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Ecumenism - Present Realities and Future Prospects (Hardcover, New)
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Ecumenism - Present Realities and Future Prospects (Hardcover, New)
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In Ecological Ethics and the Human Soul: Aquinas, Whitehead, and
the Metaphysics of Value, Francisco J. Benzoni addresses the
pervasive and destructive view that there is a moral gulf between
human beings and other creatures. Thomas Aquinas, whose metaphysics
entails such a moral gulf, holds that human beings are ultimately
separate from nature. Alfred North Whitehead, in contrast,
maintains that human beings are continuous with the rest of nature.
These different metaphysical systems demand different ethical
stances toward creation. Benzoni analyzes and challenges Thomas's
understanding of the human soul, his primary justification for the
moral separation, arguing that it is finally philosophically
untenable. The author finds promising the alternative metaphysics
of Whitehead, for whom human beings are a part of nature-even if
the highest part; all creatures have a degree of subjectivity and
creativity, and thus all have intrinsic value and moral worth,
independent of subjective human valuation. Further, though there is
difference, there is no moral gulf between God and the world. God
is truly affected by the experience of creatures. Benzoni argues
that if this vision of moral worth is articulated with sufficient
force and clarity, it could help heal the human relation to our
planet. "Eminently clear in concept and analysis, profound in
insight, and precise in reasoning, this book not only contributes a
distinguished study of Aquinas but also reshapes contemporary
ecological ethics by relating it to basic issues of metaphysics.
Both subsequent moral theory attentive to Aquinas and subsequent
formulations of ecological ethics will be incomplete without taking
account of Benzoni's argument."-Franklin I. Gamwell, Shailer
Mathews Distinguished Service Professor of Religious Ethics, the
Philosophy of Religion, and Theology, The University of Chicago
Divinity School "In the introduction and conclusion, Francisco
Benzoni makes clear the broader significance of this work for the
field of ecological ethics and the future well-being of the human
species on this earth. One can learn a great deal about the
philosophy of both Aquinas and Whitehead in working through these
pages."-Joseph Bracken, Xavier University
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