ABSTRACT

To increasing numbers of people, sustainability is the key challenge of the twenty-first century. In the many fields where it is a goal, persistent problems obstruct the efforts of those trying to make a difference. The task of this book is to provide an overview of the current state of philosophy in the context of what philosophy is, could be or should be – in relation to sustainability and the human future on Earth. The book is conceived as a contribution to the UN Decade of Education for Sustainable Development, helping to link work on philosophy and sustainability.

Critiquing Sustainability, Changing Philosophy focusses on the importance of philosophical work to the formation and effectiveness of global civil society and social movements for sustainability in the context of the Anthropocene age of the Earth. It takes a transdisciplinary systems approach that challenges philosophy and concludes by proposing a greatly enhanced role for philosophy in contributing to global public reason for sustainability.

This book will be of interest to philosophers, sustainability practitioners and thinkers, policy makers and all those engaged in the global movement for sustainability.

chapter |10 pages

Introduction

Sustainability in the Anthropocene and the roles of philosophical critique

chapter |18 pages

Starting points

chapter |18 pages

The Anthropocene

chapter |21 pages

Changing material practices

‘Techné' and technology 1

chapter |21 pages

Culture and sustainability

What has postmodernism ever done for us?

chapter |30 pages

Philosophies for sustainability?

An analytic review

chapter |9 pages

Sustainability

A school for freedom?