Nature, God and Humanity: Envisioning an Ethics of NatureCambridge University Press, 2002 M04 4 - 267 páginas Nature, God and Humanity clarifies the task of forming an ethics of nature, thereby empowering readers to develop their own critical, faith-based ethics. Calling on original, thought-provoking analyses and arguments, Richard L. Fern frames a philosophical ethics of nature, assesses it scientifically, finds support for it in traditional biblical theism, and situates it culturally. Though defending the moral value of beliefs affirming the radical Otherness of God and human uniqueness, this book aims not to compel the adoption of any particular ethic but rather illumine the contribution diverse forms of inquiry make to an ethics of nature. How does philosophy clarify moral conviction? What does science tell us about nature? Why does religious faith matter? Rejecting the illusion of a single, rationally-compelling ethics, Fern answers these questions in a way that fosters both agreement and disagreement, allowing those holding conflicting ethics of nature to work together for the common good. |
Contenido
Introduction | 1 |
THE ETHICS OF NATURE | 9 |
Moral concerns | 11 |
Why people matter | 14 |
Selves and sentients | 18 |
Biotic egalitarianism | 23 |
Moral principles | 31 |
Living with moral indeterminacy | 37 |
Theistic naturalism | 136 |
A free act | 139 |
An eschatological act | 143 |
A conversational act | 145 |
A selflimiting act | 147 |
A vulnerable act | 150 |
A loving act | 155 |
A trusting act | 159 |
Humane holism | 39 |
Autopoiesis | 41 |
Species and ecosystems | 46 |
Envisioning a holistic ethics of nature | 48 |
The inherent value of wild nature | 51 |
Mother nature | 56 |
Humane holism | 65 |
Ecological wisdom a methodological interlude | 69 |
The case for animal awareness | 71 |
Scientific inquiry | 78 |
The end of nature | 82 |
Fuzzy science | 85 |
Thinking like a mountain | 89 |
Faith and reason | 95 |
THE WILD GOD | 103 |
Religious faith | 105 |
Thesim | 110 |
The resonableness of faith | 117 |
Theological reflection | 124 |
A faithful act | 161 |
THE BODY OF HUMANITY | 165 |
Human nature and good | 167 |
Speaking for God | 168 |
Human nature | 173 |
Cultureasnature | 179 |
Human good | 183 |
Moral respect and normative authority | 191 |
Why culture matters to an ethics of nature | 194 |
The fellowship of creation | 201 |
Human dominion and the fellowship of creation | 207 |
Toward a theistic ethics of nature | 214 |
Predation in the wild | 216 |
Human predation | 223 |
The politics of nature | 233 |
242 | |
261 | |
264 | |
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Nature, God and Humanity: Envisioning an Ethics of Nature Richard L. Fern Sin vista previa disponible - 2002 |
Términos y frases comunes
affirm allows animal awareness appears argue argument autopoiesis basic beauty belief biotic egalitarianism chapter charismatic Christian claim constitutive created creation creative deism deny depends difference divine earth ecological emanationism encompassing epistemic ethics of nature evolutionary existence experience fundamental God's harm Hollideck humane holism imago Dei individual inherent value integral interests involves Irenaeus irreducibly Jürgen Moltmann land ethic Leopold less living creatures Maimonides matter mean modern science Moltmann moral community moral concern moral respect moral standing moral worth natura naturans non-human animals normative identity normatively laden notion NRSV object panentheists pantheism philosophical predation presumption principle question radical rationally compelling reason reflection Regan regarding relative religious faith requires responsibility role Rolston scientific inquiry sense sentients sentiotic social species speciesism speciesists story T. F. Torrance teleotic theism theistic naturalism theology thereby therewith things Tom Regan truth well-being wild and human wild nature