Showing posts with label Deep Ecology. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Deep Ecology. Show all posts

2021/07/01

Buddhism and Deep Ecology: Henning, Daniel H.: 9781403370068: Amazon.com: Books

Buddhism and Deep Ecology: Henning, Daniel H.: 9781403370068: Amazon.com: Books
Buddhism and Deep Ecology Paperback – December 11, 2002
by Daniel H. Henning  (Author)
4.4 out of 5 stars    3 ratings


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Buddhism and Deep Ecology

it was ok 2.00  ·   Rating details ·  5 ratings  ·  1 review
Buddhism And Deep Ecology (the latter can be considered the spiritual dimensions of the environmental movement) is approached on a holistic, consciousness, and value I basis. It presents basic ideas, knowledge, experiential exercises, examples, public participation aspects, and a Dhammaecology glossary on how Buddhism and Deep Ecology relate to each other and to protecting natural forests and the environment. The essential teaching of Buddha are related to Deep Ecology and visa versa, especially under Oneness, ecocentric, and spiritual orientations, for awareness, compassion, loving-kindness, and care for all living beings, including trees, for a wide spectrum of readers. (less)

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toronto
3.0 out of 5 stars OK
Reviewed in the United States on January 24, 2011
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This is an ok book on the subject, but scattered and somewhat self-indulgent. On the other hand, the author is a serious participant in this difficult world, so his opinion is worth weighing. There is so little on the subject that the references are also useful.
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MR B AITKEN
5.0 out of 5 stars Thisbook is a delight to read esp if you believe in the first ...
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on February 8, 2018
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Thisbook is a delight to read esp if you believe in the first precept of doing no harm to All sentients. An uplifting book , a book of interconnection and compassion Buy it you won’t be disappointed
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Deep Ecology Movement: An Introductory Anthology: Drengson, Alan, Inoue, Yuichi: Amazon.com.au: Books

Deep Ecology Movement: An Introductory Anthology: Drengson, Alan, Inoue, Yuichi: Amazon.com.au: Books


Deep Ecology Movement: An Introductory Anthology Paperback – 15 July 2011
by Alan Drengson (Author), Yuichi Inoue (Author)
4.1 out of 5 stars    9 ratings

Deep ecology, a term coined by noted Norwegian philosopher Arne Naess, is a worldwide grassroots environmental movement that seeks to redress the shallow and piecemeal approache of technology-based ecology. Its followers share a profund respect for the earth's interrelated natural systems and a sense of urgency about the need to make profound cultural and social changes in order to respore and sustain the long-term health of the planet. This comprehensive introduction to the Deep Ecology movement brings tgether Naess' groundbreaking work with essays by environmental thinkers and activists responding to and expanding on its philosophical and practical aspects.Contributors include George Sessions, Gary Snyder, Alan Drengson, Dll Devall, Freya Matthews, Warwick Fox, David Rothenberg, Michael E. Zimmerman, Patsy Hallen, Dolores LaChapelle, Pat Fleming, Joanna Macy, John Rodman, and Andrew Mclaughlin. The Authrs offer diverse viewpoints- from ecofeminist, scientific, and purely philosophical approaches to Christian, Buddhist, and Gandhian-based principles. Their essays show how social, technological, psychological, philosophical, and institutional issues are aall fundamentally related to our attitudes and values toward the natural world
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julian ortleb
5.0 out of 5 stars Versatile and inspiring
Reviewed in Germany on 18 November 2014
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Very successful compilation of basic texts on depth ecology, which go both in breadth and depth. Most of them written in academic style, so English skills are required. Nevertheless, the lyrics are not dry, but really inspiring. Many important and wise considerations, according to which we would ideally all align our lives.
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Surajit Das
5.0 out of 5 stars Collections of well written articles
Reviewed in India on 15 January 2021
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It is an excellent anthology. It will help for the students and researchers of environmental philosophy. It covers the areas of ecology, ecofeminism, and some other environmental issues.
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Arkady
5.0 out of 5 stars Five Stars
Reviewed in the United States on 23 January 2016
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great
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Jane Johnson
5.0 out of 5 stars The Deep Ecology Movement
Reviewed in the United States on 11 September 2013
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Great to Deepen your experience and awareness of all things Ecolo - from the beginning to the now and onward, be it! be in it!
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==

Aug 20, 2017rated it it was amazing
I haven't been inspired by a book in the same manner since I read "The Emperor Wears No Clothes" by Jack Herer in 2012. Born and raised in California, my youth revolved around National Parks filled with redwoods, whale watching on the Pacific Ocean, elephant seals and banana slugs, and so much more that I didn't fully appreciate were special to this place and time. As a teen I was inspired by movements that I never truly knew the origins of, such as the grassroots movement, green peace, NORML, and the Green Party amongst others. This introductory anthology discusses the Industrial Age spanning from the 1800's to the 1980's (in which this book was written), but also discusses how many of those movements and political parties became what they are. It's interesting to see the projected world view of that time and what people hoped the future would hold. It's equally interesting to take into account how much of their aspirations have come to fruition and which are still being struggled over. Commercial Industry moves slowly into the Green Age, fear of loss holds many back from utilizing the deep ecology philosophy and the residual stigma of the antiquated "war on drugs" + "war on terror" keeps all industries dancing to the primitive tune of violence and exploitation of resources from all levels of life rather than choosing what is best for existence as a whole. Even our ISS has a problem with waste disposal. Already we pollute space, and we are only speculatively present in that environment. Nature is unpredictable and can be unyielding to human needs, so humans synthesized much of nature to the point of removing us from it. This has been done in the name of profit but is done under a guise that the alternative option leaves us exposed to too much risk of the unpredictable. Labs are unpredictable as well. The REAL ONES of The World always have known that we've been robbed of a richer existence, stripped of our cultures, and ultimately silenced through violence and oppression. It's the same today, but perspectives are so skewed that people become overwhelmed by PC social standards and struggle to see how they can implement change. So we see the bizarre mix of events where one person might "rescue" a dog from a shelter and become a SJW for it.. and where another person in another country will be starving to death because they didn't find any strays to bring home to cook that evening. The second person can't relate to the first, vice versa.. and yet who is right? Should people starve to death in developing countries in order for people in developed nations to view them as morally equal? Second order evil vs. first order evil, which is worse? Is there a difference? And if so, who causes a greater hurt to the ecological systems in the long term? When logically thought through, many of perceived evils to the environment viewed from a 21st century 1st world point of view, is just not truly in touch with the reality of all things. Each One Teach One, Stay Blessed. Peace & 1ove

RIP Jack Herer

"There's something that's missing, they don't understand. It's like a limb blown off and left to rot in a foreign land. How can I get to the root of the problem? When none of my predecessors want me to solve them. Covert Ops and a conspiracy of silence. More violence begets more violence. The whole world's buzzing about a war against drugs while my mind's buzzing on these drugs that are against war. Cannabis Sativa, you fuccin stupid hhhooore, before you go to pulling my stashie out the drawer, I wanna see us all unite to raise funds for more. Not just the re-cop tho, I'm looking to the next level. Cannabis' future lies in better funding for scientific testing. Do your part, spread the fuccing message. Be an advocate, be an activist, but don't be a coward groping around in the darkness. Illuminate your mind or eliminate your thoughts. With or without you, this message is something I believe. Not only that, but it's something deep. I remember being hopeless and alone when I was living good AND when I was homeless in the cold. Anywhere I am, I'm a problem. Narcissistic views, I'm kind of guarded. Neurotic Nightmare and the night hasn't started. Who will explain me away when I go insane? There's something that I'm missing, like a conscious, like a brain. I drank from the negativity and infected my brain. Now my hands shake and I feel anxious every day. Smoke supermelts till the pain melts away. Left alone with a heart less world, no where to go. I wandered so many nights past so many blank faces. Houses that I can't call home, people I don't want to know. Swallow your guilt, Swallow your pride. These are lessons I've been taught by a lot of devilish women in my life, hear it in my tone. I'm totally not kidding. There's something missing but you won't find it out there, and you most certainly won't find it in me. It's something DEEP."
S.D.
 (less)
Andy
A mixed bag here. Some of the essays including the introductory material about what "deep ecology" is as compared to regular ecology is instructive. It doesn't necessarily jibe with my thoughts on the issues but we all have different takes on things. Maybe my own views on ecology run a bit deeper than the norm which is something I can accept. I start to run into problems with the essay on feminism and deep ecology (written by a man) and then The Council of All Beings pushed me over. New age, hippy, whatever you want to call this goofiness just bugs the hell out of me and gives the green movement so many problems because so many have a hard time taking people chanting or talking about their totem animals seriously. Maybe it helps Julia Butterfly or Woodchuck or whatever someone wants to call him/her/itself be in touch with nature but people on the fence read or hear this stuff and shake their heads. This is too important of a movement, too important of an issue for people like this to be out there chanting and trying to lead something. I want to say they should let the adults run things but these are adults who, for whatever reason, seem to think their free spirited expressions are going to change minds. They aren't. This is worth a selective reading but, depending on your take on things, some essays are best left alone. (less)

2021/06/18

Life Is a Miracle: An Essay Against Modern Superstition: Berry, Wendell: 9781582431413: Amazon.com: Books

Life Is a Miracle: An Essay Against Modern Superstition: Berry, Wendell: 9781582431413: Amazon.com: Books

Life Is a Miracle: An Essay Against Modern Superstition Paperback – May 1, 2001
by Wendell Berry  (Author)
4.4 out of 5 stars    76 ratings
176 pages
“[A] scathing assessment . . . Berry shows that Wilson's much–celebrated, controversial pleas in Consilience to unify all branches of knowledge is nothing more than a fatuous subordination of religion, art, and everything else that is good to science . . . Berry is one of the most perceptive critics of American society writing today.” —The Washington Post



“I am tempted to say he understands [Consilience] better than Wilson himself . . . A new emancipation proclamation in which he speaks again and again about how to defy the tyranny of scientific materialism.”—The Christian Science Monitor





In Life Is a Miracle, the devotion of science to the quantitative and reductionist world is measured against the mysterious, qualitative suggestions of religion and art. Berry sees life as the collision of these separate forces, but without all three in the mix we are left at sea in the world.


