<p>"This welcome collaboration between two key scholars of environmental culture explains why embracing complexity, pluralism, difficulty, and uncertainty leads to better, deeper responses to environmental troubles. In clear prose with wide intellectual reference, Bauman and OâBrien argue that 'radical change is possible only at the pace of ambiguity.'" <br /><strong>Willis Jenkins, Professor of Religious Studies & Environmental Humanities at the University of Virginia, USA</strong></p><p>"<em>Environmental Ethics and Uncertainty</em> is original, engaging, and important. It offers students and other readers an entry into some of the very complex and challenging moral and theoretical issues related to climate change in a way that is smart and well-grounded without being overly dry, dense, or inaccessible. It does so by focusing on exactly the themes we need to be discussing in regards to environmental ethics and climate change today: ambiguity, uncertainty, pluralism, and hope. The authors show how uncertainty is not only theoretically but also practically helpful, as they think through concrete ethical problems such as fracking and pipeline protests. Further, their use of eclectic sources and thinkers both shows the wide range of issues and ideas we need to address in thinking about climate change and invites conversation with readers outside the field."<br /><strong>Anna Peterson, Professor, Department of Religion, University of Florida, USA</strong></p><p>"<em>Environmental Ethics and Uncertainty</em> offers a timely intervention in polarized debates surrounding issues like climate change or fracking, and who or what we should believe. Drawing on the wisdom of activists and thinkers ranging from Rachel Carson to Martin Luther King, Jr., the book underscores the value of questioning. Bauman and O'Brien show us that excessive certainty and willful ignoranceâboth prominent stances in modern American cultureâfail to capture the complexity of knowledge and its relationship to moral action."<br /><strong>Professor Lisa Sideris, Department of Religious Studies, Indiana University, USA</strong></p><p>"The distinctiveness of Bauman and OâBrienâs text comes through its unique combination of theoretical and applied chapters, drawing upon an impressive array of interdisciplinary sources and examples ⌠Employing the familiar frame of âwicked problemsâ, Bauman and OâBrien argue that approaches to environmental issues must inevitably appreciate complexity and uncertainty while emphasising the multiple positions and perspectives surrounding specific ⌠Bauman and OâBrienâs work offers an important perspective to be considered by any scholars and activists interested in applied environmental ethics in the twenty-first century." <br /><strong>Joseph D. Witt, Mississippi State University in âEnvironmental Valuesâ, 2020</strong></p>
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Whitney A. Bauman is Associate Professor of Religious Studies at Florida International University, USA. His books include Religion and Ecology: Developing a Planetary Ethic (2014) and, with Kevin OâBrien and Richard Bohannon, Grounding Religion: A Field Guide to the Study of Religion and Ecology, 2nd Revised Edition (2018).
Kevin J. O'Brien is Professor of Religion and Dean of Humanities at Pacific Lutheran University, USA. His books include The Violence of Climate Change: Lessons of Resistance from Nonviolent Activists and, with Whitney Bauman and Richard Bohannon, Inherited Land: The Changing Grounds of Religion and Ecology.