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Exploring earthiness : the reality and perception of being human today / Anne Primavesi.

By: Material type: TextTextPublisher: Cambridge, U.K. : The Lutterworth Press, 2014, �2013Description: 1 online resourceContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9780718842246
  • 0718842243
Subject(s): Genre/Form: Additional physical formats: Print version:: Exploring earthiness.DDC classification:
  • 205.691 23
LOC classification:
  • BT695.5 .P744 2013eb
Online resources:
Contents:
Resourceful earth -- Disdained earth -- Appropriated earth -- Reformed earth -- Classical earth -- Colonized earth -- Monetized earth -- Devalued earth -- Marketized earth -- Peaceable earth -- One earth -- Living earth.
Summary: "If we see ourselves as Earth rather than Earth as existing for us our perspective is transformed. A variety of religious, philosophical, cultural, and political self-perceptions that dominate our sense of human identity are deeply challenged by this shift in perspective. John Locke's doctrine of Earth as human 'property' has been central to current presuppositions about our selves: justified on the grounds of our possessing unique, divinely bestowed, rational abilities. But today, the effects of that doctrine on Earth's resource base and on its other-than-human creatures directly challenge such assumptions. At the same time contemporary scientific findings about the evolution of earthly life demonstrate that while we belong to Earth and nowhere else, Earth does not belong to us. Exploring this role reversal raises fundamental questions about current theological, philosophical, scientific, and economic presuppositions that underpin the 'business as usual' viewpoint and human-centered aims of contemporary policies and lifestyles. It takes us beyond hierarchical Christian and philosophical doctrines toward a deeper, Earth-focused and peace-based understanding of what it means to be human today"-- Publisher website.
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Includes bibliographical references.

Resourceful earth -- Disdained earth -- Appropriated earth -- Reformed earth -- Classical earth -- Colonized earth -- Monetized earth -- Devalued earth -- Marketized earth -- Peaceable earth -- One earth -- Living earth.

"If we see ourselves as Earth rather than Earth as existing for us our perspective is transformed. A variety of religious, philosophical, cultural, and political self-perceptions that dominate our sense of human identity are deeply challenged by this shift in perspective. John Locke's doctrine of Earth as human 'property' has been central to current presuppositions about our selves: justified on the grounds of our possessing unique, divinely bestowed, rational abilities. But today, the effects of that doctrine on Earth's resource base and on its other-than-human creatures directly challenge such assumptions. At the same time contemporary scientific findings about the evolution of earthly life demonstrate that while we belong to Earth and nowhere else, Earth does not belong to us. Exploring this role reversal raises fundamental questions about current theological, philosophical, scientific, and economic presuppositions that underpin the 'business as usual' viewpoint and human-centered aims of contemporary policies and lifestyles. It takes us beyond hierarchical Christian and philosophical doctrines toward a deeper, Earth-focused and peace-based understanding of what it means to be human today"-- Publisher website.

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