Some really interesting articles in the latest issue of the Journal for the Study of Religion, Nature, and Culture.
Apologies for the formatting, and thanks to Christiana Peppard for tweeting this one.
Contesting Consecrated Scientific Narratives
Table of Contents
Introduction
Editor’s Introduction: Contesting Consecrated Scientific Narratives in Religion and Environmental Ethics | PDF ![]() |
Bron Taylor | 133-135 |
Articles
Science as Sacred Myth? Ecospirituality in the Anthropocene Age | PDF ![]() |
Lisa H. Sideris | 136-153 |
Perspectives
Science as Myth (Whether Sacred or Not), Science as Prism | PDF ![]() |
J. Baird Callicott | 154-168 |
The Uses and Abuses of Science in Religious Environmentalism | PDF ![]() |
Celia Deane-Drummond | 169-175 |
Honoring Nature All The Way Down | PDF ![]() |
Ursula Goodenough | 176-180 |
New Wine into Old Bottles? Or Time to Jettison the Bottle? | PDF ![]() |
Adrian Ivakhiv | 181-184 |
The Role of Scientism in Myth-making for the Anthropocene | PDF ![]() |
Brendon M. H. Larson | 185-191 |
Myth, Ritual, and the New Universe Story in the Inner Hebrides | PDF ![]() |
Michael S. Northcott | 192-198 |
Placing, Displacing, Replacing the Sacred: Science, Religion, and Spirituality | PDF ![]() |
Holmes Rolston III | 199-205 |
Journey of the Universe: An Integration of Science and Humanities | PDF ![]() |
Mary Evelyn Tucker | 206-212 |
Just Say No to Knowledge: Religious Postmodernism’s Attack on the Natural Sciences | PDF ![]() |
Bernard Daley Zaleha | 213-220 |
Forum Response: The Confines of Consecration: A Reply to Critics | PDF ![]() |
Lisa H. Sideris | 221-239 |
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