Buddhist Environmental Ethics Caren IrrBrings Tibetan Buddhist philosophy, contemplative practice, and contemporary environmental ethics together to present a novel way of approaching the pressing issues facing our more than human world. In Buddhist Environmental Ethics, Colin H. Simonds presents a compelling case for using a contemplative register to approach some of our most pressing issues surrounding climate change, ecological collapse, and the exploitation of nonhuman animals. Simonds
The title of Li Yu’s film Lost in Beijing evokes the experience of many first-time visitors to China’s bustling capital
Chapters in the book cover both historical and contemporary concerns
"How can we live with illness
emerging and evolving nursing programs
when the National Guard was America's primary domestic peacekeeper during the post–Civil War era of labor-capital unrest
They exploit plants using a range of strategies
the Sattasai presents the many aspects of love and provides a realistic counterpart to the Kāmasūtra
Presents a new window into the literary
even previously excluded segments of the community
The chapter examines the use of quantitative trait loci (QTL) mapping for photosynthetic traits
War and Peace in the Worlds of Rudolf H
and valuing the humanity of the inevitable moments of life’s end