On the Nature of the Gods 2. 159–60; trans. Rackham 1933 It would be a long story to tell of the services rendered by mules and asses, which were undoubtedly created for the use of men. As for the pig, it can only furnish food; indeed Chrysippus actually says that its soul was given it to serve as salt and keep it from putrefaction; and because this animal was fitted for the food of man, nature made it the most prolific of all her offspring. Seneca, Letters 95. 19 Look how many things extravagance, the plunderer of land and sea, has mixed together so that they fit through a single throat. Any attempt to assess Stoic thinking in light of our current ecological crisis pulls us in opposing directions.For, in the ancient world, to think about e...
This intimate non-fiction essay traces a lineage of Western ecopoetics and ecological thought to its...
Man should not look for a single center or program in ecosystems, much less for subjective experienc...
I demonstrate here how Aristotle's teleological conception of nature has been largely misunderstood ...
On the Nature of the Gods 2. 159–60; trans. Rackham 1933 It would be a long story to tell of the ser...
With the notion of advancing a modern Stoic environmental ethical framework, we explore the philosop...
In this article, I consider how ancient Greek philosophical thinking might be approached differently...
This paper explores how to deliberate about food choices from a Stoic perspective informed by the va...
This chapter considers how ancient Stoic cosmopolitanism – roughly, the claim all human beings are m...
This essay traces some of the stages of ecotheological thought, placing special emphasis on the symb...
In this ecotheological study the immense magnitude of the ecological crisis, a modern but global pro...
This essay outlines the emerging field of ecological theology (ecotheology) with a primary focus on ...
The threat of ecological collapse is increasingly becoming a reality for the world’s populations, bo...
Natural degradation is not merely a competition between ecology and economy. The destruction of natu...
At the end of the twentieth century the relationship between man and nature becomes the object of a ...
Sustainability is often conceived as a contemporary issue, since several synergic factors put both t...
This intimate non-fiction essay traces a lineage of Western ecopoetics and ecological thought to its...
Man should not look for a single center or program in ecosystems, much less for subjective experienc...
I demonstrate here how Aristotle's teleological conception of nature has been largely misunderstood ...
On the Nature of the Gods 2. 159–60; trans. Rackham 1933 It would be a long story to tell of the ser...
With the notion of advancing a modern Stoic environmental ethical framework, we explore the philosop...
In this article, I consider how ancient Greek philosophical thinking might be approached differently...
This paper explores how to deliberate about food choices from a Stoic perspective informed by the va...
This chapter considers how ancient Stoic cosmopolitanism – roughly, the claim all human beings are m...
This essay traces some of the stages of ecotheological thought, placing special emphasis on the symb...
In this ecotheological study the immense magnitude of the ecological crisis, a modern but global pro...
This essay outlines the emerging field of ecological theology (ecotheology) with a primary focus on ...
The threat of ecological collapse is increasingly becoming a reality for the world’s populations, bo...
Natural degradation is not merely a competition between ecology and economy. The destruction of natu...
At the end of the twentieth century the relationship between man and nature becomes the object of a ...
Sustainability is often conceived as a contemporary issue, since several synergic factors put both t...
This intimate non-fiction essay traces a lineage of Western ecopoetics and ecological thought to its...
Man should not look for a single center or program in ecosystems, much less for subjective experienc...
I demonstrate here how Aristotle's teleological conception of nature has been largely misunderstood ...