Integral Ecology for a More Sustainable World

Integral Ecology for a More Sustainable World
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Dialogues with Laudato Si'
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Artikel-Nr:
9781498580069
Veröffentl:
2019
Seiten:
424
Autor:
Dennis O’Hara
eBook Typ:
EPUB
Kopierschutz:
Adobe DRM [Hard-DRM]
Sprache:
Englisch
Beschreibung:

Laudato Si' insists on a revolutionary human response to the public challenges of our time concerning the ecological crisis. The volume takes up the revolutionary spirit of Pope Francis and speaks to the economic, technological, political, educational, and religious changes needed to overcome the fragile relationships between humans and Earth.
Laudato Si’ insists on a revolutionary human response to the public challenges of our time concerning the ecological crisis. The volume takes up the revolutionary spirit of Pope Francis and speaks to the economic, technological, political, educational, and religious changes needed to overcome the fragile relationships between humans and Earth. This volume identifies various systemic factors that have produced the anthropogenic ecological crisis that threatens the planet and uses the ethical vision of Laudato Si’ to promote practical responses that foster fundamental changes in humanity’s relationships with Earth and each other. The essays address not only the immediate behavioral changes needed in individual human lives, but also the deeper, societal changes required if human communities are to live sustainable lives within Earth’s integral ecology. Thus, this volume intentionally focuses on a plurality of cultural contexts and proposes solutions to problems encountered in a variety of global contexts. Accordingly, the contributors to this volume are scholars from a breadth of interdisciplinary and cultural backgrounds, each exploring an ethical theme from the encyclical and proposing systemic changes to address deeply entrenched injustices. Collectively, their essays examine the social, political, economic, gender, scientific, technological, educational, and spiritual challenges of our time as these relate to the ecological crisis.


Preface: Evolution of the Concept of Integral Ecology in Papal Teaching

Cardinal Peter K. A. Turkson, Cardinal-Priest of San Liborio



Introduction:

Dennis O’Hara, Matthew Eaton, Michael Ross



Part I:Laudato Si’ in Context



Chapter 1: Laudato Si’: Social Analysis and Political Engagement in the Tradition of Catholic Social Thought

Christopher Vogt, St. John’s University



Chapter 2: A Compassionate Science: Pope Francis, Climate Change, and the Fate of Creation

Stephen Scharper, University of Toronto



Part II: The Throwaway Culture: Consumption and Economics



Chapter 3: Growth is an Idol in a Throwaway Culture: Ecotheology Against Neutrality

Timothy Harvie, St. Mary’s University



Chapter 4: Pope Francis Contra 21st Century Capitalism: The Power of Joined-up Social Ethics

Gerard Mannion, Georgetown University



Chapter 5: Wealthy Hyperagency in the Throwaway Culture: Inequality and Environmental Death

Kate Ward, Marquette University



Chapter 6: The Peril and the Promise of Agriculture in Laudato Si’

Matthew Whelan, Baylor University



Part III: The Gospel of Creation: Theology and Anthropology



Chapter 7: “The ‘Brown Thread’ in Laudato Si’: Grounding Ecological Conversion and Theological Ethics Praxis”

Dawn Nothwehr, Catholic Theological Union



Chapter 8: Ecological Conversion in the Light of Ecofeminist Concerns: A Post-Lonergan Dialogue

Susan Rakoczy, St Joseph’s Theological Institute/University of KwaZulu-Natal



Chapter 9: Reframing Ecotheological Anthropology within a More Integral Ecology

Dennis Patrick O’Hara, University of St. Michael’s College



Chapter 10: Locating Laudato Si’ along a Catholic Trajectory of Concern for Non-Human Animals

Charles Camosy, Fordham University



Part IV: The Technocratic Paradigm: Science and Technology



Chapter 11: From Galileo to Laudato Si’: The Uses of Science: How Science Needs Faith

Guy J. Consolmagno, S.J., Vatican Observatory



Chapter 12: Cosmology, Theology, and Laudato Si’

John Haught, Georgetown University



Chapter 13: The Technocratic Paradigm: Diagnosis and Therapy

Neil Ormerod, Australian Catholic University



Chapter 14: Suffering in the Technocratic Paradigm

Brianne Jacobs, Fordham University



Part V: Social Ecologies: Politics and Activism



Chapter 15: Ecological Citizenship and a New Habitus

Anne Marie Dalton, St. Mary’s University



Chapter 16: Preservationism, Environmental Justice, Smart Growth: Care for Our Common Home

Laura Stivers, Dominican University of California



Chapter 17: Resisting Nuclear Energy in South Africa: Drawing Inspiration from Laudato Si’

Andrew Warmback, St. Paul’s Church, Diocese of Natal, Anglican Church of Southern Africa



Chapter 18: An Integral Issue: Population, Sustainable Development & Sexual Ethics

Michael Ross, University of St. Michael’s College



Part VI: New Lifestyles: Education and Spirituality



Chapter 19: Placing Integral Ecology at the Heart of Education: Transformative Learning in Critical Conversation with Laudato Si’

Christopher Hrynkow, St. Thomas More College



Chapter 20:, Laudato Si’: The Ecological Imperative of the Liturgy

Peter McGrail, Liverpool Hope University



Chapter 21: The Francis Effect? Investigating the Impact of Laudato Si’ on Catholic Climate Change Engagement

Nicholas Smith, University of Westminster



Conclusion: Ecocide as Deicide: Eschatological Lamentation and the Possibility of Hope

Matthew Eaton, Kings College

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