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Neither Nature Nor Supernature Neither Nature Nor Supernature
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Groundless Deconstruction? Groundless Deconstruction?
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Common Creatures, Creaturely Commonality? Common Creatures, Creaturely Commonality?
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Mapping Ecospirit Mapping Ecospirit
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Introduction: Grounding Theory—Earth in Religion and Philosophy
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Published:June 2007
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Abstract
This introductory chapter begins with a discussion of the role of ecology in theology and philosophy. It argues that over the crucial decades of environmental degradation, critical discourses have developed that deconstruct presumptions about God, Man, and Nature, all the while perforating the boundaries between relevant disciplines. That loose cluster of philosophical and literary postmodernism, feminism and postcolonialism, poststructuralism and social constructivism has heated up and reshaped the terms of thought among and between academic disciplines. However, the key vocabularies in social, philosophical, and cultural theory for exposing the constructed character of the status quo—indeed, of all knowledge, and so of all legitimations of epistemic or social domination—invariably marginalize or eliminate ecological questions. An overview of the subsequent chapters is presented.
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