"Breaking the modern impulse to see humans as separate from nature, the authors encourage readers to learn from the "supremely methodical and highly improvisational" natural systems that touch people's lives. True change, they argue, begins with stopping and questioning assumptions about humans' place in the world. From this process of reflection, they offer an alternative blueprint for acting in ecologically healthy ways, and for inspiring others to do the same"--
"Breaking the modern impulse to see humans as separate from nature, the authors encourage readers to learn from the "supremely methodical and highly improvisational" natural systems that touch people's lives. True change, they argue, begins with stopping and questioning assumptions about humans' place in the world. From this process of reflection, they offer an alternative blueprint for acting in ecologically healthy ways, and for inspiring others to do the same"--Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Mary M. Clare and Gary Ferguson have each dedicated more than thirty years to exploring the world¿s social and natural ecologies—Clare as a graduate professor of psychology and education, Ferguson as a nature and conservation-science writer. Their individual work has now come together in Full Ecology, a movement devoted to the idea that we can best serve both the natural and human world by reclaiming our human nature. Clare is a fellow in the American Psychological Association, and with her PhD in psychological and cultural studies she has published more than one hundred scholarly articles and two books. Ferguson is an award-winning and internationally recognized author of twenty-six books, most recently The Carry Home and The Eight Master Lessons of Nature. When not on the road or in the wilderness, the couple live in Bozeman, Montana.
Inhaltsangabe
Contents Introduction...6 Stop...22 Ask...44 Act...68 Inspire...104 Acknowledgments About the Authors