How to Think about the Climate Crisis: A Philosophical Guide to Saner Ways of Living

Paperback / softback

Main Details

Title How to Think about the Climate Crisis: A Philosophical Guide to Saner Ways of Living
Authors and Contributors      By (author) Graham Parkes
Physical Properties
Format:Paperback / softback
Pages:288
Dimensions(mm): Height 216,Width 138
Category/GenreNon-western philosophy
Social and political philosophy
The environment
ISBN/Barcode 9781350158870
ClassificationsDewey:363.73874
Audience
Tertiary Education (US: College)

Publishing Details

Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Imprint Bloomsbury Academic
NZ Release Date 24 December 2020
Publication Country United Kingdom

Description

**Choice Outstanding Academic Title, 2021** Coping with the climate crisis is the greatest challenge we face as a species. We know the main task is to reduce our emissions as rapidly as possible to minimise the harm to the world's population now and for generations to come. What on earth can philosophy offer us? In this compelling account of a problem we think we know inside out, the philosopher Graham Parkes outlines the climatic predicament we are in and how we got here, and explains how we can think about it anew by considering the relevant history, science, economics, politics and, for the first time, the philosophies underpinning them. Introducing the reality of global warming and its increasingly dire consequences, he identifies the immediate obstructions to coping with the problem, outlines the libertarian ideology behind them and shows how they can be circumvented. Drawing on the wisdom of the ancients in both the East-Asian and Western traditions (as embodied in such figures as Confucius, Laozi, Zhuangzi, Dogen, Plato, Epicurus, Marcus Aurelius and Nietzsche), Parkes shows how a greater awareness of non-Western philosophies, and especially the Confucian political philosophy advocated by China, can help us deal effectively with climate change and thrive in a greener future. If some dominant Western philosophical ideas and their instantiation in politics and modern technology got us into our current crisis, Parkes demonstrates persuasively that expanding our philosophical horizons will surely help get us out.

Author Biography

Graham Parkes is Professorial Research Fellow in Philosophy at the University of Vienna, Austria. For over thirty years he has taught environmental philosophies and Asian and comparative thought at UC Santa Cruz, the University of Hawaii, and universities in China, Japan, and Europe. He is the editor of Nietzsche and Asian Thought (1991) and author of Composing the Soul: Reaches of Nietzsche's Psychology (1994).

Reviews

[A] superbly written book, which unlike most books on the environmental crisis, does more than expose the whats, the whys, and the hows of an extremely urgent, life-threatening global situation ... Climate Crisis is a must-read for anyone who wants to make an informed contribution to this discussion, but, more importantly, for anyone who is willing to change their way of thinking and living with the help of good research and good philosophy. * Dao: A Journal of Comparative Philosophy * [T]his is an original and thoughtful book that genuinely has something new to say about the climate crisis, consumerism, and our relationship to the world more generally. * The Earthbound Report * How to Think About the Climate Crisis draws on philosophical, political, and environmental sources and stands out within the growing climate-change literature. * CHOICE * An extremely well-written and passionate argument for action on climate change. Importantly, Parkes directly addresses the "China question," and goes beyond the political, philosophical, and moral Eurocentrism that characterizes much of the current debate. * Hans Georg Moeller, Professor of Philosophy, University of Macau, China * Parkes here explores Confucianism and Daoism, not as some exotic relic of the "Oriental" past to be quixotically commended as a "solution" to the current environmental crisis-as did writers in the 1970s and '80s with such titles as "Tao Now!" Rather, Confucianism, Parkes persuasively argues, is the worldview of the ruling party in China, which is "communist" in name only. And he finds that foundational Western thought-e.g. Christianity as Pope Francis understands it and Plato's Republic-resonates with Confucian and Daoist ideas. Such a confluence could be the basis of an international consensus about reality and governance on which to begin to cope with global warming. * J. Baird Callicott, University Distinguished Research Professor Emeritus, University of North Texas, USA *