Editorial Reviews
Review
"A new emancipation proclamation in which he speaks again and again about how to defy the tyranny of scientific materialism." -- Colin C. Campbell, Christian Science Monitor
About the Author
Wendell Berry is the author of fifty books of poetry, fiction, and essays. He was recently awarded the Cleanth Brooks Medal for Lifetime Achievement by the Fellowship of Southern Writers and the Louis Bromfield Society Award. For over forty years he has lived and farmed with his wife, Tanya, in Kentucky.
From The Washington Post
"[A] scathing assessment... Berry is one of the most perceptive critics of American society writing today."

Customer Reviews: 4.4 out of 5 stars    76 ratings

Wendell Berry
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Biography
Wendell E. Berry (born August 5, 1934) is an American novelist, poet, environmental activist, cultural critic, and farmer. A prolific author, he has written many novels, short stories, poems, and essays. He is an elected member of the Fellowship of Southern Writers, a recipient of The National Humanities Medal, and the Jefferson Lecturer for 2012. He is also a 2013 Fellow of The American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Berry was named the recipient of the 2013 Richard C. Holbrooke Distinguished Achievement Award. On January 28, 2015, he became the first living writer to be ushered into the Kentucky Writers Hall of Fame.
Bio from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Photo by Guy Mendes (Guy Mendes) [CC BY-SA 3.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0)], via Wikimedia Commons.

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4.4 out of 5 stars

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S. Nachalo
5.0 out of 5 stars society ended and no one noticed
Reviewed in the United States on July 7, 2016
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“We are not getting something for nothing. We are getting nothing for everything,” the epigraph with which Berry opens Life is a Miracle, is apt and concise. Modern society appears miraculous, the product of man's industry and ingenuity. It looks (and is advertised largely as) a kind of perpetual motion machine, powered by little other than human inventiveness. Attentive observers have noticed that appearances are, as usual, deceptive: we are living on fossil fuels, energy created over eons by geological processes, and in a matter of decades, we've used up more than half of what's available. But there are problems even greater than the depletion of our main energy sources, destroying our ability to perpetuate our society and culture without much notice from anyone. We (and many other animals) have been passing our knowledge and ways of life the old fashioned way (and the only way) from parent to child as long as we've been on this planet without giving it a thought, but it appears that this simple and irreducible aspect of our species existence can be interrupted. When this happens locally, tribes and cultures die. It's not clear whether it is possible for this to happen globally, but it seems that this is the direction we are heading. Globalization and the “market economy” have been at work disrupting and destroying local cultures and replacing them with a universal mono-culture known to its practitioners and captives variously as “capitalism," "market economy," or “democracy” in the west, “communism” or “socialism” elsewhere. Whatever name it goes by, its effects on the living beings and the environments they inhabit is the same.

Life is a Miracle is about this process, the loss of the ability to perpetuate the culture we've built over millenia. Wendell Berry looks to science for a culprit, because science is our culture's founding myth, governing paradigm, and much more, and he picks E. O. Wilson's Consilience as the book through which to analyze the subject. The choice is appropriate for a number of reasons: Wilson is a mainstream scientist, and in Consilience, he tackles questions like ethics, religion, art, and culture in general- necessarily, since his stated goal is to bring the different disciplines together into a working whole. He is also a conservationist, as is Berry.

Science approaches all questions as problems to be solved, and all unanswered questions as questions yet to be answered. “(Consilience) reads as though it was written to confirm the popular belief that science is entirely good, that it leads to unlimited progress, and that it has (or will have) all the answers.” (p. 24) This means that mystery, an essential and critical part of human culture, is an impossibility: Wilson attributes it entirely to human ignorance. Without mystery, reverence and propriety are impossible, leading to a society governed by profit and raw power as we've arrived at today, whether the power is cloaked in the accoutrements of “democracy,” “socialism,” or more transparent forms. What Wilson calls “consilience” turns out to be an invitation (or an ultimatum, taken more broadly) for religion and the arts to take on the goals and methodology of science, an impossibility if the words mean what we all think they mean. “Like a naïve politician, Mr. Wilson thinks he has found a way to reconcile two sides without realizing that his way is one of the sides... One cannot, in honesty, propose to reconcile Heaven and Earth by denying the existence of Heaven.” (p.99)

The crisis we face can't be solved with more science or technology, since these are part of the cause. We have to address the way we think and talk about the world and ourselves.

The language we use to speak of the world and its creatures, including ourselves, has gained a certain analytical power (along with a lot of expertish pomp) but has lost much of its power to designate what is being analyzed or to convey any respect or care or affection or devotion toward it. As a result, we have a lot of genuinely concerned people calling upon us to “save” a world which their language simultaneously reduces to an assemblage of perfectly featureless and dispirited “ecosystems,” “organisms,” “environments,” “mechanisms,” and the like. It is impossible to prefigure the salvation of the world in the same language by which the world has been dismembered and defaced. (italics in original) (p. 8)

Berry's solution to this crisis, if there is to be any solution to it, is for scientists, artists, and religious people, whether they can work together in the end or not, to root their work in local considerations and return to such considerations at their works' end, as well as, ideally, throughout the process.

Directly opposed to this reduction or abstraction of things is the idea of the preciousness of individual lives and places. This does not come from science, but from our cultural and religious traditions. It is not derived, and it is not derivable, from any notion of egalitarianism. If all are equal, none can be precious. (And perhaps it is necessary to stop here to say that this ancient delight in the individuality of creatures is not the same thing as what we now mean by “individualism.” It is the opposite. Individualism, in present practice, refers to the supposed “right” of an individual to act alone, in disregard of other individuals. (p.42)

Any new invention or idea or practice should, in the end, be weighed on the merits of its impact on our communities. “Suppose we learn to ask of any proposed innovation the question so far only the Amish have been wise enough to ask: What will this do to out community?” (p.134) Obviously, most people don't have the benefit of living in anything resembling a community, so we would have to break up the corporate capitalist society into local communities first.

Life is a Miracle elicits some hysterical reviews on Amazon, as one would expect with books that challenge our most basic assumptions about ourselves and the world. I expect that if it were more widely read, the greater part of our country would be foaming at the mouth over this book. God I wish it were. This is likely one of the most important books of the decade, or century, or however long we plan on living miserable lives governed by anti-human precepts.
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Joy S. Frady
4.0 out of 5 stars A Helpful Corrective for Our Times
Reviewed in the United States on July 9, 2016
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This book is a response to E.O. Wilson's "Consilience", a book which purports to bring all academic disciplines under the rubric of scientism. Berry strongly objects, pointing out the slippery slopes abounding in academia and culture when scientific pursuits are given preeminence. Berry is at his best in this book when he critiques the university system, particularly its penchant for specialization and the funding streams within which mitigate against the good of the community. This book was written at the turn of the 21st century and it is apparent to this reader that in the intervening years the problems Berry addresses have gotten worse. Berry's theme of community may be the most important and most needed theme for our world today, as we live in an isolated, divided culture where ideologies are at war.
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Anders Martinson
5.0 out of 5 stars A challenging, thought-provoking, and valuable piece of writing
Reviewed in the United States on July 12, 2009
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Having read many of Wendell Berry's work I can say that this is probably not to use as your introduction to his writing. Better to start with a collection of his agrarian essays. This is one of his most difficult essays to come to terms with, and a review that attempts to analyze it would almost work in opposition to the (anti-reductionist) points Berry tries to convey.

In a way I think Berry made an error in choosing his subtitle. The use of the word superstition is unnecessarily inflammatory, and the word against distracts the reader from the fact that Berry's work in general and this essay in particular focus largely on things that he is for.

A casual approach to this book could leave the reader unfamiliar with his other work feeling that Berry is a Luddite polemicist. A more careful reading of the, somewhat uncharacteristically, dense prose here will reveal Berry's thoughtful passion for what it means to be human. One needn't agree with every point Berry attempts to make in order to use this book as a way to simply stop and think.

In the chapter A Conversation Out of School Berry quite plainly asserts that science and art are not inherently at odds with one another. He clearly sees limits in what science can help us know and accomplish, but he doesn't dismiss entirely the pursuit of empirical knowledge. This is a provocative and challenging piece of work, but well worth the effort.

