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Summary Philosophical study of Ecology and Conservation Biology is a growing part of Philosophy of Science. Ecology and Conservation Biology are closely-related branches of biology. Ecology studies interactions between groups of organisms and among those groups and their environments. The questions of Conservation Biology arise from efforts to preserve groups of organisms or other biological units like ecosystems. Many of the questions in this area arise from more general questions in philosophy of science like the role of laws, the structure of explanations, the challenges of representation. The specific kinds of complexity arising from the interactions of so many and such different living organisms as are typical of ecological research make Ecology and Conservation Biology fruitful terrain for examining how scientists can represent complexity in a manageable way. Moreover, these biological disciplines are also appealed to in decision making, at scales from the management of a wetland to the development of international climate-change agreements. Some philosophers of science address biologists' capacities to answer the questions arising in these contexts, given the achievements and limitations of these complex sciences.
Key works An early monograph connecting ecology and conservation was Shrader-Frechette 1993. Cooper 2003 was the first monograph in philosophy of science focused on ecology.
Introductions Justus 2013 is an introduction to problems and debates in Philosophy of Ecology written for Biology instructors and other educators, but more generally useful for non-specialists. Colyvan et al 2009 surveys major issues in Philosophy of Ecology. Justus 2002 discusses prominent problems in Conservation Biology, and Sarkar 2004 is an introductory encyclopedia article on the same.
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  1. Global Artificial Intelligence (GAI): Global Map.R. Pedraza - 2025 - Ruben Garcia Pedraza.
    Global Map takes you to the frontier where Artificial Intelligence, planetary management, and the future of humanity converge. In this groundbreaking book, Rubén García Pedraza explores the Unified Modelling System—a powerful framework that allows us to build models upon maps, and from those maps, to make precise and effective decisions. Whether in agriculture, industry, or planetary-scale projects, this system reveals how decisions can be optimized to transform reality itself.
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  2. Possibility of two universal ancestors: It's always right coding principles.A. Eslami - unknown
  3. Salvation and Non-Human Creation: An Orthodox Witness in the Digital Age: Ecological Insights from Maximus the Confessor and John Zizioulas.Aleksandar Bradic - manuscript
    In this essay, we contend that the exercise of human dominance over nature extends beyond a mere utilitarian and exploitative attitude toward non-human creation, which inevitably leads to ecological crises, and is also reflected in humanity’s impulse toward ‘escape from nature’, manifesting as a growing detachment from the rest of creation. This impulse, although evident throughout history, holds particular relevance in today’s increasingly digitally mediated world, where the acceleration of the ‘digital transformation’ process is often presented as a key component (...)
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  4. Nature Guide to The Listening Point.Devin Bostick - manuscript
    This document is a structured hypothesis. -/- It maps 30 ecological observations from Quetico Provincial Park as if biological emergence is governed by deterministic coherence laws—not randomness, not adaptation. -/- Each system—geological, botanical, faunal, atmospheric—is analyzed using coherence logic derived from the CODES and RIC substrate architectures. These include: -/- – PAS (Phase Alignment Score) – CHORDLOCK (anchor logic) – AURA_OUT (visibility gating) – ELF (feedback correction loop) -/- While this substrate is not yet formally deployed in ecological inference engines, (...)
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  5. VESSELSEED_ Reef Logic and the Architecture of Harmonious Superintelligence.Devin Bostick - manuscript
    This paper formalizes VESSELSEED, a deterministic biological substrate for coherent intelligence, modeled on the synchrony logic of coral reefs. Using PAS (Phase Alignment Score), ELF_BIO (echo-loop feedback), and SOMA_OUT (threshold-triggered emission), VESSELSEED offers a post-stochastic model of intelligence grounded in phase coherence rather than optimization. It shows how coral ecosystems embody inference without control and extends this logic to human physiology, cognition, and governance. The result is a coherence-first system that scales without hierarchy and emits behavior only when structurally aligned.
