A valuable and documented source.
--Choice
Ferkiss has navigated an exceedingly complex course through our
philosophical history, tracing the lineage of ideas about nature
and technology as they evolved from ancient times through Taoism,
industrialism, Marxism, and several other isms.'
--Sierra Magazine
Offers a colorful, concise, and well-written survey of formal
thought on the role of science and technology.
--Policy Currents
Worldwide in its scope and reach, Ferkiss's book encompasses
ethics and technology, society, and international relations--a true
renaissance perspective. It is written clearly and without
trepidations.
--Amitai Etzioni, author of The Moral Dimension
A valuable overview of conceptions of nature, science, and
technology since ancient times. Anyone concerned with global
environmental issues will benefit from its temperate, even- handed
treatment of the hundreds of thinkers who have participated in
great age-old debate over the human conquest of the earth and its
resources.
--W. Warren Wagar, Distinguished Teaching Professor, SUNY,
Binghamton
A fine book . . . an excellent source book and] a valuable
reference work, one of those books that belong on the shelf, near
at hand, in the collection of any serious student of
environmentalism and the history of technology. It will be
consulted often.
--Walter Rosenbaum, University of Florida, author of Environmental
Politics and Policy
An extraordinary achievement--a dazzling scholarly tour de force
that is so clearly and elegantly written that readers are gripped
by the superb story Ferkiss] tells. It is the story of what may be
the central issue of our time--humanity's relationship with nature.
. . . Perhaps no scholar on earth is better equipped to tell this
story. . . . Ferkiss] exhibits an extraordinary command of the
subject as he takes readers on a fascinating guided tour through
Western and Eastern culture, beautifully summarizing and
judiciously commenting on the changing attitudes shown by people
ranging from Buddhists to Nazis, from the ancient Greeks to today's
Earth Firsters and ecotopians .... A genuine treat.
--Edward Cornish, President, World Future Society
A fine book...it reaches broadly and deeply into our cultural
roots, bringing religion, theology, popular culture, science,
folklore, natural history and much else into the discussion...an
excellent source book and] a valuable reference work, one of those
books that belong on the shelf, near at hand, in the collection of
any serious student of environmentalism and the history of
technology. It will be consulted often.
-- Walter Rosenbaum, University of Florida, author of Environmental
Politics and Policy
While all human societies have enlisted technologies to control
nature, the last hundred years have witnessed the technological
exploitation and destruction of natural resources on an
unprecedented scale. As environmental groups and the scientific
community sound the alarm about deforestation, global warming and
ozone depletion, the obvious question arises: how did we get where
we are today? Victor Ferkiss here sets out to answer this central
question, emphasizing that we cannot escape from our present
environmental predicament unless we understand the ideas which have
created it.
Tracing the development of cultural attitudes toward the
environment and technology over almost the whole span of human
civilization, this book is distinctive both in its
comprehensiveness, and in its attempt to place side by side
influential thinkers and movements with varied views on these
issues.
In this extraordinary book Ferkiss asks the basic questions
concerning humans and their relationship to the environment. He
traces cultural attitudes towards the environment from early
mankind to the present day. This book is distinguished in its
comprehensiveness, as well as in its attempt to place influential
thinkers and movements with varied views side-by-side.
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