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Moral Authority of Nature

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First Sentence
"This book is about how humans use nature to think about standards of the good, the beautiful, the just, and the valuable."
526 pages
~8h 46min to read
University Of Chicago Press 1 views
ISBN
9781282738409
Editions
Paperback
Hardcover
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Description

For thousands of years, people have used nature to justify their political, moral, and social judgments. Such appeals to the moral authority of nature are still very much with us today, as heated debates over genetically modified organisms and human cloning testify. This work offers a wide ranging account of how people have used nature to think about what counts as good, beautiful, just, or valuable. The eighteen essays cover a diverse array of topics, including the connection of cosmic and human orders in ancient Greece, medieval notions of sexual disorder, early modern contexts for categorizing individuals and judging acts as "against nature," race and the origin of humans, ecological economics, and radical feminism. The essays also range widely in time and place, from archaic Greece to early twentieth-century China, medieval Europe to contemporary America. This work provides a sustained historical survey of its topic.

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