Ethics and Public Policy Center
About EPPC Contact EPPC Support EPPC My EPPC
  Find:    
Home News & Updates Conferences & Events Programs Publications Fellows & Scholars
Publications
Publication Series
Blog Posting
Books
Center Conversations
Event Transcripts
Speeches
The Catholic Difference
The Gathering Storm
Browse by:
- Author
- Title
- Date
- Type
View your cart 



Please fill out the form below to receive our e-mail newsletter.

Your E-mail Address:
Your Name (Optional):
Submit
Home  >  Publications  > 
Creation at Risk?
Religion, Science, and Environmentalism
Edited by Michael Cromartie
Posted: Sunday, October 1, 1995

The environmental movement both echoes and challenges traditional Judeo-Christian views about humankind's proper relationship to the natural world. Ten scholars and activists here explore--and clash over--some of the scientific, religious, moral, philosophical, economic, and political claims advanced by contemporary environmentalists.

Among the topics examined critically are the theological implications of biocentrism; global warming, the Rio Treaty, and the use of failed computer forecasts of temperature changes as the basis for public policy; "green totalitarianism" and the global-management perspective of environmentalists; and the relative merits of governments and markets in dealing with ecological problems.

Contributors: Charles T. Rubin, Andrew Kimbrell, Patrick J. Michaels, Christopher Flavin, Gregg Easterbrook, Ronald Bailey, Thomas Sieger Derr, James A. Nash, Peter J. Hill, and Andrew Steer.

Creation at Risk?
Eerdmanns / Ethics & Public Policy Center
Published: October 1995
Available for Purchase
Paperback
ISBN: 0-8028-4104-X
Page Count: 166
Dimensions: 0.50x9.25x6.25
Price: $10