Climate Change and the Symbol Deficit in the Christian Tradition: Expanding Gendered Sources
In: T&T Clark Explorations in Theology, Gender and Ecology Ser.
Intro -- Half Title -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Dedication -- Contents -- Preface -- Introduction: The deficit thesis and the task it presents -- Part I: Contexts for the symbol deficit -- Chapter 1: From acts of God to the Anthropocene -- Chapter 2: Culprits for the predicament -- Lynn White revisited -- Nature as modernity's other: Adorno and Horkheimer -- Chapter 3: Consumer idolatry -- System of idolatry: Abuse of God's gifts -- Captured in the consumer society -- Calling out heresy -- Chapter 4: Religion in denial -- Chapter 5: To empower those who suffer and give voice to those who lack a voice -- An encompassing vision -- Gendered injustices -- Doctrinal challenges -- Conclusion, Part I: Lessons from the context -- Part II: Conditions for symbolic practices -- Chapter 6: Symbols as mediating practice -- Introduction: Symbols, practices and semiotics -- Tillich on symbols -- From Tillich to pragmatism: Neville -- Symbols and experience -- Symbolic practices are practices of orientation, transformation and engagement -- Symbols mediate, constitute and engage embodied human experience -- Perspectives from evolutionary theory -- To live by metaphors -- Formative psychological elements for symbolically mediated relationships -- Chapter 7: Conditions for agency: A critique of modernity's detached subject -- An expanded view of agency and freedom conditions -- Overcoming anthropocentric conditions for agency: From Habermas to Vetlesen -- Preliminary concluding reflections -- Chapter 8: Symbols for enhancing moral motivation and avoiding defection -- The stick: Supernatural punishment as moral motivation? -- A better way, but no carrot: On emulation of goodness -- Linda Zagzebski: Goodness as admirable -- On the virtue of ecological care -- Virtues as relational and articulations of self-interpretation.