Sustainability: Economics, Ecology, and Justice |
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Page 27
... pollution of the environment that is a threat to the ecosystem as well as more directly to human health . Technolog- ical advances create increasing capacity for self - destruction , whether by the conscious acts of war or by accident ...
... pollution of the environment that is a threat to the ecosystem as well as more directly to human health . Technolog- ical advances create increasing capacity for self - destruction , whether by the conscious acts of war or by accident ...
Page 57
... polluting ones . And large additions to costs of certain goods would encourage substitutions . The free market would then work to generate a less polluting industry , and pollution taxes could be used to counteract the continuing pollution ...
... polluting ones . And large additions to costs of certain goods would encourage substitutions . The free market would then work to generate a less polluting industry , and pollution taxes could be used to counteract the continuing pollution ...
Page 60
... pollution abatement should be subtracted as regrettable necessities . They also noted that some scientists were warning about global changes in weather resulting from industrial activity , and they seemed ready to modify the MEW to take ...
... pollution abatement should be subtracted as regrettable necessities . They also noted that some scientists were warning about global changes in weather resulting from industrial activity , and they seemed ready to modify the MEW to take ...
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