Reasonable people can disagree. Read it with an open mind and see where the discussion takes you. The very fact that it has led to pointed discussions on all sides of the issue just among these reviews shows that it touches on crucial issues for our society and world.
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Greta S. Hyland
5.0 out of 5 stars First Wendell Berry Book
Reviewed in the United States on February 19, 2014
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Wendell Berry has come up often enough over the last couple of years that I finally had to buy one of this books. I have to admit, I was kind of put off by the reverence that his readers showed when talking of him, but once I read his book, I could understand the fanfare. This book is clearly written, thought provoking, and one that made the most compelling argument for the limits of science...and I am a science buff. I have since ordered two more of Berry's books. I know I will return to my highlights in the book over and over again.
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Life is a Miracle: An Essay Against Modern Superstition
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Life is a Miracle: An Essay Against Modern Superstition
by Wendell Berry
 4.19  ·   Rating details ·  1,063 ratings  ·  132 reviews
"[A] scathing assessment…Berry shows that Wilson's much-celebrated, controversial pleas in Consilience to unify all branches of knowledge is nothing more than a fatuous subordination of religion, art, and everything else that is good to science…Berry is one of the most perceptive critics of American society writing today." --Lauren F. Winner, Washington Post Book World

"I am tempted to say he understands [Consilience] better than Wilson himself…A new emancipation proclamation in which he speaks again and again about how to defy the tyranny of scientific materialism" ---Colin C. Campbell, Christian Science Monitor

"Berry takes a wrecking ball to E. O. Wilson's Consilience, reducing its smug assumptions regarding the fusion of science, art, and religion to so much rubble. --Kirkus Reviews

In Life Is a Miracle, the devotion of science to the quantitative and reductionist world is measured against the mysterious, qualitative suggestions of religion and art. Berry sees life as the collision of these separate forces, but without all three in the mix we are left at sea in the world. (less)
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Published April 19th 2001 by Counterpoint (first published 2000)
Original TitleLife Is a Miracle: An Essay Against Modern Superstition
ISBN1582431418 (ISBN13: 9781582431413)
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Werner
Mar 18, 2008Werner rated it really liked it
Recommends it for: All readers who care about serious questions
Shelves: other-nonfiction
Wendell Berry is a well-known author of prose and poetry; sometimes a college teacher of English (a field in which he has a graduate degree); a Kentucky farmer who tills land that's been in his family for several generations and who advocates for sustainable farming practices and environmental stewardship; and a public intellectual who thinks seriously about important social and philosophical issues. To date, this is the only one of his numerous books that I've read (though I definitely intend to read more!); but I've now read it three times, most recently because I've long really wanted to review it, and felt that because of the depth and complexity of the thought, it deserved a review written with the benefit of the freshest possible engagement. Even so, it will be a challenge to summarize it within the scope of a review.

Berry is a classical Christian believer, whose faith shapes his view of the world and universe around him and undergirds his thought. Moreover, in the present book, he's making the case that human life in the world is essentially miraculous, and that it has an inescapable spiritual dimension. That said, however, he does not base his arguments here on appeal to religious authority as such, nor present them in narrowly "religious" terms. Rather, he's arguing for a basic philosophical position, and a basic way of living in the world on the basis of that position, that can be shared by persons of a wide variety of faiths, and even by persons who have no specific faith as such, but who approach the natural and human world from an existentially humble perspective that recognizes the mystery and complexity of the universe and values individual humans, communities, and natural spaces. For this reason, although I originally shelved the book with "Christian life and thought," I think "Other nonfiction" would be the more accurate classification --not because his thought isn't Christian, but because he's writing from the perspective of philosophy, not theology, and writing to all of his fellow humans who share the common graces of conscience and ability to reason.

While this is a short book (153 pages), addressed to general intelligent readers rather than academic specialists, not burdened with scholarly apparatus and expressed in as clear a style as possible, and although it is a relatively quick read, it's not AS quick as one might initially expect. The content is pithy, and covers a lot of ground at short length, but significant depth. Berry illustrates and supports his points with examples from literature, especially Shakespeare (the first chapter has an extended discussion of King Lear --which I have never read-- and the book's title comes from Edgar's words to his suicidal father, "Thy life's a miracle...."), references to history and current events, and quotes from other serious thinkers. While he's primarily concerned with the concrete and practical side of life, he necessarily addresses some significant abstract ideas that bear on how we approach the concrete and the practical; the writing demands thought and attention. Full engagement with it can be demanding.

Published in 2000, the book is a specific response to the 1998 book Consilience: The Unity of Knowledge by Edward O. Wilson, much-honored Harvard Univ. biologist, secular humanist philosopher (and avowed "environmentalist") and general pillar of the intellectual establishment. In that book (which I admittedly have not read; I believe Berry represents it accurately and that his numerous quotations from it are not out of context, but in any case the viewpoint Berry describes is a common establishment party line that most readers have already encountered frequently) Wilson argues for the equation of "science" with positivist materialism and denial of the existence of anything not empirically material, for the ability of Science thus defined to ultimately explain all of reality, and for the reorganization of all human knowledge and academic disciplines into a supposedly "consilient" whole subordinated under the overarching philosophic guidance of this super-competent Science. Berry begs to differ; but while he develops his own position in response to Wilson's, his book has value, IMO, as a positive statement on its own terms, not simply as a refutation of Wilson (so it can be appreciated on its own terms whether you've read Wilson or not).

To summarize some of Berry's main positions in capsule form, he maintains: that human knowledge is not solely rationally deductive-empirical, but can be intuitive, emotional, and/or the product of wholistic experience over time that's not reducible to mathematical formulas or "data;" that organisms and machines are two distinctly different things, and that the former, and the world and the universe generally, are not properly conceived by trying to reduce them to the latter; that the "scientist" is not a detached observer of the "environment" but a part of it, and that the instant you set up a false dichotomy between the two you're fatally undercutting any genuine commitment to the "environment;" that humans are not mechanically or chemically determined but have genuine free will (not the "illusion" of it), which means that we make choices, and that if we don't, appealing to us to make environmentally-friendly choices makes no sense; and that while the proper goal of all sciences and arts is the healthy flourishing of humans and their communities, the goal of science as practiced in contemporary academia is maximizing the profits of the wealthy corporations that pay for the research, with results generally inimical to human flourishing. He devotes a chapter to the concept of "propriety," which he defines as "the fittingness of our conduct to our place and circumstance" (and which has a wealth of applications to present-day behaviors); and he emphasizes the importance of commitment to the local and particular, rather than grandiose subordination of the local and particular to 'globalized" operations. But there's much more content, and more food for thought, here; I've only scratched the surface rather briefly!

My read of the book this time, and writing of this review, was of course in the shadow of the current pandemic, a situation that heightens and accentuates the urgency of some of Berry's themes. The virus is a "problem" that many people are looking to Science to "solve;" but of course science had a great deal to do with creating the "problem" and the conditions under which it's spread, and deified "Science" isn't going to give us moral and spiritual resources for getting through the "problem," explaining it or making sense of its consequences in anything but a reductionist sense, or helping us decide what sort of social reality we want to build or rebuild in its aftermath. Those are things that don't call so much for technical expertise as for virtue, faith, wisdom, and community. A blog post written 20 years after this book was, and which doesn't mention Berry or this book, may seem an odd thing to link to in closing; but that's what I'm going to do, because I think Billy Coffey's conclusion there puts in simple words much of what Berry is saying here. https://www.goodreads.com/author_blog... . (less)
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David
Aug 05, 2012David rated it really liked it
As a scientist and a university faculty member, I found some parts of this essay stinging. Nevertheless, I found, on the whole, much of the commentary cogent and useful. At first, this essay seemed like some form of Luddite treatise. But what actually emerged was a well thought out challenge to the primacy of science in the modern world. Although the author issues this challenge directly at the Ecologist E. O. Wilson, in response to Wilson's thesis entitled Consilience, Wendell Berry rarely misses an opportunity to broaden his attack against Science (with a capital S). Nevertheless, I found the points of attack well articulated and rarely gratuitous.

In sum, this text made me (actually, allowed me) to look at science from a fresh perspective. Such opportunities are rare, when one has been in a given field for many years. For this, I am indebted to this author. (less)
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Karson
Feb 04, 2008Karson rated it really liked it
Wow. I didn't think the whole thing totally ruled, but there are certain quotes that are probably going to stick with me forever. He just has a different point of view than i have ever been exposed to. He really values the particular. Particular places, particular people, particular animals, particular things. This is across the spectrum from me. Like most Americans I value big, novel things. I think big trips rule, big mountains, big states, even big animals. I like moose more than birds. Mountains more than streams. Adventurous trips more than everyday life. I want to love particular "mundane" things, and Berry knows a lot more about that then I do. He'd rather stay one place his whole life and fully appreciate its depth and richness, than briefly skim all the world without a deep understanding of any one place. The particular and mundane scare the shit out of me, but this guy revels in it. Holy crap. (less)
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Jon
Dec 19, 2008Jon rated it it was amazing
Gotta give this one 5-stars just for sheer audacity. Berry takes on modern science and its materialistic and mechanistic world view, and he has E.O. Wilson and his book Consilience in his sights. Berry suggests that something is lost when we only focus on the reductionist perspective at the root of modern science. We are, he is suggesting, more than can be explained by modern science, and he suggests the dominance of the modern scientific paradigm represents a threat to those ineffable or irreducible characteristics that make us uniquely human.

We are, he is suggesting, more than machines:

"The most radical influence of reductive science has been the virtually universal adoption of the idea that the world, its creatures, and all the parts of its creatures are machines--that is, that there is no difference between creature and artifice, birth and manufacture, thought and computation" (p. 6).

In response to that model he suggests that, "life, like holiness, can only be known by being experienced" (p. 8), and that "Our daily lives are a daily mockery of our scientific pretensions" (p. 33). And again, "Directly opposed to this reduction or abstraction of things is the idea of the preciousness of individual lives and places" (p. 42).

The book does bog down a bit in the middle, but then there will be a line like this to catch your attention:

"To define knowledge as merely empirical is to limit one's ability to know; it enfeebles one's ability to feel and think" (p. 103).

Or this:
"'Survival value', it seems to me, must deal in minimums, since any species dependent upon maximums would be too vulnerable to survive. The human race has survived because of its ability to survive famine, not because of its ability to survive feasts" (p. 110).

