Amazon cover image
Image from Amazon.com

Confucianism and ecology : the interrelation of heaven, earth, and humans

Contributor(s): Material type: ArticleArticleSeries: Religions of the World and EcologyPublication details: Cambridge, Mass Harvard Univ Center for Study of World Religions 1998Description: xlv, 378 p. table,photos,maps,figsISBN:
  • 0945454155
  • 9780945454151
  • 0945454163
  • 9780945454168
Subject(s): Genre/Form:
Contents:
Preface, by L Sullivan. Introduction: setting the context. Beyond the Enlightenment mentality, by W Tu. "Think globally, act locally," and the contested ground between, by W De Bary. Companionship with the world: roots and branches of a Confucian ecology, by R Taylor. Early Confucianism and environmental ethics, by P Ivanhoe. Extending the Neo-Confucian tradition: questions and reconceptualization for the twenty-first century, by M Kalton. The continuity of being: Chinese visions of nature, by W Tu. Response and responsibility: Chou Tun-i and Confucian resources for environmental ethics, by J Adler. The philosophy of environmental correlation in Chu Hsi, by T Kuwako. Ecological implications of Yi Yulgok's cosmology, by Y Ro. The philosophy of ch'i as an ecological cosmology, by M Tucker. The trinity of cosmology, ecology, and ethics in the Confucian personhood, by C Cheng. Motifs for a new Confucian ecological vision, by J Berthrong. Orientation, self, and ecological posture, by R Neville. Confucianism and garden design: a comparison of Koishikawa Korakuen and Worlitzer Park, by S Goto, J Ching. Some thoughts on Confucianism and ecofeminism, by H Li. From Heaven-and-Earth to nature: Chinese concepts of the environment and their influence on policy implementation, by R Weller, P Bol.
Reviews from LibraryThing.com:
Tags from this library: No tags from this library for this title. Log in to add tags.
Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Status Notes Date due Barcode
Books Books SAIACS Reference Section 179.109 T891C (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available ISSR 041568

Title Enrichment: conf pprs, Consultation on Confucianism and Ecology, CSWR, Harvard, My 30-Je 1, 1996; reprs.

Index.

Preface, by L Sullivan. Introduction: setting the context. Beyond the Enlightenment mentality, by W Tu. "Think globally, act locally," and the contested ground between, by W De Bary. Companionship with the world: roots and branches of a Confucian ecology, by R Taylor. Early Confucianism and environmental ethics, by P Ivanhoe. Extending the Neo-Confucian tradition: questions and reconceptualization for the twenty-first century, by M Kalton. The continuity of being: Chinese visions of nature, by W Tu. Response and responsibility: Chou Tun-i and Confucian resources for environmental ethics, by J Adler. The philosophy of environmental correlation in Chu Hsi, by T Kuwako. Ecological implications of Yi Yulgok's cosmology, by Y Ro. The philosophy of ch'i as an ecological cosmology, by M Tucker. The trinity of cosmology, ecology, and ethics in the Confucian personhood, by C Cheng. Motifs for a new Confucian ecological vision, by J Berthrong. Orientation, self, and ecological posture, by R Neville. Confucianism and garden design: a comparison of Koishikawa Korakuen and Worlitzer Park, by S Goto, J Ching. Some thoughts on Confucianism and ecofeminism, by H Li. From Heaven-and-Earth to nature: Chinese concepts of the environment and their influence on policy implementation, by R Weller, P Bol.

English

There are no comments on this title.

to post a comment.