Lexington Books
Pages: 158
Trim: 6½ x 9
978-1-4985-9931-3 • Hardback • September 2019 • $111.00 • (£85.00)
978-1-4985-9932-0 • eBook • September 2019 • $105.50 • (£82.00)
Daniel E. Lee is the Marian Taft Cannon professor in the humanities at Augustana College and director of the Augustana Center for the Study of Ethics. He is author of numerous articles and ten books, including Human Rights and the Ethics of Globalization.
Acknowledgments
Prologue
Part I: Extinction and Endangered Species
Chapter 1: Ode to a Pigeon
Chapter 2: From Thundering Herds to but a Few
Chapter 3: Rescuing Species from the Brink of Extinction
Part II: Productivity and Sustainable Agriculture
Chapter 4: “A Whole Arsenal of Agricultural Chemicals”
Chapter 5: New Ways to Farm Profitably While Protecting the Environment
Part III: Recycling
Chapter 6: Recycling Across the Ages
Chapter 7: A New Era
Epilogue
Bibliography
About the Author
Celebrate Earth as a garden!—from backyard to farm, agricultural field to flourishing wilderness, endangered species to sustainable biosphere (Garden of Eden). Give respect to and take responsibility for each landscape as land of promise, the promised land. Economic justice is inseparable from environmental justice, caring for people inseparable from caring for creation. Lee’s penetrating, often detailed, account of smart land use and inept misuse is full of insights for difficult times.
— Holmes Rolston III, Colorado State University
In this well-researched and interesting volume, Daniel Lee offers a strong defense of a realistic stewardship ethic to guide reflection about issues in environmental ethics. Lee’s perspective is rooted in key biblical texts but also expressed through Aldo Leopold’s land ethic, Henry David Thoreau’s appreciation for the grandeur of nature, and Wendell Berry’s critique of modern agriculture. Lee’s training in Christian Ethics is well reflected in his application of the Just War criteria to the ethics of regulatory intervention and in his discussion of the relevance of Aristotle’s golden mean to issues related to rapacious consumption. A welcome companion text for courses in environmental ethics as well as an interesting text for congregational study groups.
— James Martin-Schramm, Luther College