Or this:
A work of art says what it says in the only way it can be said. Beauty, for example, cannot be interpreted. It is not an empirically verifiable fat; it is not a quantity (p. 117). (less)
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M.G. Bianco
Feb 15, 2018M.G. Bianco rated it it was amazing
Shelves: non-fiction
One of the best book of essays from Wendell Berry that I've read. Intriguing and compelling at every point, he hits his biggest home run (for me) when he considers the different kinds of knowledge and then the distinctions between art and science, and the necessity for both to work together from a common ground.

For those of you who have heard his speech on Wallace Stegner's idea of the "boomers" and "stickers," he elaborates on that more in this book as well. (less)
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Evan
Nov 06, 2008Evan rated it it was amazing
Berry continues to astonish me. This is not a fast and easy read; you have to work and pay attention. But Berry writes as a prophet of our times and has put his finger on a core - maybe the root - cause of dis-ease in our century.

He writes a critique of rationalism and scientific thought that we need to pay attention to.

A few memorable passages:

"For a while I proposed to myself that the only things really explainable are explanations. That is not quite true, but it is near enough to the truth that I am unwilling to forget it.

"What can be explained? Experiments, ideas, patterns, cause-effect relationships and connections within defined limits, anything that can be calculated, graphed or diagrammed. And yet the explanation changes whatever is explained into something explainable. Explanation is reductive, not comprehensive; most of the time, when you have explained something, you discover leftovers. An explanation is a bucket, not a well.

"What can't be explained? I don't think creatures can be explained. I don't think lives can be explained. What we know about creatures and lives must be pictured or told or sung or danced. And I don't think pictures or stories or songs or dances can be explained. The arts are indispensable precisely because they are so nearly antithetical to explanation." (p113)

"The time is past, if ever there was such a time, when you can just discover knowledge and turn it loose in the wold and assume that you have done good.

"This, to me, is a sign of the incompleteness of science in itself - which is the sign of the need for a strenuous conversation among all the branches of learning."

"In our present economic predicament, ethics, ecology, environmental law, etc. won't as specialties have much corrective force. They will be used to rationalize what is wrong." (p145)
(less)
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Joel
May 18, 2011Joel rated it really liked it
Wendell Berry: my constant antidote to graduate school.

Berry dislikes scientific reductionism, argues for the uniqueness of art and religion as ways of knowing, being, doing, etc, and adds some important objections to the "scientific" enterprise as it is carried out today: it is essentially colonial, imperialist, and in bed with a number of environmentally destructive forces.

He also comes down pretty harshly on the way academic disciplines are organized and the way universities are run. This makes a lot of sense to me, but leaves me with some questions about how to proceed with my own chosen field. I am so surrounded by people who do research and scholarly publishing as their livelihood that I forget it's something I've never wanted.

Berry writes in another book, Standing by Words:

"If one wishes to promote the life of language, one must promote the life of the community—a discipline many times more trying, difficult, and long than that of linguistics, but having at least the virtue of hopefulness. It escapes the despair always implicit in specializations: the cultivation of discrete parts without respect or responsibility for the whole."

I'm knee-deep in theory about language and social worlds, yet too much of it, in the end, for me feels like a spinning out into nothing. It is not too late, perhaps, for me to imagine getting much more involved with language and literacy teaching at local, grassroots levels. For all our talk about the Local, currently fashionable ideas in applied linguistics seem rarely to be produced by scholars who are genuinely committed to living and working in a place, rather than an archipelago of universities.

Obviously, this book has provoked thinking beyond its subject. Which I suppose is another thing it has going for it. (less)
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2021/04/06

S Kaza, 7 The Greening of Buddhism The Oxford Handbook of Religion and Ecol­ogy

 7 The Greening of Buddhism   Stephanie Kaza

  The Oxford Handbook of Religion and Ecol­ogy

AS A MAJOR WORLD RELIGION, BUDDHISM HAS A LONG and rich history of responding to human needs. From the moist tropical lowlands of Sri Lanka to the towering mountains of Tibet, Buddhist teachings have been transmitted through diverse ter­rain to many different cultures. Across this history, Buddhist under­standing about nature and human-nature relations has been based on a wide range of teachings, texts, and social views. The last half century, as Buddhism has taken root in the West, has been a time of great environ­mental concern. Global warming, habitat loss, and resource extraction have all taken a significant toll as human populations multiply beyond precedent.

With the rise of the religion and ecology movement, Buddhist schol­ars, teachers, and practitioners have investigated the various traditions to see what teachings are relevant and helpful for cultivating environmen­tal awareness. The development of green Buddhism is a relatively new phenomenon, reflecting the scale of the environmental crisis around the world. Thus far the gleanings have followed the lead of specific writers and teachers opening up new interpretations of Buddhist teachings.

This essay was originally prepared for The Oxford Handbook of Religion and Ecol­ogy, edited by Roger Gottlieb, published by Oxford University Press in 2006. Since that time there have been further developments in Buddhist eco-activism and Buddhism and Ecology scholarship, with emphasis on climate change, ani­mal protection, and social justice. Buddhist writers, teachers, and activists con­tinue to draw on the central philosophical and religious themes from the major Buddhist traditions highlighted here.

Western Buddhists, still new to the philosophies and practices of the East, have often sparked the conversations, seeking ways to complement secu­lar approaches to environmental thought.

HISTORY AND DEVELOPMENT OF GREEN BUDDHISM

One of the earliest voices for Buddhist environmentalism in North Amer­ica was Zen student and poet Gary Snyder, who illuminated the connec­tions between Buddhist practice and ecological thinking.' Snyder studied Zen in Japan and cultivated an "in the moment" haiku-like form in his poetry; much of which was set in the mountains of the western United States. One of his more lighthearted pieces, "Smokey the Bear Sutra," was handed out by activists urging better protection for US forests. Sny­der was associated with the early Beat generation of the 1950s and 1960s, which had a strong influence on the 1960s counterculture. Hippies, communards, and back-to-the-landers took up Snyder's approach, made popular in Jack Kerouac's travelogue Dharma Bums. Many early Buddhist students felt that spiritual leadership was crucial in the race toward plan­etary ecological destruction.

In the 1970s  the environmental movement swelled, and Buddhist cen­ters became well established in the West. While Congress passed such landmark legislation as the Clean Water Act, some of the new retreat centers confronted ecological issues head on. Zen Mountain Monastery in New York challenged the Department of Environmental Conservation over a beaver dam and forest protection. Green Gulch Zen Center in Northern California worked out water-use agreements with the neigh­boring farmers and national park. Some Buddhist centers opted for veg­etarian fare at a time when vegetarianism was not that well known. For a few, this reflected an awareness of the environmental problems associated with raising meat. A number of Buddhist centers made some effort to grow their own organic food.

By the 1980s Buddhist leaders were explicitly addressing the eco-crisis and incorporating ecological awareness in their teaching. In his 1989 Nobel Peace Prize speech, His Holiness the Dalai Lama proposed mak­ing Tibet an international ecological reserve. Vietnamese Zen monk and peace activist Thich Nhat Hanh invited his followers to join the Order of Interbeing, teaching Buddhist principles using ecological examples. Zen teachers Robert Aitken in Hawaii and Daido Loori in New York exam­ined the Buddhist precepts from an environmental perspective. Buddhist activist Joanna Macy creatively synthesized elements of Buddhism and deep ecology, challenging people to take their insights into direct action. The Buddhist Peace Fellowship, founded in 1978, added environmental concerns to its early activist agenda.

In Thailand, teak forests were being clearcut at an accelerating rate for foreign trade. This resulted in massive flooding and mudslides, generating a national wave of environmental protest. Buddhist priests in rural villages made headlines with their ritual ordination of elder trees as a symbolic gesture of solidarity with threatened forests.2 As Buddhist environmental activism spread, the "forest monks," as they came to be known, formed an ethical front in the protest against overexploitation. Other monks got involved with activist efforts to question economic development and its environmental impacts. Plastic bags, toxic lakes, and nuclear reactors were targeted by Buddhist leaders as detrimental influences on people's physical and spiritual health. In Butma, Buddhists concerned about the environment drew attention to the impacts of a major oil pipeline and the decimation of tropical forests. In Tibet, the environmental impacts of Chinese colonization were documented and publicized by support groups in the West.'

Interest in Buddhist views on the environment gained momentum in the 19905 through books, journals, and conferences. For the twentieth an­niversary of Earth Day, the Buddhist Peace Fellowship produced a teach­ing packet and poster for widespread distribution. That same year, 1990, the first popular anthology of Buddhism and ecology writings, Dharma Gaia, was published by Parallax following the scholarly collection Nature in Asian Traditions of Thought.' World Wide Fund for Nature brought out a series of books on five world religions, including Buddhism and Ecology.' Well-established Buddhist magazines such as Tricycle, Shambhala Sun, Inquiring Mind, Turning Wheel, and Mountain Record devoted whole issues to the question of environmental practice.

