[PDF] Politics Of Nature eBook

Politics Of Nature Book in PDF, ePub and Kindle version is available to download in english. Read online anytime anywhere directly from your device. Click on the download button below to get a free pdf file of Politics Of Nature book. This book definitely worth reading, it is an incredibly well-written.

Politics of Nature

Author : Bruno Latour
Publisher : Harvard University Press
Page : 320 pages
File Size : 38,70 MB
Release : 2009-07-01
Category : Philosophy
ISBN : 0674039963

GET BOOK

A major work by one of the more innovative thinkers of our time, Politics of Nature does nothing less than establish the conceptual context for political ecology—transplanting the terms of ecology into more fertile philosophical soil than its proponents have thus far envisioned. Bruno Latour announces his project dramatically: “Political ecology has nothing whatsoever to do with nature, this jumble of Greek philosophy, French Cartesianism and American parks.” Nature, he asserts, far from being an obvious domain of reality, is a way of assembling political order without due process. Thus, his book proposes an end to the old dichotomy between nature and society—and the constitution, in its place, of a collective, a community incorporating humans and nonhumans and building on the experiences of the sciences as they are actually practiced. In a critique of the distinction between fact and value, Latour suggests a redescription of the type of political philosophy implicated in such a “commonsense” division—which here reveals itself as distinctly uncommonsensical and in fact fatal to democracy and to a healthy development of the sciences. Moving beyond the modernist institutions of “mononaturalism” and “multiculturalism,” Latour develops the idea of “multinaturalism,” a complex collectivity determined not by outside experts claiming absolute reason but by “diplomats” who are flexible and open to experimentation.

After Nature

Author : Jedediah Purdy
Publisher : Harvard University Press
Page : 337 pages
File Size : 45,49 MB
Release : 2015-09
Category : History
ISBN : 0674368223

GET BOOK

An Artforum Best Book of the Year A Legal Theory Bookworm Book of the Year Nature no longer exists apart from humanity. Henceforth, the world we will inhabit is the one we have made. Geologists have called this new planetary epoch the Anthropocene, the Age of Humans. The geological strata we are now creating record industrial emissions, industrial-scale crop pollens, and the disappearance of species driven to extinction. Climate change is planetary engineering without design. These facts of the Anthropocene are scientific, but its shape and meaning are questions for politics—a politics that does not yet exist. After Nature develops a politics for this post-natural world. “After Nature argues that we will deserve the future only because it will be the one we made. We will live, or die, by our mistakes.” —Christine Smallwood, Harper’s “Dazzling...Purdy hopes that climate change might spur yet another change in how we think about the natural world, but he insists that such a shift will be inescapably political... For a relatively slim volume, this book distills an incredible amount of scholarship—about Americans’ changing attitudes toward the natural world, and about how those attitudes might change in the future.” —Ross Andersen, The Atlantic

The Politics of Rights of Nature

Author : Craig M. Kauffman
Publisher :
Page : pages
File Size : 34,26 MB
Release : 2021
Category : Environmental policy
ISBN : 9780262366601

GET BOOK

"On the global development of legislation, treaty negotiations, constitutional measures, and litigation resulting in legal recognition of Rights of Nature (RoN), including the cultural and political influences that determined how these legal rights were framed, the method of adoption and, importantly, the evolution of RoN enforcement through judicial decisions and growing cultural familiarity with the new legal concept"--

Thomas Jefferson and the Politics of Nature

Author : Thomas S. Engeman
Publisher :
Page : 240 pages
File Size : 32,23 MB
Release : 2000
Category : Philosophy
ISBN :

GET BOOK

A collection of late 20th-century scholarship devoted to Thomas Jefferson as a politician, writer, philosopher, Christian and economist.

The Politics of Nature

Author : Andrew Dobson
Publisher : Routledge
Page : 260 pages
File Size : 34,44 MB
Release : 2002-11-01
Category : Political Science
ISBN : 1134803001

GET BOOK

This book presents a uniquely comprehensive and balanced survey of current green political ideas. It analyses the ability of these ideas to provide plausible answers to fundamental problems in political theory, concerning justice and democracy, individual rights and freedom, human nature and gender. The authors, who come from a range of different disciplines, explore the relationship between green ideas and other traditions including liberalism, anarchism, feminism and Christianity.

Interspecies Politics

Author : Rafi Youatt
Publisher : University of Michigan Press
Page : 209 pages
File Size : 20,5 MB
Release : 2020-02-25
Category : Political Science
ISBN : 0472131753

GET BOOK

Politics "with" the environment

Who Speaks for Nature?

Author : Laura Ephraim
Publisher : University of Pennsylvania Press
Page : 200 pages
File Size : 13,88 MB
Release : 2018
Category : Philosophy
ISBN : 081224981X

GET BOOK

Introduction. The Science Question in Political Theory -- Earth to Arendt -- Vico's World of Nature -- Descartes and Democracy -- Hobbes's Worldly Geometry of Politics -- Epilogue. Science and Politics at the End of the World

Political Nature

Author : John M. Meyer
Publisher : MIT Press
Page : 230 pages
File Size : 45,76 MB
Release : 2001-07-20
Category : Science
ISBN : 9780262263719

GET BOOK

Concern over environmental problems is prompting us to reexamine established thinking about society and politics. The challenge is to find a way for the public's concern for the environment to become more integral to social, economic, and political decision making. Two interpretations have dominated Western portrayals of the nature-politics relationship, what John Meyer calls the dualist and the derivative. The dualist account holds that politics—and human culture in general—is completely separate from nature. The derivative account views Western political thought as derived from conceptions of nature, whether Aristotelian teleology, the clocklike mechanism of early modern science, or Darwinian selection. Meyer examines the nature-politics relationship in the writings of two of its most pivotal theorists, Aristotle and Thomas Hobbes, and of contemporary environmentalist thinkers. He concludes that we must overcome the limitations of both the dualist and the derivative interpretations if we are to understand the relationship between nature and politics. Human thought and action, says Meyer, should be considered neither superior nor subservient to the nonhuman natural world, but interdependent with it. In the final chapter, he shows how struggles over toxic waste dumps in poor neighborhoods, land use in the American West, and rainforest protection in the Amazon illustrate this relationship and point toward an environmental politics that recognizes the experience of place as central.

The Nature of Politics

Author : Roger D. Masters
Publisher : Yale University Press
Page : 326 pages
File Size : 24,81 MB
Release : 1989-01-01
Category : Social Science
ISBN : 9780300041699

GET BOOK

Relates politics to the fields of evolutionary biology, social psychology, linguistics, and game theory and looks at the influence of language on politics

What is Nature

Author : Kate Soper
Publisher : Wiley-Blackwell
Page : 304 pages
File Size : 38,94 MB
Release : 1995-09-06
Category : Social Science
ISBN : 9780631188919

GET BOOK

'This is an excellent book. It addresses what, in both conceptual and political terms, is arguably the most important source of tension and confusion in current arguments about the environment, namely the concept of nature; and it does so in a way that is both sensitive to, and critical of, the two antithetical ways of understanding this that dominate existing discussions.' Russell Keat, University of Edinburgh