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  1. Environmental Restoration: Ethics, Theory, and Practice.William Throop, Paul H. Gobster & R. Bruce Hull - 2002 - Environmental Values 11 (2):249-250.
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  • Environmental Restoration: Ethics, Theory, and Practice.William Throop (ed.) - 2000 - Humanity Books.
    This important anthology organises key essays that outline philosophical perspectives on the rapidly growing practice of environmental restoration. While some argue that environmental restoration is a new paradigm for environmentalism, others maintain that it is just more human domination of nature. The ongoing debate will help to shape environmentalism in the 21st century. A concise introduction by William M Throop outlines a range of issues about the values, beliefs, and attitudes that inform our assessment of restoration. Non-technical discussions of restoration (...)
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  • A Week on the Concord and Merrimack Rivers.Henry David Thoreau - 1893 - Courier Corporation.
    Based on an 1839 boat trip Thoreau took with his brother from Concord, Massachusetts, to Concord, New Hampshire, and back, this classic of American literature is not only a vivid narrative of that journey, it is also a collection of thought-provoking observations on such diverse topics as poetry, literature and philosophy, Native American and Puritan histories of New England, friendship, sacred Eastern writings, traditional Christianity, and much more. Written, like Walden, while Thoreau lived at Walden Pond, and published in 1849, (...)
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  • Biophilia.Edward O. Wilson (ed.) - 2009 - Harvard University Press.
    Biophilia is Edward O. Wilson's most personal book, an evocation of his own response to nature and an eloquent statement of the conservation ethic. Wilson argues that our natural affinity for life―biophilia―is the very essence of our humanity and binds us to all other living species.
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  • Conserving Natural Value.Holmes Rolston - 1994 - Columbia University Press.
    This introduction to biological conservation assesses the value judgments at the heart of conservation. The author elaborates on such questions as: how much habitat does an endangered species require?; does this particular species deserve to be saved?; who will pay for its upkeep?; and much more.
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  • Crowded Solitude.Robert Chapman - 2004 - Environmental Philosophy 1 (1):58-72.
    Wilderness and wildness are not related isomorphically. Wildness is the broader category; all instances of wilderness express wildness while all instances of wildness do not express wilderness. There is more than a logical distinction between wildness and wilderness, and what begins as an analytic distinction ends as an ontological one. A more rhetorical representation of this confusion is captured by the notion of synecdoche, where, in this case, wilderness the narrower term is used for wildness the more expansive term. Although (...)
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  • A New Approach to Conservation: The Importance of the Individual Through Wildlife Rehabilitation.Gill Aitken - 2018
    Conservationists assume a set of underlying values which guide their decision-making and action. The safeguarding or promotion of biodiversity, it is believed, is the means by which nature is best protected. This book examines - and challenges - these general conservation assumptions. While reinforcing the need to halt extinction and value biodiversity, it shows that biodiversity needs to be more clearly understood, perhaps being replaced by the notion of 'wildness'. It examines how biodiversity is a holistic term, and how individual (...)
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  • Conserving Natural Value.Holmes Rolston - 1996 - Environmental Ethics 18:209-214.
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  • No Man's Garden: Thoreau and a New Vision of Civilization and Nature.Daniel Botkin - 2001 - Environmental Values 10 (4):546-548.
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