In 1990 two groundbreaking national conferences were held in Seattle, Washington, and Middlebury, Vermont—both focused on eco-religious approaches to the environment. At the Vermont conference the Dalai Lama was the keynote speaker, urging people to take care of the environ­ment. A few years later at the 1993 Parliament of the World's Religions in Chicago, Buddhists gathered with Hindus, Muslims, pagans, Jews, and Christians from all over the world; one of the top agenda items was the role of religion in responding to the environmental crisis. Parallel inter­est in the academic community culminated in ten major conferences at Harvard Center for the Study of World Religions, purposely aimed at defining a new field of study in religion and ecology. The first of these conferences, convened by Mary Evelyn Tucker and John Grimm in 1996, focused on Buddhism and ecology and resulted in the first major aca­demic volume on the subject.6

For the most part, the academic community addressed the philosophy but not the practice of Buddhist environmentalism. Applied practice was explored by socially engaged Buddhist teachers such as Thich Nhat Hanh and Bernie Glassman. In Thailand and around the world, Sulak Sivaraksa worked tirelessly for global change, and in the United Kingdom Vipas-sana teacher Christopher Titmuss ran for Parliament as a Green Party candidate. John Daido Loori committed a substantial portion of his retreat-center land in the Catskills of New York to be "forever wild," while Rochester Zen Center founder Philip Kapleau actively encouraged vegetarianism. In California, nuclear activist Joanna Macy promoted a model of experiential teaching designed to cultivate motivation, pres­ence, and authenticity. Her workshops popularized Buddhist meditation techniques and a Buddhist view of systems thinking. Together with Bud­dhist rainforest activistJohn Seed of Australia, she developed the Council of All Beings to engage people's attention and imagination on behalf of all beings.' Thousands of these councils have now taken place in Australia, New Zealand, the United States, Germany, Russia, and other parts of the Western world.

Since 2000 the religion and ecology movement has gathered steam and become a forceful presence at the American Academy of Religion as well as the World Council of Churches. The acceleration of global envi­ronmental problems has added to the urgency of the agenda, taken up now by Buddhists as well as Christians, Jews, and all the major religious traditions. Buddhist initiatives have been strongest in Buddhist coun­tries such as Thailand, Tibet, and Burma. Though fewer in numbers,

Western Buddhists have contributed texts and academic study to provide a foundation for the new movement. There are now doctoral programs in the United States where a student can earn a graduate degree with a focus on Buddhism and ecology.'

RECENT STREAMS IN BUDDHIST ENVIRONMENTAL THOUGHT

As interest has developed in Buddhism and Ecology, the fields of thought have expanded through various writers as well as popular and academic discourses. When a field of thought first coalesces from wide-ranging points of engagement, a common first step is the publication of collected writings on the topic. This then opens the field to newcomers by provid­ing an overview and introduction to the major themes within the field. For Buddhism and Ecology, this step was taken with Dharma Gaia (1990), followed by the academic collection of papers entitled Buddhism and Ecol­ogy (iç), which led to the most complete collection to date: Dharma Rain (2000). This last anthology drew together classic reference texts from a range of Buddhist traditions, along with modern commentaries, exploratory essays, and academic critiques.

With such texts available to academic audiences, professors in re­ligious studies and environmental studies could now offer courses on Buddhism and Ecology at the undergraduate level. For students in the West, Buddhism held its own magnetic attraction as the exotic "other" next to Christianity. Young people concerned about the environment and eager for a more congruent spiritual fit with their experience in nature found Buddhist environmental thought very appealing. At a professional level, Buddhist perspectives have been a regular part of the programs or­ganized by the Religion and Ecology Group at the American Academy of Religion." This group has seen a rapid rise in interest, with conference attendance increasing every year.

Environmental concerns have also been a significant part of inter-religious dialogue in the West. At the 2005 international conference of the Society for Buddhist-Christian Studies held in Los Angeles, the theme was "Hearing the Cries of the World," with one session focused on the "cries" of the environment. At Gethsemani II in 2002, a Catholic-sponsored dialogue in Thomas Merton's tradition, speakers addressed

structural poverty and violence resulting from global exploitation of environmental resources. Impacts of consumerism were taken up at the 2003 annual meeting of the Society for Buddhist-Christian Studies. The 2014 annual meeting of the American Academy of Religion fea­tured numerous panels and speakers on the moral implications of cli­mate change.

Not all topics of environmental concern have attracted attention from green Buddhists; some key issues such as climate change are only now getting attention in academic or popular discourse. Arenas requiring technical knowledge such as air and water pollution or pesticide regula­tion do not seem to draw much Buddhist commentary. Issues in regional or local ecosystem protection are apparently better handled by a coalition of local groups, more often nonreligious than religious. Buddhism, how­ever, does offer rich resources for immediate application in food ethics, animal rights, and consumerism—areas that are now developing some solid academic and popular literature. The most basic Buddhist tenet of nonharming provides a strong platform for evaluating animal welfare and animal rights issues, since many of these revolve around degrees of harm to human-impacted animals, whether on factory farms or in zoos. Paul Waldau has written extensively on both Buddhist and Christian attitudes toward animals in his book The Specter of Speciesism.11

Food ethics are evolving rapidly in the West as consumers realize the tremendous costs of globally shipped goods and agriculture based on chemical inputs. In the last decade, farmers' markets and community-supported agriculture have gained great popularity and expanded quickly. Fast-food diets were deeply challenged by Eric Schlosser's research in Fast Food Nation, as well as the fast-food experiment in the movie Super-size Me. In Italy the Slow Food Movement has taken off as a celebration of cultural values for local, homemade food, especially breads, wines, and cheeses. The demand for organic produce in the West has increased steadily, and in some states such as Vermont and Oregon, organic farmers are a significant portion of the farming community. Students at Buddhist meditation retreats in the United States have come to expect high-quality, thoughtfully prepared meals. At Green Gulch Zen Center in California, students have pressed for locally grown produce of all types as well as fair-trade coffee and tea.

Interest in Buddhist food practices was perhaps ignited by one of Thich Nhat Hanh's famous exercises for mass gatherings: the orange meditation (sometimes replaced by the apple or the raisin meditation). In this long guided meditation, students practice mindfulness of touch, smell, taste, first bite, swallowing—in short, every moment in the act of eating. This meditation evoked interest in mindful food practice in general: eating slowly, eating as family practice, eating to support a healthy environment. It raised again the issue of vegetarianism, always a concern in a Buddhist setting. For Westerners exposed to both Buddhist and environmental reasons for not eating meat, ethical food practices can vary substantially."

Consumerism, the social emphasis on "stuff" and status, also lends itself well to Buddhist analysis. Since the Four Noble Truths identify desire as the cause of suffering, Buddhist practice offers useful antidotes to the runaway desire that characterizes a consumer society. In Hooked!, a number of Buddhist teachers, scholars, and practitioners take up Bud­dhist values, methods, and principles to address the all-penetrating tan­gle of consumerism that dominates social consciousness today.'3 Buddhist meditative practices are helpful in taming the impulses of desire that lead to shopping sprees and consumer addictions. Zen teachings that focus on taking apart the ego-self make a good foil to skillful marketers who spe­cialize in identity needs. Initiatives in Thailand and Japan indicate what is possible when Buddhist grassroots organizers or temples take on the institutional structures of consumerism. 14

Buddhist environmental thought found its way into creative writing as well, in both prose and poetry. A number of Buddhist and Buddhist-leaning poets followed in Gary Snyder's footsteps, taking up subjects of nature or human-nature relations in their poetry. A collection of these poems, Beneath a Single Moon, pulled together work reflecting Buddhist environmental themes.'5 Among nature writers, several authors alluded to Buddhist practice as part of what informs their intimate relations with the landscape. Peter Matthiessen wrote eloquently of Zen insights in his book The Snow Leopard, set high in the Himalayas on a search for this rare endangered cat. Gary Snyder published two collections of essays, The Practice of the Wild and A Place in Space, which developed his Buddhist environmental thought in fresh and pragmatic ways. Gretel Ehrlich, in Islands, the Universe, Home, wrote of meditation in the open spaces of the western United States and in A Match to the Heart drew on bardo imagery to describe being hit by lightning.

ENVIRONMENTAL THEMES IN BUDDHIST TRADITIONS

Buddhists taking up environmental concerns are motivated by many fields of environmental suffering—from loss of species and habitats to the consequences of industrial agriculture. Informed by different streams of Buddhist thought and practice, they draw on a range of themes in Buddhist texts and traditions. Many of the central Buddhist teachings seem consistent with concern for the environment, and a number of modern Buddhist teachers advocate clearly for environmental steward­ship. As Buddhists develop their contribution to environmental care-giving, they tend to reflect the themes and values of the teachings that are most supportive and useful to their work.

The key themes or values usually cited as foundational to Buddhist environmental thought originate with the major historical developments in Buddhism—the Theravada traditions of southeast Asia; the Mahayana schools of northern China, Japan, and Korea; and the Vajrayana lineages of Tibet and Mongolia. While Buddhists engaged in environmental work in Asian countries may draw primarily on the teachings of their region, Western Buddhists tend to take hold of whatever seems applicable to the work at hand. This list of themes is not a comprehensive review but rather an introduction to the dominant ideas in Buddhist environmental discourse today.

1] Theravada Themes

In the earliest Buddhist sutras there are many references to nature as refuge, especially trees and caves. The famous story of the Buddha's life begins with his mother giving birth under the shelter of a kindly tree. After young Gautama wandered for years in the forests of India, he took refuge at the foot of a bodhi tree, where he achieved enlightenment. For the remainder of his life, the Buddha taught large gatherings of monks and laypeople in protected groves of trees that served as rainy-season retreat centers for his followers. The Buddha urged his followers to choose natural places for meditation, free from the influence of everyday human activity. Early Buddhists developed a reverential attitude toward large trees, carrying on the Indian tradition regarding each as a vanaspati or "lord of the forest." Protecting trees and preserving open lands were

considered meritorious deeds. Today in India and Southeast Asia many large old trees areoften wrapped with monastic cloth to indicate this age-old appreciation for nature as refuge.

