1. Attending to the Human-Nature Relationship: Approaches, Contexts, and Challenges.- 2. Seeing Nature as a Whole: Eco-spirituality and the Human-Nature Relationship.- 3. The Role of Panentheism and Pantheism for Environmental Wellbeing Lina Langby.- 4. Landscapes of the Unconscious and the Longings of Nature.- 5. Ferd towards a Joyful Change – Nature, Mountaineering Philosophers, and the Dawn of “Higher” Friluftsliv Education.- 6. An Overview of Natural, Human, Philosophical & Theological Dualisms.- 7. Reading the Signs of the Times: Nature/Culture Dualism and Human Feeling in the Anthropocene.- 8. One Reality, Not Two: Bonhoeffer, Jesus Christ, and a Membraned World.- 9. Pentecostal Emotive (Non)Dualism: Pneumatology, Worship, and Context.- 10. The Role of Formal Distinction in the Articulation of Univocity of Being: “Neutral” and “Expressive” Univocity of Being in the Thinking of Duns Scotus and Spinoza.- 11. You Are What You See: Environmental Ethics from Aesthetic Experience via David Bentley Hart and Gilles Deleuze.- 12. Zen Master Thich Nhat Hanh’s Ecological Imagination.- 13. Lines of Distinction and Circles of Connection: Toward a Holistic Epistemology.
Thomas John Hastings is the former Executive Director and Administrative Faculty, Overseas Ministries Studies Center at Princeton Theological Seminary, USA. He is also Editor of the International Bulletin of Mission Research.
Knut-Willy Sæther is Professor at the Department of Religious Studies, Volda University College, Norway.
"This is a very timely contribution to a growing and vital body of reflection on the climate emergency within the humanities. It offers a creative diversity of voices, and makes a strong addition to current scholarship. It will be an important resource for scholars and students in ecotheology, ecospirituality, and environmental humanities more generally." —Christopher Southgate, Professor of Christian Theodicy, University of Exeter, UK
In the face of the anthropogenic threats to the singular planetary habitat we share with other human beings and non-human species, humanities scholars feel a renewed sense of urgency 1) to acknowledge the ways our species has funded particular histories of environmental exploitation, alienation, and collapse, 2) to unpack inherited assumptions that impact our views of nature and interspecies relations, and 3) to suggest ways of thinking and acting that seek to repair the damage and promote mutual flourishing for all of earth inhabitants. This volume brings together scholars in philosophy, theology, and religion who take up this urgent ethical task from a broad range of perspectives and locations.
Thomas John Hastings is the former Executive Director and Administrative Faculty, Overseas Ministries Studies Center at Princeton Theological Seminary, USA. He is also Editor of the International Bulletin of Mission Research.
Knut-Willy Sæther is Professor at the Department of Religious Studies, Volda University College, Norway.