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  6. "L'écothéologie : état des lieux et enjeux".Philippe Gagnon - 2025 - In Sophie Izoard-Allaux & Catherine Vialle, La nature vulnérable : chances et défis - Vulnérabilités du vivant III. Paris: Cerf. pp. 155-166.
  7. La nature vulnérable : chances et défis - Vulnérabilités du vivant III.Sophie Izoard-Allaux & Catherine Vialle - 2025 - Paris: Cerf.
    Peut-on parler de crépuscule écologique ? Quelle est aujourd'hui la juste place des hommes et des femmes dans l'ensemble du vivant ? Quels éléments peuvent nourrir la réponse à cette interrogation qui questionne aussi le rapport de la nature avec elle-même, l'humain et Dieu ? Ce sont les questions que cet ouvrage entend aborder à travers une lecture théologique et transdisciplinaire. Face à la nature, l'être humain se sent bien souvent déconcerté : alors qu'il semble de plus en plus difficile (...)
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  8. Open Border Ecosystems: Against Globalised Laissez-Faire Rewilding.Christopher Lean - forthcoming - Cambridge Prisms: Extinction.
    Ecosystems are increasingly being represented as marketplaces that produce goods for humanity, and because of this, economic metaphors for increasing efficiency have been introduced into conservation. A powerful model for economic growth is the globalised free market and some are implicitly deploying it to suggest changes in conservation practice. Ecological globalisation is the position that we should not control the free movement of species and re-wilding occurs most efficiently through non-intervention. When species can move and interact with new ecological systems, (...)
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  9. ‘Species’ Is Not the (Only) Unit of Biodiversity: A Process-Philosophical Perspective on Conservation Concepts.Ole Martin Sandberg, Anthony Schultz, Ragnhildur Guðmundsdóttir & Skúli Skúlason - 2025 - Marine Ecology 46 (1).
    In this paper, we argue that the concept of ‘species’ should not be the main focus of research and policies in biodiversity conservation. Diversity is important at all levels of life: within species as well as among them and within and among ecosystems. First, we give a brief overview of the debate about the necessity to find a unified concept of ‘species’. In this, we side with Charles Darwin, who insisted that no strict definition could be given to this term, (...)
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  10. CODES Climate Model.Devin Bostick - manuscript
    Abstract -/- -/- Current climate models rely on probability-driven emissions tracking and mitigation strategies, which fail to account for the structured resonance dynamics of planetary systems. CODES introduces a structured resonance-based framework that reinterprets environmental stability as a function of phase-locked coherence rather than stochastic fluctuations. -/- -/- This model posits that climate instability arises from resonance disruptions across atmospheric, biological, and energy systems, rather than isolated excesses of carbon or pollutants. Instead of treating emissions as independent variables, CODES reformulates (...)
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  11. A lab for all seasons: the laboratory revolution in modern botany and the rise of physiological plant ecology. [REVIEW]Stephen Bocking - 2025 - Annals of Science 82 (2):338-340.
    After so many decades dominated by molecular biology, it is important to remember that scientists have also devoted much attention to entire living organisms and ecosystems. In this spirit, Sharon...
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  12. Green fields, ugly ducklings and black swans: aesthetic dimensions of ecological science.Samantha Capon, Robyn Bartel, Sandy Boucher, Felicity Joseph & Anthony Lynch - 2025 - People and Nature 7:1286-1295.
    Despite its relative infancy, ecological science plays a pre-eminent role in current environmental decision-making globally and has, over recent decades, permeated a broad range of academic disciplines. Developments in two areas of philosophical thought in particular, environmental aesthetics and the aesthetics of science, beg an exploration of their intersection with respect to the role of aesthetics in ecological science. Here, we provide a contemporary synthesis of both environmental aesthetics and aesthetics of science to explore aesthetic dimensions of contemporary ecological science, (...)
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  13. The Mitonuclear Compatibility Species Concept, Intrinsic Essentialism, and Natural Kinds.Kyle Heine & Elay Shech - 2025 - Philosophy of Science ( Issue 1):59 - 81.
