Description |
1 online resource (209 pages) |
Series |
Routledge Explorations in Environmental Studies |
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Routledge explorations in environmental studies.
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Contents |
Cover; Half Title; Series Page; Title Page; Copyright Page; Dedication; Table of Contents; About the author; Preface; Part I: Eco-phenomenological issues: Transcending the metaphysics of presence; Chapter 1: Introducing eco-phenomenology: Methods, problems, and proposed solutions; Prologue: the need for eco-phenomenology; Deep Ecology and phenomenology; Deep Ecology; Phenomenology; The move to eco-phenomenology; Defining eco-phenomenologyand introducing the scope of its concern; Prolegomena to eco-phenomenology; Edmund Husserl, Martin Heidegger, essences, and the nature of understanding |
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Insuper Husserl and HeideggerMaurice Merleau-Ponty, Alphonso Lingis, and interrogative ontology; Merleau-Ponty and the immersion of the human being in the world; The radicalized phenomenology of Alphonso Lingis; The descriptive method and concern for the "things" of the world; Notes; Chapter 2: The cultural Weltanschauung: "Naturalistic" framework and our interaction with nature; Introducing the "Cultural Framework"; The Natural Attitude and the Lebenswelt in Husserl and eco-phenomenology; The rise of naturalism-scientism and the Cultural Framework; The Cultural Framework as das Ge-Stell |
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Heidegger's "epochs of Being/Beyng" in relation to natureProblems with secular humanism and scientism; Critiques of sustainable development and "green" humanism; The ongoing influence of the "naturalistic" cultural framework; Fossil fuels and environmental politics; Notes; Part II: The ethical call of Nature: Reticent imperatives; Chapter 3: A reconceived philosophy of "objects" and Nature: Object-Oriented Ontology and eco-phenomenology; Toward a reconceived view of nature; A detailed overview of Graham Harman's Object-Oriented Ontology |
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The emergence of the reality of objects: On reinterpreting Husserl and HeideggerPhilosophical realism or the ontology of objects; Enlightened return to issues of eco-phenomenology; Notes; Chapter 4: Duties and imperatives in a reconceived ethics of Nature: Intuitionism and phenomenology; Prolegomena to an eco-phenomenological ethics of Nature; The prima facie rule-intuitionism of W.D. Ross's ethics; Toward a prima facie phenomenological ethics of Nature; Intuiting the normative: The inherent ethical value of Nature; Fundamental ethical imperatives given by the world and the things themselves |
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Moral goodness and attunementRevised prima facie duties as tentative eco-imperatives; Intuitionism and phenomenology; Notes; Chapter 5: The phenomenology of human-and-Nature involvements: The ethical call of Nature's reticent imperatives; Immersed, embodied, and emplaced intentionality; A reconceived notion of the human-and-Nature relationship; Listening to and for the "reticent" imperatives of Nature; Notes; Bibliography; Index |
Notes |
Print version record |
Subject |
Environmental ethics.
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Nature -- Effect of human beings on.
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Phenomenology.
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phenomenology.
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Environmental ethics
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Nature -- Effect of human beings on
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Phenomenology
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Form |
Electronic book
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ISBN |
9780429770333 |
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0429770332 |
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