"Introduction: Nature, Environmental Ethics, and Continental Philosophy"
This issue aims to continue the discussion of how the continental tradition might advance or transform environmental thinking by considering different philosophers’ works.
This issue aims to continue the discussion of how the continental tradition might advance or transform environmental thinking by considering different philosophers’ works.
This essay addresses the implications of German Idealism and Romanticism, and in particular the philosophy of Schelling as it is informed by Kant and Goethe, for contemporary environmental philosophy.
In this paper, it is argued that Nietzsche’s account of nature provides us with a challenging diagnosis of the modern crisis in our relationship with nature.
In this article, David E. Cooper discusses Heidegger’s view on nature.
This paper reflects on Merleau-Ponty’s environmental thinking.
In this paper Michael S. Carolan looks at Michel Foucault and Fernand Braudel’s conception of how economy enters into nature.
Allan Greenbaum presents his notion of nature connoisseurship.
In his article, Walter K. Dodds tries to answer the question of whether we can control humanity’s hitherto endless appetite for resources before we irreparably harm the global ecosystem and cause the extinction of even more species.
Bag It follows “everyman” Jeb Berrier as he navigates our plastic world.
In this paper, Hein-Anton van der Heijden discusses Dutch politics of “New Nature.”