    This essay introduces, develops, and appraises the mitonuclear compatibility species concept (MCSC), identifying advantages and limitations with respect to alternative species concepts. While the consensus amongst most philosophers of biology is that (kind) essentialism about species is mistaken, and that species at most have relational essences, we appeal to the MCSC to defend thoroughgoing intrinsic essentialism. Namely, the doctrine that species have fully intrinsic essences and, thus, are natural kinds (of sorts), while allowing that species aren’t categorically distinct.
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  14. Co-creating with nature: healing the wound of separation.Pam Montgomery - 2025 - Rochester, Vermont: Bear & Company.
    Establishes that being in partnership with Nature is our birthright, explores the roots of our separation, and demonstrates that we are designed to communicate with Nature. Offers six principles of co-creative partnership with Nature that serve as a map for guiding us back to our rightful place as a part of Nature. Explains that plants can guide us in living according to our true essential nature and details the steps of creating and facilitating a plant initiation with common plants.
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  15. Intersubjectivity and ecology: Habermas on natural history.Felix Kämper - 2024 - Constellations 31 (4):520-531.
  16. Driftability and niche construction.Alejandro Fábregas-Tejeda & Grant Ramsey - 2024 - Synthese 204 (6):1-22.
    Niche construction is the process of organisms changing themselves or their environment—or their relationship with their environment—in ways that affect the evolutionary trajectory of their population. These evolutionary trajectory changes are traditionally understood to be triggered by changes in selection pressures. Niche construction thus necessarily involves organisms altering selection pressures. In this paper, we argue that changes in selection pressures is not the only way organisms can influence the evolutionary futures of their population. We propose that organisms can also affect (...)
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  17. Écologie tragique: le taureau par les cornes.Fabrice Hadjadj - 2024 - Paris: Mame.
    La question n'est plus : 'L'écologie, pour ou contre?' Le label vert a partout remplacé le label rouge (ou bleu ciel). La question est : 'Quelle écologie?' Or il y a là un problème, et même un 'problème à cornes,' selon la formule de Nietzsche : peut-on vraiment fonder l'écologie sur la Nature, dont la notion est si ambivalente? Elle n'a pas attendu l'homme pour produire cinq extinctions massives. Laissée à elle-même, elle éteindra tout, y compris les étoiles. Par ailleurs, (...)
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  18. Taking natural harms seriously in compassionate conservation.Tristan Katz - 2024 - Biological Conservation.
    Compassionate conservation is an ethical framework proposed to instill greater compassion for individual animals in conservation science and practice. In addition to highlighting compassion as a virtue, compassionate conservationists propose four ethical principles (first do no harm, individuals matter, inclusivity, and peaceful coexistence) to capture what it means to act compassionately in conservation. In this paper I argue for a revision of this framework. I begin by showing how compassionate conservationists also implicitly promote the virtue of respect, which better accounts (...)
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  19. Book Review: Toward a Critical Theory of Nature: Capital, Ecology and Dialectics.Austin Cottrell - 2024 - Philosophy and Social Criticism 50 (8):1282-1285.
  20. (1 other version)Radical ecology: the search for a livable world.Carolyn Merchant - 1992 - New York:
    This is a new edition of the classic examination of major philosophical, ethical, scientific and economic roots of environmental problems which examines the ways that radical ecologists can transform science and society in order to sustain life on this planet. It features a new Introduction from the author, a thorough updating of chapters, and two entirely new chapters on recent Global Movements and Globalization and the Environment.
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  21. Interpretable and accurate prediction models for metagenomics data.Edi Prifti, Antoine Danchin, Jean-Daniel Zucker & Eugeni Belda - 2020 - Gigascience 9 (3):giaa010.
    Background: Microbiome biomarker discovery for patient diagnosis, prognosis, and risk evaluation is attracting broad interest. Selected groups of microbial features provide signatures that characterize host disease states such as cancer or cardio-metabolic diseases. Yet, the current predictive models stemming from machine learning still behave as black boxes and seldom generalize well. Their interpretation is challenging for physicians and biologists, which makes them difficult to trust and use routinely in the physician-patient decision-making process. Novel methods that provide interpretability and biological insight (...)
