Sustainability in the Anthropocene

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A32=Babette Babich
A32=Brendan Mahoney
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A32=Dana S. Belu
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A32=Galit Wellner
A32=Jan Kyrre Berg Friis
A32=Patricia Glazebrook
A32=Róisín Lally
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Brundtland Report
Category1=Non-Fiction
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Category=QDHR5
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climate change
continental philosophy
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environmental crisis
environmental ethics
environmental philosophy
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global warming
Heidegger
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ontogenesis
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phenomenology
philosophy of science
philosophy of technology
postphenomenology
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renewable technologies
reproductive technology
science and technology studies
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solar energy
technoscience
wind energy

Product details

  • ISBN 9781498584241
  • Weight: 376g
  • Dimensions: 154 x 219mm
  • Publication Date: 17 Dec 2021
  • Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
  • Language: English
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We are facing an environmental crisis that some say is ushering a new geological epoch, the Anthropocene, one that threatens not only a great deal of life on the planet but also our understanding of who we are and our relation to the natural world. In the face of this crisis it has become clear that we need a more sustainable culture. In fact the language of sustainability has become pervasive in our culture and has deeply ingrained itself in our understanding of what living a good life would entail. “Sustainability,” however, is a contested word, and it carries with it, often implicitly and unacknowledged, deep philosophical claims that are entangled with all kinds of assumptions and power relations, some of them very problematic. This book attempts to set this urgent goal of sustainability free from its more reductive and harmful interpretations and to thereby apply a more thoughtful environmental ethics to current and emerging technologies, particularly those involving reproduction and the harnessing of energy that dominate our elemental relations to sun and air, wind and water, earth and forest.


The book is divided into 4 sections: (1) Sustainability: A Contested Term, (2) Sustainability and Renewable Technologies: Sun, Air, Wind, Water, (3) Sustainability and Design, and (4) Sustainability and Ethics. The first section sets the context for our studies and opens a space for thinking sustainability in a more thoughtful way than is often the case in contemporary discussions. The next two sections are the heart of our contribution to postphenomenology and technoscience, and the essays, here, turn to concrete examinations of particular technologies and questions of technological design in the light of our environmental crisis. The fourth section closes the book by drawing some more general implications for ethics from the intersection of the foregoing themes.

R?isín Lally is lecturer of philosophy at Gonzaga University.