Main Roaming Free Like a Deer: Buddhism and the Natural World

Roaming Free Like a Deer: Buddhism and the Natural World

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By exploring lived ecological experiences across seven Buddhist worlds from ancient India to the contemporary West, Roaming Free like a Deer provides a comprehensive, critical, and innovative examination of the theories, practices, and real-world results of Buddhist environmental ethics. Daniel Capper also clarifies crucial contours of Buddhist vegetarianism or meat eating, nature mysticism, as well as cultural speculations about spirituality in nonhuman animals. Buddhist environmental ethics often are touted as useful weapons in the fight against climate change. However, two formidable but often overlooked problems with this perspective exist. First, much of the literature on Buddhist environmental ethics uncritically embraces Buddhist ideals without examining the real-world impacts of those ideals, thereby sometimes ignoring difficulties in terms of practical applications. Moreover, for some understandable but still troublesome reasons, [...]Buddhists from different schools follow their own environmental ideals without conversing with other Buddhists, thereby minimizing the abilities of Buddhists to act in concert on issues like climate change, which demands coordinated large-scale human responses. With its accessible style and personhood ethics orientation, Roaming Free like a Deer should appeal to anyone who is concerned with how human beings interact with the nonhuman environment.
Request Code : ZLIB.IO18444435
Categories:
Year:
2022
Publisher:
Cornell University Press
Language:
English
ISBN 10:
1501759582
ISBN 13:
9781501759581
ISBN:
9781501759581, 1501759582

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