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  22. Aesthetic to ecology.Laura Follesa - 2024 - Metascience 33 (2):239-242.
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  23. Obrazy v ėkofilosofskoĭ kartine mira: monografii︠a︡.Ė. V. Barkova (ed.) - 2022 - Moskva: RU-Science.
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  24. Ėkofilosofii︠a︡--razvitii︠u︡ kulʹtury mira: monografii︠a︡.Ė. V. Barkova (ed.) - 2023 - Moskva:
    gl. 1. Ėkofilosofii︠a︡ kak zhiznesokhrani︠a︡i︠u︡shchiĭ kulʹturnyĭ proekt -- gl. 2. Obrazy kulʹtury mira v istoriko-personologicheskom izmerenii -- gl. 3. Borʹba za mir v sovremennom mire : opyt, kont︠s︡ept︠s︡ii, modeli resheniĭ.
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  25. The easy difference: Sex in behavioural ecology.Rose Trappes - 2024 - In Annabelle Dufourcq, Annemie Halsema, Katrine Smiet & Karen Vintges, Purple Brains: Feminisms at the Limits of Philosophy. Nijmegen: Radboud University Press. pp. 98-105.
    This chapter questions the way “sex” features in behavioral ecological research as a standard explanatory variable. Researchers often use sex to explain variation in a trait or phenomenon that they are studying. This practice is widespread, partly because sex is often easy to identify and often explains some variation, thus making it easier to discover and test other causal patterns of interest. Yet, sex also frequently fails to explain variation. Using a couple of recent examples, it is shown how the (...)
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  26. Data Synthesis for Big Questions: From Animal Tracks to Ecological Models.Rose Trappes - 2024 - Philosophy, Theory, and Practice in Biology 16 (1):4.
    This paper addresses a relatively new mode of ecological research: data synthesis studies. Data synthesis studies involve reusing data to create a general model as well as a reusable, aggregated dataset. Using a case from movement ecology, I analyse the trade-offs and strategies involved in data synthesis. Like theoretical ecological modelling, I find that synthesis studies involve a modelling trade-off between generality, precision and realism; they deal with this trade-off by adopting a pragmatic kludging strategy. I also identify an additional (...)
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  27. Living on Earth: forests, corals, consciousness, and the making of the world.Peter Godfrey-Smith - 2024 - New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux.
    A philosopher's examination of how animal and plant life has shaped the history of our planet.
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  28. Cybernetic or Machinic Ecology? Guattari’s Parting Ways with Bateson.Julie Van der Wielen - 2024 - Environmental Philosophy 21 (1):61-89.
    In this article, I examine the relation between Bateson and Guattari’s ecological thoughts: two thinkers whose ecological ideas at first sight have a lot in common. In order to show the difference between the thoughts of both thinkers, I will take my clue from Guattari’s remark that he parts ways with Bateson on the role of context. Explaining the role of context in both authors will allow me to show how Guattari’s thought implies both an endorsement and a critique of (...)
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  29. What We Owe Owls: Nonideal Relationality among Fellow Creatures in the Old Growth Forest.Ben Almassi - 2023 - Relations Beyond Anthropocentrism 10 (2).
    Though many of us have constructed our lives (or have had them constructed for us) such that it is easy to ignore or forget, human lives are entangled with other animals in many ways. Some interspecies relations would arguably exist in some form or another even under an ideal model of animal ethics. Others have an inescapably non-ideal character – these relationships exist as they do because things have gone wrong. In such circumstances we have reparative duties to animals we (...)
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  30. Slow ecology: Local knowledge and natural restoration on the lower Danube.Stelu Şerban - 2024 - Environmental Values 33 (3):258-278.
