Voices of the Earth: An Anthology of Ideas and ArgumentsA unique collection of readings conveying the enormous range of discussions and debates which, over the centuries, have questioned our place within and treatment of the natural world. The extracts chosen cover both Western and non-Western traditions of thought, and represent a diverse range of sources, including writers, theologians, scientists, poets and philosophers, from the early Hindu scriptures to Sartre. The extracts have been chosen for their accessibility for the modern reader, and the volume includes a comprehensive introduction outlining the issues involved, and commentaries which put the individual texts in context. The extracts in this book raise fundamental questions about our relationship with the world we live in, and will inform current concerns about the environmental crises we are facing. Fascinating reading, and an indispensable source of reference. |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 35
Page 70
... motion of the cosmos itself cannot be lacking in perfect order . Indeed , just as the individual motions are derived from and contribute to universal motion , so from the order of universal motion they receive order and to the order of ...
... motion of the cosmos itself cannot be lacking in perfect order . Indeed , just as the individual motions are derived from and contribute to universal motion , so from the order of universal motion they receive order and to the order of ...
Page 92
... motion . II . The natural genuine effect of variously determined motion in portions of matter is to divide it into parts of differing sizes and shapes , and to put them into different motions ; and the con- sequences that flow from ...
... motion . II . The natural genuine effect of variously determined motion in portions of matter is to divide it into parts of differing sizes and shapes , and to put them into different motions ; and the con- sequences that flow from ...
Page 108
... motion that agitates matter ? the same reasoning furnishes the answer ; namely , that as motion is coeval with matter , it must have existed from all eternity , seeing that motion is the necessary consequence of its existence of its of ...
... motion that agitates matter ? the same reasoning furnishes the answer ; namely , that as motion is coeval with matter , it must have existed from all eternity , seeing that motion is the necessary consequence of its existence of its of ...
Contents
NonEuropean Traditions | 17 |
The Classical World | 28 |
The JudaeoChristian | 43 |
Copyright | |
10 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
absurd according action animals Aristotle attitudes beasts beauty become belief body Book of Genesis Breath called cause century complete concept concerning consciousness Copyright cosmos created creation creatures David Campbell deep ecology Descartes divine E F Watling earth ecological effects eternal everything existence feeling Harmondsworth harmony heavens hence human humankind idea infinite kind Lakota laws Leibniz living London Lord machine material matter means mechanical mind modern monad Monism moral motion natural philosophy natural selection natural world object organic Penguin Books perceptions perennial philosophy perfect permission of Penguin phenomena physical plants Plato Plotinus possible praise principle produce publisher purpose reason Renaissance Reproduced by permission revolution Romantic scientific scientific revolution seen sense soul species species-being spirit stars substance Taoism term thee theory things thinking thou thought traditional trans tree unity University Press whole world-view