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Liberty and the Ecological Crisis
DOI link for Liberty and the Ecological Crisis
Liberty and the Ecological Crisis book
Liberty and the Ecological Crisis
DOI link for Liberty and the Ecological Crisis
Liberty and the Ecological Crisis book
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ABSTRACT
This book examines the concept of liberty in relation to civilization’s ability to live within ecological limits.
Freedom, in all its renditions – choice, thought, action – has become inextricably linked to our understanding of what it means to be modern citizens. And yet, it is our relatively unbounded freedom that has resulted in so much ecological devastation. Liberty has piggy-backed on transformations in human–nature relationships that characterize the Anthropocene: increasing extraction of resources, industrialization, technological development, ecological destruction, and mass production linked to global consumerism. This volume provides a deeply critical examination of the concept of liberty as it relates to environmental politics and ethics in the long view. Contributions explore this entanglement of freedom and the ecological crisis, as well as investigate alternative modernities and more ecologically benign ways of living on Earth. The overarching framework for this collection is that liberty and agency need to be rethought before these strongly held ideals of our age are forced out. On a finite planet, our choices will become limited if we hope to survive the climatic transitions set in motion by uncontrolled consumption of resources and energy over the past 150 years. This volume suggests concrete political and philosophical approaches and governance strategies for learning how to flourish in new ways within the ecological constraints of the planet.
Mapping out new ways forward for long-term ecological well-being, this book is essential reading for students and scholars of ecology, environmental ethics, politics, and sociology, and for the wider audience interested in the human–Earth relationship and global sustainability.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
part Part I|2 pages
Navigating wicked dilemmas of liberty and agency in the Anthropocene
part Part II|1 pages
Seeds of freedom and nature in modern traditions
chapter 5|15 pages
Are freedom and interdependency compatible? lessons from classical liberal and contemporary feminist theory
chapter 7|14 pages
The virtue ethics alternative to freedom for a mutually beneficial human-earth relationship
chapter 8|19 pages
Who stands for Uŋčí Makhá
chapter 9|15 pages
Nature, liberty, and ontology
part Part III|1 pages
Resisting the undertow of modernity
chapter 10|14 pages
Liberation from excess
chapter 11|13 pages
Cognitively unstable rational agents
chapter 12|13 pages
The Civilicene and its alternatives
part Part IV|2 pages
From navigating the Anthropocene to being in the Ecozoic