    In the first half of the 2000s, one project to restore the former Danube floodplain was carried out in Belene, a marginal town on the Bulgarian Danube. The aim of this article is to record the practices that were already in place before the interventions on the Danube, as part of a heterogeneous local knowledge that had an alternative vision to the scientific knowledge of experts involved in the restoration project. The data comes from qualitative interviews with locals and experts (...)
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  31. Sharon E. Kingsland, A Lab for All Seasons: The Laboratory Revolution in Modern Botany and the Rise of Physiological Plant Ecology, 2023, New Haven: Yale University Press, ISBN: 9780300267228, 385 pp. [REVIEW]Joel B. Hagen - 2024 - Journal of the History of Biology 57 (1):165-167.
  32. Martin Heidegger’s ‘Dasein’ in an Emerging Digital Ecology.Ben van Lier - 2024 - Foundations of Science 29 (2):479-502.
    We are currently in the middle of the transformation from Martin Heidegger’s modern society to a society based on digital technology. In the developing digital society, humans in their current state of ‘Being’ are increasingly surrounded by systems that are networked and run based on algorithms, software, and data. These interconnected systems function, communicate, and interact in networks and driven by these algorithms, software, and data, which give them the ability to connect, calculate, and reveal. Jointly, these systems thus create (...)
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  33. Cultural Ecology in the Court: Ontology, Harm, and Scientific Practice.Andrew Buskell - 2024 - Journal of Social Ontology 10 (2).
    This article charts a path between those who champion the culture concept and those who think it dangerous. This path navigates between two positions: realists who adopt realist conceptions of both the culture concept and the category of cultural groups, and fictionalists who see such efforts as just creative and fictional extrapolation. Developing the fictionalist position, I suggest it overstates the case against realism: there is plenty of room for realist positions that produce well-grounded empirical studies of cultural groups. Nonetheless, (...)
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  34. Romanticism and Political Ecology.Anna Ezekiel (ed.) - forthcoming
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  35. Advances in Human Ecology.Uta Eser (ed.) - 1998 - Tübingen:
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  36. The Intersubjective Ecology Lab: Collaborative More-than-Human and Artistic Pedagogies.Anna Ziya Geerling - unknown
    Founded on the premise that all living beings and systems are subjects in their own right, the Intersubjective Ecology Lab (IEL) is a collaborative effort at innovative, creative and experimental ways of reviving or arriving at socio-ecological knowledges and relationships that can help us reimagine our present and future beyond the so-called era of ‘the Anthropocene’ by supporting ecosystemic well-being on a local and planetary scale. During the Highland Gathering 2023, we hosted various sessions; from a philosophical dialogue on decolonizing (...)
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  37. Metrics in biodiversity conservation and the value-free ideal.Federica Bocchi - 2024 - Synthese 203 (5):1-27.
    This paper examines one aspect of the legacy of the Value-Free Ideal in conservation science: the view that measurements and metrics are value-free epistemic tools detached from ideological, ethical, social, and, generally, non-epistemic considerations. Contrary to this view, I will argue that traditional measurement practices entrenched in conservation are in fact permeated with non-epistemic values. I challenge the received view by revealing three non-epistemic assumptions underlying traditional metrics: (1) a human-environment demarcation, (2) the desirability of a people-free landscape, and (3) (...)
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  38. Metaphysical Status of Money and Sustainable Organizations and Ecosystems.Tiago Cardao-Pito & Jyldyz Abdyrakhmanova - 2024 - Philosophy of Management 23 (2):1-30.
    The current economic and societal production system gives money a magnified importance, overlooking other essential flows necessary for human survival and existence. It focuses on monetary indicators like profits, dividends, and GDPs to evaluate organizational production, while often disregarding outputs that harm the biosphere. Money is treated as the constitutive being (ousia) and attributed undemonstrated explanatory properties. Intangible flow theory helps eliminate this metaphysical status of money by recognizing that monetary flows are just one of many necessary flows for human (...)
