Contact us on (02) 8445 2300
For all customer service and order enquiries

Woodslane Online Catalogues

9781666922400 Add to Cart Academic Inspection Copy

Buddhist Ecological Protection of Space

A Guide for Sustainable Off-Earth Travel
Description
Author
Biography
Table of
Contents
Google
Preview
This seminal monograph provides the essential guidance that we need to act as responsible ecological citizens while we expand our reach beyond Earth. The emergence of numerous national space programs along with several potent commercial presences prompts our attention to urgent environmental issues like what to do with the large mass of debris that orbits Earth, potential best practices for mining our moon, how to appropriately search for microscopic life, or whether to alter the ecology of Mars to suit humans better. This book not only examines the science and morals behind these potential ecological pitfall scenarios beyond Earth, it also provides groundbreaking policy responses founded upon ethics. These effective solutions come from a critical reframing for scientific settings of the unique moral voices of diverse Buddhists from the American ethnographic field, who together delineate sophisticated yet practical values for traveling through our solar system. Along the way, Buddhists fascinatingly supply robust environmental lessons for Earth, too. As much a work of astrobiology as it is one of religious studies, this book should appeal to anyone who is interested in space travel, our human environment in large scale, or spiritual ecology.
Daniel Capper is professor in the School of Humanities at the University of Southern Mississippi.
Introduction Chapter 1: Space Debris and Environmental Justice Chapter 2: The Rabbit in the Moon Chapter 3: Seeking Microbes Chapter 4: Mars as an Ecological Lifeboat Conclusion
Google Preview content