
Contents
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New Science, Old Relationships New Science, Old Relationships
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Religion as a Reservoir of Ecological Knowledge Religion as a Reservoir of Ecological Knowledge
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Indigenous Religion Regulating Environmental Management Indigenous Religion Regulating Environmental Management
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Deities as Personifications of Ecological Processes Deities as Personifications of Ecological Processes
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Ecological Instruction in Sacred Texts Ecological Instruction in Sacred Texts
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Historic Western Religious Values and Ecology Historic Western Religious Values and Ecology
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Romanticism and Transcendentalism Romanticism and Transcendentalism
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The Post‐modern Dialogue between Ecology and Religion The Post‐modern Dialogue between Ecology and Religion
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Ecology's and Environmental Science's Impact on Religion Ecology's and Environmental Science's Impact on Religion
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Religious Critique of Ecological and Environmental Science Religious Critique of Ecological and Environmental Science
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The Globalization of the Dialogue between Ecology and Religion The Globalization of the Dialogue between Ecology and Religion
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References and Suggested Reading References and Suggested Reading
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13 Ecology and Religion
Get accessSusan Power Bratton is Professor and Chair of Environmental Studies at Baylor University.
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Published:02 September 2009
Cite
Abstract
Non-specialists often confuse ecology with environmental science, or even with environmental management and politics. Ecology explicitly investigates the interaction of biotic systems with their environment. This article first covers religious interaction with ecological phenomena prior to or independently of the rise of modern life science. The second half investigates the past two centuries of religious interaction with the development of ecological thought in the Euro-American context, and concludes with a brief survey of the last quarter-century of ecological and environmental science dialogue with world religions. Rather than merely offering a summary of some idealized human interaction with nature, religious interaction with environmental science is becoming more specific. It is now engaging individual environmental issues, including human population growth, global warming, the preservation of endangered species, and the management of specific ecosystems such as oceans, forests, and rivers.
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