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  39. (1 other version)Dōgen, Deep Ecology, and the Ecological Self.Deane Curtin - 2014 - In J. Baird Callicott & James McRae, Environmental Philosophy in Asian Traditions of Thought. State University of New York Press. pp. 267-289.
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  40. Ecology, Aesthetics and Daoist Body Cultivation.James Miller - 2014 - In J. Baird Callicott & James McRae, Environmental Philosophy in Asian Traditions of Thought. State University of New York Press. pp. 225-243.
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  41. (1 other version)The Viability (Dao) and Virtuosity (De) of Daoist Ecology: Reversion (Fu) as Renewal.Sandra A. Wawrytko - 2014 - In J. Baird Callicott & James McRae, Environmental Philosophy in Asian Traditions of Thought. State University of New York Press. pp. 209-224.
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  42. (1 other version)Process Ecology and the ‘Ideal’ Dao.Alan Fox - 2014 - In J. Baird Callicott & James McRae, Environmental Philosophy in Asian Traditions of Thought. State University of New York Press. pp. 197-207.
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  43. Evolution in Space and Time: The Second Synthesis of Ecology, Evolutionary Biology, and the Philosophy of Biology.Mitchell Ryan Distin - 2023
    Change is the fundamental idea of evolution. Explaining the extraordinary biological change we see written in the history of genomes and fossil beds is the primary occupation of the evolutionary biologist. Yet it is a surprising fact that for the majority of evolutionary research, we have rarely studied how evolution typically unfolds in nature, in changing ecological environments, over space and time. While ecology played a major role in the eventual acceptance of the population genetic viewpoint of evolution in the (...)
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  44. Deep ecology and the philosophy of Emmanuel Levinas: the importance of moving from biocentric responsibility to environmental justice.Pehuén Barzola-Elizagaray & Ofelia Agoglia - 2024 - Ethics in Science and Environmental Politics 24:31-45.
    Environmental theory and practice can benefit greatly from Emmanuel Levinas’ non-ontological philosophy of the Other in order to address the current global environmental crisis. From this viewpoint, this article focuses on 2 major positions within deep ecology. We discuss the significance of transitioning from one of them, which represents biocentric responsibility, to the other, which seeks to achieve environmental justice by challenging the hegemony of institutionalised environmentalism. In Levinasian terms, this is represented by moving from the anarchic realm of ethics (...)
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  45. Integrating population genetics with landscape ecology to infer spatio-temporal processes.Rolf Holderegger - 2007 - In Felix Kienast, Otto Wildi & S. Ghosh, A changing world: challenges for landscape research. Dordrecht, The Netherlands:
  46. Of the Land and the Spirit: The Essential Lord Northbourne on Ecology and Religion. [REVIEW]Samuel Bendeck Sotillos - 2010 - Resurgence 258:71-71.
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  47. Noir materialism: freedom and obligation in political ecology.Michael Uhall - 2024 - Lanham:
    This book reengineers the conceptual relationship between nature and politics by crafting the terms of a new philosophy of nature and exploring its consequences for political thought. These consequences include major theoretical reformulations of some indispensable political concepts, including freedom, obligation, and the subject.
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  48. Landscape aesthetics: toward an engaged ecology.Alberto L. Siani - 2024 - New York: Columbia University Press.
    Both landscape and aesthetics are all too often considered disengaged categories associated with leisure and contemplation. This book establishes landscape as a key concept in contemporary thought and rethinks aesthetics in political and activist terms. In order to do so, it challenges the dualism of "the environment" as the space inhabited by humans and the province of the natural sciences about which philosophy has little to say. (This separation is evident even in the name of the recent field of environmental (...)
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  49. Acoustic ecology.Kostas Paparrigopoulos - 2024 - In Roberto Barbanti, Isabelle Ginot, Makis Solomos & Cécile Sorin, Arts, ecologies, transitions. Abingdon, Oxon: Routledge.
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  50. Ecology and Culture of Sustainable Development.Nizami M. Mamedov - 2014 - European Journal of Philosophical Research 1 (1):44-53.
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