One of the first Buddhist teachings on the Four Noble Truths explains the nature of human suffering as generated by desire and attachment. Fully embracing the nature of impermanence, the medicine for such suf­fering is the practice of compassion (karuna) and lovingkindness (metta). The early Indian Jataka tales recount the many former lives of the Bud­dha as an animal or tree when he showed compassion to others who were suffering. In each of the tales the Buddha-to-be sets a strong moral exam­ple of compassion for plants and animals. The first guidelines for monks in the Vinaya contained a number of admonitions related to caring for the environment. For example, travel was prohibited during the rainy season for fear of killing the worms and insects that came to the surface in wet weather. Monks were not to dig in the ground or drink unstrained water. Even wild animals were to be treated with kindness. Plants too were not to be injured carelessly but respected for all that they give to people. 16

Early Buddhism was strongly influenced by the Hindu and Jain prin­ciple of ahimsa or nonharming—a core foundation for environmental concern. In its broadest sense nonharming means "the absence of the desire to kill or harm."" Acts of injury or violence are to be avoided because they are thought to result in future injury to oneself. The fourth noble truth describes the path to ending the suffering of attachment and desire—the Eightfold Path of practice. One of the eight practice spokes is right conduct, which is based on the principle of nonharming. The first of the five basic precepts for virtuous behavior is often stated in its prohib­itory form as "not taking life" or "not killing or harming." Buddhaghosa explains: "Taking life' means to murder anything that lives. It refers to the striking and killing of living beings. 'Anything that lives'—ordinary people speak here of a 'living being,' but more philosophically we speak of 'anything that has the life-force.' 'Taking life' is then the will to kill anything that one perceives as having life, to act so as to terminate the life-force in it.

"8

The first precept, "not killing," applies to environmental conflicts around food production, land use, pesticides, and pollution. The sec­ond precept, "not stealing," engages global trade ethics and corporate exploitation of resources. "Not lying," the third precept, brings up issues

in advertising that promote consumerism. "Not engaging in abusive re­lations," interpreted through an environmental lens, can cover, many examples of cruelty and disrespect for nonhuman beings. Nonharming extends to all beings—not merely to those who are useful or irritating to humans. This central teaching of nonharming is congruent with many schools of ecophilosophy that respect the intrinsic value and capacity for experience of each being.

The Eightfold Path also includes the practice of right view or under­standing the laws of causality (karma) and interdependence. The Bud­dhist woridview in early India understood there to be six rebirth realms: devas, asuras (both god realms), humans, ghosts, animals, and hell beings. To be reborn as an animal would mean one had declined in moral vir­tue. By not causing harm to others, one could enhance one's future re­births into higher realms. In this sense, the law of karma was used as a motivating force for good behavior, including paying respect to all life. Monks were instructed not to eat meat, since by practicing vegetarianism they would avoid the hell realms and would be more likely to achieve a higher rebirth. In one sutra it is said, "If one eats the flesh of animals that one has not oneself killed, the result is to experience a single life (last­ing one kalpa) in hell. If one eats the meat of beasts that one has killed or one has caused another to kill, one must spend a hundred thousand kalpas in hell ."19

A third element of the Eightfold Path, right livelihood, concerns how one makes a living or supports oneself. The early canonical teachings indicate that the Buddha prohibited five livelihoods: trading in slaves, trading in weapons, selling alcohol, selling poisons, and slaughtering animals. The Buddha promised a terrible fate to those who hunted deer or slaughtered sheep; the intentional inflicting of harm was particularly egregious, for it revealed a deluded mind unable to see the relationship between slaughterer and slaughtered. Proponents of ethical vegetarian­ism point out that large-scale slaughtering of animals for food produc­tion breaks the Buddhas prohibition. Some Buddhist environmentalists speak of their work as right livelihood, a path of practice that serves others and cultivates compassionate action.

Though Buddhism generally places little weight on creation stories (since there is no creator god in the Buddhist view), the Agganna Sutta contains one parable of creation in which human moral choices affect the health of the environment. In this story the original beings are de­scribed as self-luminous, subsisting on bliss and freely traveling through space. At that time it was said that the Earth was covered with a flavorful substance much like butter, which caused the arising of greed. The more butter the beings ate, the more solid their bodies became. Over time the beings differentiated in form, and the more beautiful ones developed conceit and looked down on the others. Self-growing rice arose on the Earth to replace the butter, and before long people began hoarding and then stealing food. According to the story; as people erred in their ways, the richness of the Earth declined. The point of the sutta is to show that environmental health is bound up with human morality.20 Other early suttas spelled out the environmental impacts of greed, hate, and igno­rance, showing how these Three Poisons produce both internal and ex­ternal pollution. In contrast, the moral virtues of generosity, compassion, and wisdom were said to be able to reverse environmental decline and produce health and purity.

2] Mahayana Themes

As Buddhist teachings were carried north to China, a number of north­ern schools of thought evolved, emphasizing different texts, principles, and practices, some of which have now been applied to environmental concerns. The Hua Yen school of Buddhism of seventh-century China placed particular emphasis on the law of interdependence or mutual cau­sality. Because ecological thinking fits well with the Buddhist description of interdependence, this theme has become prominent in modern Bud­dhist environmental thought.2' The Hua Yen Chinese philosophy per­ceives nature as relational, each phenomenon dependent on a multitude of causes and conditions that include not only physical and biological factors but also historical and cultural factors.

The Avatamsaka Sutra of the Hua Yen school uses the teaching meta­phor of the jewel net of Indra to represent the infinite complexity of the universe. This imaginary cosmic net holds a multifaceted jewel at each of its nodes, with each jewel reflecting all the others. If any jewels become cloudy (toxic or polluted), they reflect the others less clearly. To extend the metaphor, tugs on any of the net lines, for example, through loss of species or habitat fragmentation, affect all the other lines. Likewise, if clouded jewels are cleared up (rivers cleaned, wetlands restored), life

across the net is enhanced. Because the net of interdependence includes not only the actions of all beings but also their thoughts, the intention of the actor becomes a critical factor in determining what happens.

The law of interdependence suggests a powerful corollary, sometimes translated as "emptiness of separate self." Since all phenomena are de­pendent on interacting causes and conditions, then nothing exists as autonomous and self-supporting. This Buddhist understanding and ex­perience of self contradicts the traditional Western sense of self as a dis­crete autonomous individual. Interpreting the Hua Yen metaphor, Gary Snyder suggests that the empty nature of self offers access to "wild mind," the energetic forces that determine the nature of life." These forces act outside of human influence, setting the historical, ecological, and even cosmological context for all life.

T'ien-t'ai monks in eighth-century China believed in a universal Bud­dha nature that dwelled in all forms of life. Sentient (animal) and non-sentient (plant) beings and even the Earth itself were seen as capable of achieving enlightenment. This concept of Buddha nature is closely re­lated to Chinese views of chi or moving energy, ever changing, taking new form. This view of nature reflects a dynamic sense of flow and inter­connection between all beings, with Buddha nature arising and changing constantly. Buddhist scholar Ian Harris suggests that a Mahayana vege­tarian ethic was first formulated around the idea of Buddha nature. In the Mahaparinirvana Sutra Buddha nature is understood to be an embryo of the Tathagata or the fully enlightened being.23 Addressing the ethics of meat eating, Western Zen teacher Philip Kapleau wrote, "It is in Buddha-nature that all existences, animate and inanimate, are unified and harmo­nized. All organisms seek to maintain this unity in terms of their own karma. To willfully take life, therefore, means to disrupt and destroy this inherent wholeness and to blunt feelings of reverence and compassion arising from our Buddha mind." 14 Taking an animal's life, therefore, is destructive to the Buddha nature within the animal to be eaten. Kapleau taught that to honor the Tathagata and the potential for awakening, one should refrain from eating meat.

Environmental advocates sometimes call themselves "ecosattvas," those who take up a path of service to all beings. They are following the Mahayana model of the enlightened being or bodhisattva who re­turns lifetime after lifetime to help all who are suffering. Where the early

Theravada schools emphasized achieving enlightenment and leaving the world of suffering, the northern schools, influenced by Confucian social codes, placed great value on becoming enlightened to serve others. The bodhisattva vow to "save all sentient beings" calls for cultivating compas­sion for the endless suffering that arises from the fact of existence. Such bodhisattva acts of environmental service are marked by a strong sense of intention that reflects a Buddhist virtue ethic.25 Environmentalists apply this ethic to plant and animal relations as well as to people and societies, promoting environmental stewardship as a path to enlightenment.

Monastic temples in the Ch'an traditions of China were often built in mountainous or forested places. Chinese poets from the fifth century on accumulated an extensive body of literature reflecting a spiritual sense of belonging to wild nature on a cosmological level." Japanese schools of Zen influenced haiku and other classic verse forms that cultivated a sense of oneness with nature in the moment. Dogen, founder of the Soto sect of Zen, spoke of mountains and waters as sutras themselves, the very evi­dence of the dharma arising.27 He taught a method of direct knowing, ex­periencing this dharma of nature with no separation. For DOgen, the goal of meditation was nondualistic understanding, or complete transmission between two beings. Dogen taught that much human suffering generates from egoistic views based in dualistic understanding of self and other. To be awakened is to break through these limited views (of plants and animals) to experience the self and myriad beings as one energetic event.

