Linking Ecology and Ethics for a Changing World Softcover reprint of the original 1st ed. 2013(Ecology and Ethics Vol.1) P xxxvi
目次
I. Integrating philosophy and ecology: Biocultural interfacesChapter 1.0. Introduction. Ricardo RozziChapter 1.1. Biocultural Ethics. Ricardo RozziChapter 1.2. Introduced Species, Homogenizing Biotas and Cultures. Daniel SimberloffChapter 1.3. Traditional Knowledge and Wisdom: A Guide for Understanding and Shaping Alaskan Social-Ecological Change. F. Stuart Chapin, III, Patricia Cochran, H. Huntington, Corrine N. Knapp, Todd J. Brinkman & Lily R. GadamusChapter 1.4. Traditional Ecological Values, Knowledge, and Practices in Twenty-First Century Hawai`i. Peter Vitousek and Kamanamaikalani BeamerChapter 1.5. Tradition as Benefit or Barrier? The Case of Us Christian Religion in the Formation of Environmental Ethics. Susan Power BrattonChapter 1.6. Environment Imagination Situation. Irene J. KlaverII. Ecological worldviews: aesthetic, metaphors, and conservationChapter 2.0. Introduction. J. Baird CallicottChapter 2.1. The Worldview Concept and Aldo Leopold’s Project of “World View” Remediation. J. Baird CallicottChapter 2.2. The Link between Aesthetic Appreciation and the Preservation Imperative. Sheila Lintott and Allen CarlsonChapter 2.3. The Metaphorical Links between Ecology, Ethics, and Society. Brendon M. H. LarsonChapter 2.4. Science as Sacred Myth? Ecospirituality in the Anthropocene Age. Lisa H. SiderisChapter 2.5. Rachel Carson's Environmental Ethics. Philip CafaroChapter 2.6. Aldo Leopold from Sciences to Ethics and Policy. Curt MeineIII. Environmental Philosophy: ethics, epistemology, justiceChapter 3.0. Introduction. Clare PalmerChapter 3.1. Contested Frameworks in Environmental Ethics. Clare PalmerChapter 3.2. Legacies of Positivism in the Philosophy of Science. Helen LonginoChapter 3.3. Ecological Objects for Environmental Ethics. Christopher H. EliotChapter 3.4. Ecology, Ethics and Global Justice. Tim HaywardChapter 3.5. Whose Danger, Which Climate? Mesopotamian versus Liberal Accounts of Climate Justice. Michael S. NorthcottChapter 3.6. Environmental Justice, Ecofeminism and Power. Chaone MalloryIV. Ecosystems: science, values, and actionChapter 4.0. Introduction. Steward PickettChapter 4.1. Paradigms in and of Ecology. Steward PickettChapter 4.2. Hierarchy Theory: An Overview. Jianguo WuChapter 4.3. Ecosystem Services: Is a Planet Servicing One Species Likely to Function? Shahid NaeemChapter 4.4. Linking Ecology and Ethics for a Changing World: Values, Philosophy, and Action Environmental Justice and Power. Stephanie PincetlChapter 4.5. Not Such Strange Bedfellows: Underserved Public Audiences as Collaborators for Ecologists. Nalini M. NadkarniChapter 4.6. A Call For Ethics Literacy in Environmental Education. Alexandria K. Poole, Eugene C.Hargrove, Philip Day, William Forbes, Ginger Potter, Alan R. Berkowitz, Peter Feinsinger and Ricardo RozziIndex