, and genetic engineering. And yet the term 'nature' remains vital to both metaphysics and to public ecological discourse. This is because 'nature', in McGrath's view, is a living symbol, and can survive the extinction of one or another of its meanings. Contemporary ecology must proceed in the absence of a clear concept of nature, not because none are possible, but because of the depth of the transformation occurring to the earth in the Anthropocene. Whatever shape the new concept of nature will take, it must include the one who thinks nature, the human being, since the separation of nature from culture, facts from values, is no longer tenable.

List of contents










Preface; 1. Religion is not only the problem, but the solution; 2. Nature is a symbol, but of what?; 3.The theology of disenchantment; 4. Eco-anxiety; 5. Dark ecology; 6. The human difference; 7. What's really wrong with Heidegger; 8. Negative ecology; 9. The road not taken; 10. Contemplative politics; 11. Anthropocenic nature; Bibliography.

About the author










Sean J. McGrath is Full Professor of Philosophy at Memorial University of Newfoundland and a Member of the College of the Royal Society of Canada. McGrath is a specialist in the philosophy of religion and the history of philosophy. He has published and lectured widely in German idealism, phenomenology, ecology, theology and psychoanalysis.

Summary

Moving between ancient and modern sources, philosophy and theology, and science and popular culture, Sean McGrath offers a genuinely new reflection on what it means to be human in an era of climate change, mass extinction and geoengineering.

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