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"Clingerman, Forrest, editor"
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Interpreting Nature: The Emerging Field of Environmental Hermeneutics
2013,2014,2020
Modern environmentalism has come to realize that many of its key concerns \"wilderness\" and \"nature\" among them are contested territory, viewed differently by different people. Understanding nature requires science and ecology, to be sure, but it also requires a sensitivity tom, history, culture, and narrative. Thus, understanding nature is a fundamentally hermeneutic task.
Interpreting Nature
Modern environmentalism has come to realize that many of its key concerns—“wilderness\" and “nature\" among them—are contested territory, viewed differently by different people. Understanding nature requires science and ecology, to be sure, but it also requires a sensitivity to history, culture, and narrative. Thus, understanding nature is a fundamentally hermeneutic task.
Theological and ethical perspectives on climate engineering
by
Clingerman, Forrest
,
O'Brien, Kevin J
in
Ecology
,
Environmental engineering
,
Environmental geotechnology
2016
Calming the Storm presents diverse perspectives on some of the most vital questions raised by climate engineering: Who has the right to make decisions about such global technological efforts? What have we learned from the decisions that caused the climate to change that might shed light on efforts to reverse that change? What frameworks and metaphors are helpful in thinking about climate engineering, and which are counterproductive? What religious beliefs, practices, and rituals can help people to imagine and evaluate the prospect of engineering the climate?
Arts, Religion, and the Environment
2018
Exploring Nature’s Texture brings together a collection of internationally-known group of artists, theologians, anthropologists and philosophers to look at the imaginative possibilities of using the visual arts to address the breakdown of the human relationship with the environment. ; Readership: Scholars and students in theology/religious studies, art history, artists and curators, environmental humanities, environmental studies, philosophy, anthropology, environmental arts, architecture, sociology.