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(1997)
Faking Nature: The Ethics of Environmental Restoration
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J Environ Stud Sci (2012) 2:96–98 DOI 10.1007/s13412-012-0069-9 BOOK REVIEW Forrest Clingerman and Mark H. Dixon (eds): Placing nature on the borders of religion philosophy and ethics Burlington, VT: Ashgate Publishing Co., 2011 Sarah E. Fredericks Published online: 24 February 2012 AESS 2012 Placing Nature on the Borders of Religion, Philosophy and why investigating place in general is critical to understand- Ethics calls attention to an emerging interdisciplinary con- ing ecosystems, animals, and ourselves. For example, David versation about place, especially urban or restored spaces, Ustler explores how environmental identity is shaped by and significantly increases the religious, philosophical, and others including one’s place and the biota to which one ethical contributions to existing studies of place from the relates (pp. 139–152). Still others examine place in general natural and social sciences. A few themes provide an overall as when Sarah Morice-Brubaker explores trends in relating coherence to the volume. Restoration, broadly conceived, is Trinitarian theology to temporal and spatial boundaries perhaps the most dominant theme, and it takes many forms: (pp. 195–208) and when Martin Drentham develops a restoration of wild, urban, and built environments; restora- hermeneutic theory of landscape reading (pp. 123–138). tion of relationships among humans;
Journal of Environmental Studies and Sciences – Springer Journals
Published: Feb 24, 2012
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