Sustainability: Economics, Ecology, and Justice |
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Page 36
... consumption greatly with no loss in the quality of life . This is an immensely important fact , and analogous points can be made with respect to other aspects of energy production and use . Many factories can use excess heat to generate ...
... consumption greatly with no loss in the quality of life . This is an immensely important fact , and analogous points can be made with respect to other aspects of energy production and use . Many factories can use excess heat to generate ...
Page 44
... consumption , espe- cially of beef . Cattle can be raised on pastures in a sustainable way , but , at present levels of consumption in the United States , there are not nearly enough such pastures . Much beef produc- tion is continuing ...
... consumption , espe- cially of beef . Cattle can be raised on pastures in a sustainable way , but , at present levels of consumption in the United States , there are not nearly enough such pastures . Much beef produc- tion is continuing ...
Page 86
... consumption . In the rhetoric of the World Council of Churches , " justice " meant among other things that the great gap in per capita consumption between the first- and third - world nations should be drastically reduced by increasing ...
... consumption . In the rhetoric of the World Council of Churches , " justice " meant among other things that the great gap in per capita consumption between the first- and third - world nations should be drastically reduced by increasing ...
Contents
Introduction | 1 |
Christian Existence in a World of Limits | 7 |
Ecojustice and Christian Salvation | 20 |
Copyright | |
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agribusiness agriculture American Amish animal rights animals anthropocentric arcology argue believe Bible biblical called capital changes Christ Christian Christian realism church cities competition concern consumption context contribution costs countries course creatures deep ecologists destructive drastic ecology economic welfare economists effects energy environment environmental farms feeling free trade future Gaia hypothesis global goal growth Herman Daly hope human ical imago dei important increase individual industrial intrinsic value involved issues justice killing labor less limits livable society live means move natural world ourselves Paolo Soleri participation planet policies political pollution population possible poverty present problem production propose question realistic reason reduce relation requires response sense shift social social ecologists species speciesism Spirit structures subsistence suffering survival sustainable agriculture sustainable society tariffs theocentric theology thinking third-world tion United universal affluence vision wages workers