Confucianism and Ecology: The Interrelation of Heaven, Earth, and Humans
Mary Evelyn Tucker (editor-in-chief), John Berthrong (editor-in-chief), Joseph A. Adler (other), Peter K. Bol (other), Chung-ying Cheng (other), Julia Ching (other), Wm. Theodore de Bary (other), Seiko Goto (other), Philip J. Ivanhoe (other), Michael C. Kalton (other), Toshio Kuwako (other), Huey-li Li (other), Robert Cummings Neville (other), Young-chan Ro (other), Rodney L. Taylor (other), Wei-ming Tu (other), Robert P. Weller (other), Lawrence E. Sullivan (other)
Paperback Published on: 28/08/1998
Price: £22.95
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Synopsis
Confucianism demonstrates a remarkable wealth of resources for rethinking human-earth relations. This second volume in the series on religions of the world and the environment includes sixteen essays that address the ecological crisis and the question of Confucianism from three perspectives: the historical describes this East Asian tradition's views of nature, social ethics, and cosmology, which may shed light on contemporary problems; a dialogical approach links Confucianism to other philosophic and religious traditions; an examination of engaged Confucianism looks at its involvement in concrete ecological issues.
Publisher information
- Publisher: Harvard University Press
- ISBN: 9780945454168
- Number of pages: 428
- Dimensions: 153 x 228 x 24 mm
- Weight: 680g
- Languages: English