3] Vajrayana Themes

Tibetan schools drew on all of the historic teachings transmitted to the far north from China, India, and Southeast Asia. Kindness for others was emphasized strongly with the encouragement to treat all sentient beings as having been their mother in a former life. In Santideva's classic eighth-century text on the bodhisattva path, the practice of compassion for all beings becomes world transforming. He vows: "Just like space and the great elements such as Earth, may I always support the life of all the boundless creatures. And until they pass away from pain, may I also be the source of life for all the realms of varied beings that reach unto the ends of space.""

For indigenous Tibetans, the landscape was seen as a sacred mandala, a symbolic representation of Vajrayana teachings. Monks and others

for many centuries have gone on pilgrimage to specific mountains to demonstrate their spiritual devotion, sometimes taking years, to com­plete their journeys. Heaps of inscribed prayer stones are placed along stone mountain paths, and prayer flags stream in the winds, offering encouragement to pilgrims traversing the sacred lands. Stupas, or relict shrines, are placed at significant points on the land to draw energy and commemorate important religious leaders. Pilgrims make offerings at these sites, linking the points of energy across the landscape with their own footsteps.29

4] Contemporary Themes

Today's Buddhists have drawn on a number of the principles above as supportive teachings for environmental work. Several additional themes have also been popularized by modern Buddhist teachers and practi­tioners. Vietnamese Zen teacher Thich Nhat Hanh promotes mindful­ness as a central stabilizing practice for calming the mind and being present. He works with the teachings of the Satipatthana Sutta, providing instructions in mindfulness of body, feelings, mind, and objects of mind, linking these directly with the most basic actions of eating and walking. Thich Nhat Hanh is one of a handful of Buddhist teachers today who has offered retreats for environmentalists. His word interbeing has become popular among Western Buddhists as a way to express the dynamic sense of relationship with the Earth. He frequently teaches about interbeing through the example of a piece of paper, which holds the sun, the Earth, the clouds, and all the beings of the forest.3° Mindfulness practice in Bud­dhist retreat centers supports thoughtful food practices, from organic gardening to silent cooking.

Environmentally engaged Buddhists are concerned about the ecologi­cal consequences of harmful human activities. Buddhist scholar Kenneth Kraft has proposed the term eco-karma to cover the multiple impacts of human choices as they affect the health and sustainability of the Earth.31 An ecological view of karma extends the traditional view of karma to a general systems view of environmental processes. Eco-karma might be expressed, for example, as one's ecological footprint—the amount of land, air, and water required for food, water, energy, shelter, and waste disposal. Tracing such karmic streams across the land is one way to understand the human responsibility for environmental stewardship.

Among today's Buddhists, environmental work is regarded as a form of social activism, a practice with a component of advocacy for social change. Activism such as this is called socially engaged Buddhism, a practice path mostly outside the gates of the monastery. Taking up environmen­tal work in this way, there is no sense of separation between the activist work and one's practice. Caring for the environment becomes a practice that engages one fully in the core Buddhist practices. Teaching others about the ecological problems and solutions in this context can be seen as a kind of dharma teaching, offered in the spirit of liberating humans from the suffering they are creating for the Earth and themselves. So­cially engaged Buddhists have taken up the concerns of nuclear waste, animal factory farming, and consumerism, among others. By working with other Buddhist activists, Buddhist environmentalists gain support in keeping Buddhist practice and philosophy at the heart of their work.

A ROLE FOR BUDDHISM IN THE ENVIRONMENTAL CRISIS

Will green Buddhist activists play a significant role in addressing the multitude of environmental problems in need of creative solutions? Will scholars of Buddhist environmental thought contribute useful insights to understand human motivation and behavior? Will Buddhist priests and teachers take up environmental concerns as part of their work with stu­dents and local communities? How will Buddhism stack up compared with other world religious traditions in affecting the outcome of unsus­tainable environmental trends? This section reviews the strengths and limitations that are apparent at this early stage of Buddhist environmen­tal engagement, looking at three arenas of activity. Because the field of Buddhism and ecology is evolving at a rapid rate, much more may yet be drawn from the Buddhist teachings and be of help in sorting through the difficult environmental choices that lie ahead.

1] Strengths

How effective is Buddhist environmental action? And what might make Buddhist environmentalism distinctive from other environmental or eco-religious activism? Let us consider the role for activists and what strengths from Buddhism they might bring to bear on their work. First

and perhaps most obvious, to others, Buddhist activists would ground their work in regular engagement with Buddhist practice forms. Thich Nhat Hanh, for example, has encouraged activists to recite the precepts together to reinforce guidelines for right conduct in the midst of chal­lenging situations. Walking meditation is taught regularly as part of ac­tivist retreats at Vallecitos Mountain Refuge in New Mexico and 'Whole Thinking retreats in Fayston, Vermont.32 Practicing with the breath can help sustain activists under pressure in the heat of a conflict. At Green Gulch Zen Center, Earth Day celebrations have been woven into the public event for Buddha's birthday. Environmental activists associated with the Buddhist Peace Fellowship include meditation as part of their regular meeting activities.

Buddhist texts recognize a strong relationship between intention, be­havior, and the long-range effects of action. Clarifying one's intention in advocacy work helps prevent a sense of being overwhelmed or burnout. Environmental issues are rarely small and self-contained; one problem leads to another, and many parties are often involved in negotiating a last­ing solution. Campaigns or public hearings can be toxic with frustration, anger, and power displays. The Buddhist activist may be able to carry some emotional stability in the face of this heated energy by maintaining clear intention, holding to the bodhisattva vow to reduce suffering and help all beings. This can help other activists clarify their motivation and set the stage for more effective collaboration and division of tasks.

Central to Buddhist teaching is the focus on breaking through the delusion of the false self, the ego that sees itself as the center of the uni­verse. One antidote for this universal human tendency is the practice of detachment. A green Buddhist approach to activism would include some healthy ego-checking work to see if the activist is motivated by a need to build his or her ego identity as an environmentalist or Earth saver. Keeping intention strong but letting go of the need for specific results is a practice in detachment. One recognizes that the outcome of any situa­tion will depend on many factors, not just the contributions of one per­son. Being receptive to the creative dynamics at play and less identified with a particular end result can produce surprising collaborations. Sulak Sivaraksa calls this "small b Buddhism"—downplaying the ego of being a good Buddhist in favor of being an effective friend to others working toward a common goal.33

Key to a Buddhist approach to problem solving is taking a nondualistic view of reality. This follows from an understanding of self as not separate from all others but rather dynamically co-created. Most environmental battles play out as confrontations between seeming enemies: tree huggers versus loggers, housewives versus toxic polluters, organic farmers versus corporate seed producers. From a Buddhist perspective, this kind of de­monizing destroys spiritual equanimity; it is far preferable to act from an inclusive standpoint, listening to all parties involved rather than taking sides. This approach has traditionally been quite rare in environmental problem solving but is becoming more common now as people grow weary from the dehumanizing nature of enemy making. In a volatile situ­ation, a Buddhist commitment to nondualism can help stabilize negotia­tions and work toward long-term functional relationships.

Buddhist practice is grounded in the fundamental vow of taking refuge in the Three Treasures: the Buddha or teacher, the Dharma or teachings, and the Sangha or practice community. Asian activists usually base their work in relations with local sanghas as an effective grassroots base for accomplishing change. Western Buddhists, handicapped by the Western emphasis on individualism, tend to value sangha practice as the least of the Three Treasures. They tend to be drawn first to the calming influ­ence of meditation and the moral guidelines of the precepts. Practicing with community can be difficult for students living some distance from Buddhist centers and surrounded by a predominantly Judeo-Christian culture. Building community is crucial for Buddhist environmentalists even though they are geographically isolated from each other and some­times marginalized by their own peers in Buddhist centers. This has been mitigated substantially by internet organizing, and now, for example, the Green Sangha based in the San Francisco area has an international pres­ence through its existence on the web.34

Second, let us consider the role for scholars of Buddhist environmen­tal thought and what aspects of Buddhism might inform their work. This new academic field has engaged both traditional scholars who study but do not practice Buddhism as well as those who both study and practice, the scholar-practitioners. Each has strengths to contribute in grow­ing the field of knowledge. Traditional scholars can bring an objective view, placing environmental perspectives in the broader field of Bud­dhist studies, helping to legitimize these discussions. Academics such as

Ian Harris and Alan Sponberg have made such contributions, raising questions about popular green Buddhism and providing accurate histor­ical background.35 Scholar-practitioners such as Rita Gross and Kenneth Kraft bring an experiential understanding of the teachings of their lin­eages to complement their academic training.36 Scholar-practitioners are generally more comfortable and clear about their intention in doing envi­ronmental academic work, that it is motivated by their bodhisattva vows, for example. However, their work is sometimes challenged by academics who imply that "arm's length" engagement in one's scholarly pursuits is not possible for practitioners.

Scholars of either persuasion can bring their well-trained minds and analytic skills to critiquing green Buddhism and challenging ungrounded idealistic interpretations. As Buddhism grows in popularity in the West, it is vulnerable to mistaken views, blurred with New Age ideas of in­dividually designed spirituality. Scholars grounded in the original texts can check emerging ideas for distortions of Buddhist thought. Tibetan Buddhist texts and training are particularly strong in methods of analysis. Judith Simmer-Brown uses these to understand the "empty" nature of globalization and the possibility for other forms of sustainability to arise.37 Ian Harris has examined the popular interpretation of Buddhism as the most environmentally friendly of the world religions, arguing that the historical record shows much more ambivalence.38 Scholars of Buddhist environmental thought are also in a good position to critique the tenets of monotheistic traditions that act as a deterrent to seeking a sustainable future. Rita Gross, for example, has questioned the strong pronatalist po­sitions of the Christian church as problematic in dealing with exponential population growth and its impacts on the planet.39

The strength of academic work in Buddhist environmental thought lies in legitimizing this new field in the eyes of traditional schools of religion and philosophy. Thus far the list of academic volumes address­ing environmental concerns from a Buddhist perspective is still fairly small. Though Buddhist insights are usually included in pan-religious commentaries on the environment, entire volumes by single or mul­tiple Buddhist scholars are quite rare. It is likely that new work will build on the first round of anthologies and take up specific aspects of environmental concern, as Hooked! has done with consumerism. Topics that already lend themselves to academic analysis such as food ethics and animal rights concerns may be the next work to emerge from the greening ivory tower.

