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This book explores the placement of human beings, a "betweenness"
that elicits the fact that human communication is the mediation
between one's intellectual, moral, and political experience. Aaron
K. Kerr explores the relationship between nature and culture,
exposing the obscurities caused by technology and economic
dogmatism. A renewal of the mediatory role of human communication
is juxtaposed to the immediacy of digital consumption. The author
reveals that to redress ecological distress, there must be an equal
awareness, sense of place, and regional responsibility for built
environments which value nature. By situating philosophy and
communication within the scientific consensus of the anthropocene,
the author clearly indicates the necessary mediations between fact
and value, science and religion, local and global, nature and
culture. Scholars of philosophy, rhetoric, environmental ethics,
and global bioethics will find this book of particular interest.
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