Cultural LandscapesGabriel R. Ricci Transaction Publishers - 113 pages Adualism between man and nature has been a persistent feature of Western thought and spirituality from ancient times to the present. The opposition of mind and body, consciousness and world has tended to obscure the ways in which humans are ecologically part of interconnected systems, some of which are obvious while others operate in hidden but life-sustaining ways. Cultural Landscapes explores the physical ways in which we are intimately linked to the land and the intellectual and aesthetic connections human consciousness has with the landscape. |
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... Christianity alike, can also nourish any collaborative effort to address environmental concerns threatening the common good. Schaeffer provides a recent history of the Forum on religion and Ecology, which is an institutional expression ...
... Christians who believed the wanton disregard for God's creatures was sinful. they condemned the notion that other life forms were merely property, arguing that they were entitled to life under the same principle of natural law on which ...
... christian culture during World War i. Philippopoulos - Mihalopoulos explains how Kierkegaard's philosophical insights can orient us to de Chirico's work but to understand the sense of prehistory incorporated into his work , specifically ...
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Contents
The Lakota Sense of Place | 65 |
An Feochàn 1233 | 73 |
Anxiety in de Chiricos | 81 |
The Use of the Landscape in Heideggers Philosophy | 95 |
Contributors | 113 |