What about Buddhist priests, monks, teachers? What strengths do they bring to environmental discourse and action? East or West, ordained Buddhists often are in leadership positions within their local temples. As leaders they can adapt the practice forms to new settings, including concern for the planet as part of their community responsibility. One Zen teacher served only bread and water for a day during a weeklong retreat, using this as a springboard to raise issues of poverty and inequity around the world. Another teacher regularly holds ceremonies for vic­tims of major disasters such as Hurricane Katrina or the earthquake in Pakistan in 2005. Several lay teachers have developed practice forms that take place in the garden to incorporate the presence of plants in memo­rial ceremonies. One Japanese Pure Land priest has galvanized his entire sangha to place solar panels on the roof of the temple to help reduce global climate change.

Buddhist centers that interface with the public can serve as models of environmentally sustainable practices .40 Through architectural de­sign choices and monastic example, visitors can see the possibilities for energy and water conservation. Through exposure to mindful kitchen practice, retreatants can learn about the food they eat and its origins. The leadership role of the head priest or teacher is often necessary for environmental concerns to be emphasized in everyday practice. Where a Buddhist teacher has shown environmental commitment, the centers tend to reflect that commitment. When Vermont Zen Center added a new dining hall and housing wing, head teacher Sunyana Graef led the effort to follow green building principles. With her support, the grounds were transformed through extensive volunteer efforts from community members, returning trees to a suburban lawn and cultivating spaces for thoughtful reflection (such as the lovely Jiso rock garden). In New York, John Daido Loori and his students at Zen Mountain Monastery lead summer canoeing and wilderness programs in the Adirondacks to delib­erately place students in contact with the forces of nature. This has been a hallmark of the center, and Daido honored his concern for the pristine northern mountains by purchasing a piece of lakeshore where students can monitor water quality.

More and more, experienced Buddhist teachers are being asked to provide meditation instruction for environmental advocates. When the ecosattva chapter of the Buddhist Peace Fellowship prepared for pro­tests against old-growth redwood logging in Northern California, they trained at Green Gulch Zen Center. When high-ranking executives in the Trust for Public Land sought to revitalize their commitment to land-conservation values, they developed staff meditation retreats at Vallecitos Mountain Refuge. Thus far; Buddhist practice techniques have been ap­plied much more extensively to hospice and healthcare settings, prison work, and AIDS assistance. But, bit by bit, the work with environmental issues is adding up. In the West, Buddhist meditation instruction is per­ceived to be neutral training available for people of any faith or secular persuasion. It is generally not seen as proselytizing. Environmentalists who tend to reject organized religion and find spiritual fulfillment in the outdoors are open to Buddhist support for their environmental aims. The possibility of this work first emerged in a retreat for environmentalists organized by Thich Nhat Hanh's followers at Ojai, California, in 1993. Thich Nhat Hanh oriented the retreat around taking care of the environ­mentalists, sensing that burnout was rampant for those driven by concern for the plight of so many suffering beings and places.

2] Limitations

So far this would appear to be a rosy picture, filled with useful options for Buddhists interested in supporting environmental action. But critics have already pointed out significant barriers to any extended Buddhist influence in environmental work, at least in the West. One philosophical problem is that there is no single view of nature or environment that crosses all the Buddhist traditions. David Eckel has described in some detail the difference in Indian Buddhist views of nature compared with Japanese views, for example. These views represent very different time periods and cultures; Eckel finds it problematic that Westerners look­ing for the "green" in Buddhism blur over these major distinctions.41 Some have called this process "mining" the tradition for what you want from it, a common human tendency among all the religious traditions, not so different than what is done to support fundamentalist Christian interpretations. Green Buddhism could suffer from the same sort of myopic views unless it encourages further understanding of Buddhism itself.

Further, Buddhism is not a nature religion per se, as are pagan or Native American traditions that base their spiritual understandings on relations with the land and its living beings. The central principles of Buddhism deal with human suffering and liberation from that suffering; the process of insight awareness is not dependent on the land or any physical forms. It is much more of a mental process, cultivating capacities in the human mind. Thus, at its roots, Buddhism does not immediately lend itself to environmental concern. In fact, since the Buddhist approach can work within any situation, environmental sustainability is not necessarily a pre­requisite or,a goal for liberation practice. The practice of detachment to hobble the power of desire could actually work against such environmen­tal values as "sense of place" and "ecological identity."

Alan Sponberg critiques the green Buddhist emphasis on interdepen­dence, suggesting that green Buddhists may be stepping too far away from the core spiritual development challenges in Buddhist training.42 Though the law of interdependence interfaces very well with similar laws of ecology, this alone is not enough, in his opinion, to lead a practitioner to enlightenment. Ian Harris critiques Joanna Macy for taking the meta­phor of Indra's jeweled net too far and missing the original teaching em­phasis, which was on karma, not ecology. He is wary of Buddhist activists who interpret key Buddhist principles too narrowly, from only an envi­ronmental point of view. For Harris, the project of "saving the world" is not a central concern, and dragging Buddhist concepts into the pro­cess may not be necessary or even helpful. He joins Eckel and Lambert Schmidthausen in exposing the lack of concern for animals and nature in many of the Pali Canon texts.43

To this point, green Buddhism has only taken up specific environmen­tal problems primarily in countries that already have a significant Bud­dhist population. Thai forest monks and Sulak Sivaraksa's Grassroots Leadership Training Program have gained some footing in protesting lake pollution, fish die-offs, and clearcutting of forests. Tibetans in exile in India have been able to undertake environmental education programs with local Tibetans, but they have had virtually no impact on the ram­pant exploitation of Tibet's natural resources by the Chinese. In the West, green Buddhists such as the Green Sangha have taken on energy conser­vation and recycling as everyday actions, but their impact has been fairly local. Green Buddhists have not yet been significant players in some of

the Western interfaith environmental initiatives which are making a differ­ence: the global Jubilee Debt forgiveness campaign, religious advocacy for corporate social responsibility through stockholder actions, and the Inter­faith Power and Light movement for alternate energy purchasing. This is partly because green Buddhists are still so few in number, but it may also be because Buddhism as a tradition does not carry the same charge for so­cial justice as the monotheistic traditions. Righting environmental wrongs is often a situation of injustice for those who are harmed, whether plants, animals, ecosystems, or people. Buddhist virtue ethics do address these wrongs, but not with the same fire as Judaism and Christianity.

A further critique of green Buddhism in the West is that it has had so little influence solving real environmental problems in Buddhist coun­tries. For most people it is local environmental problems that catch their attention; possibilities for local action seem more accessible than those on a global scale. As a consequence, few Westerners are actively working to stop or reverse environmental devastation in the countries that spawned their beloved religion. Some members of Buddhist Peace Fellowship have joined in solidarity with the International Network of Engaged Buddhists on their environmental campaigns. But for the most part it is difficult for Westerners to engage Asian problems from afar and from a different cultural perspective. For some Asians, Westerners are seen as part of the problem, due to their disproportionate consumption of planetary resources.

Nevertheless, despite these limitations, interest in Buddhist environ­mental thought and action is very strong in both the West and East. Mis­interpretations, mistaken views, and idealized projections are perhaps inevitable for any young movement as it takes shape. At this point the environmental movement itself is so well established in large and small nonprofit advocacy groups, in state and federal legislation, and in campus sustainability actions that it hardly needs a Buddhist contribution. But in small supportive ways it may be that Buddhism will yet take its place in shaping the direction of environmental problem solving around the globe.

CONCLUSION

Buddhist environmental thought is both ancient and brand new. While many Buddhist principles handed down from centuries ago seem broadly

applicable to environmental concerns, articulating those applications is still a very new project of the last few decades. Scholars of Buddhist en­vironmental thought have many topics yet to address. Green Buddhist activists have barely begun to make a unified impact. This is a movement of both thought and action to track over the next few decades.

Has a Buddhist environmental movement coalesced around the globe? Not at all. Only a tiny handful of organizations have been formed to pro­mote Buddhist environmental views and approaches. No clearly defined environmental agenda or set of principles has been agreed upon by any group of self-identified green Buddhists. All this is perhaps too much to expect of a fledgling movement. It may yet be that in ten years many more books will have been published offering Buddhist views regarding environmental concerns. It may yet be that green Buddhist centers will be established for the express purpose of fostering environmental sus-tainability, a sort of green Catholic Worker house model. As more and more serious students in the West become teachers and temple leaders, some may take up leadership roles cultivating mindfulness around envi­ronmental issues.

What is completely unknown is what larger forces and events will shape all environmental concern and activity. In 2005 and then again in 2017 the record number of hurricane-strength storms generated more environmental disasters than communities could handle effec­tively. Global climate change, the shrinking supply of oil, and the lack of available drinking water may be much more powerful forces shaping human behavior than any religious tradition. All this is yet to unfold. But certainly Buddhists of all traditions and cultures would be welcome to join the much-needed efforts to turn the tide from further planetary destruction.