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152 pages, Paperback
First published October 1, 2007
Let us adopt the term Resourcism for the worldview (assumption or ideology) that the Earth is essentially just a set of resources for our use. Trees are just standing lumber; rocky hills are just gravel pits waiting to happen; other animals are just living meat, and even you and I may be reduced to customers or 'Human Resources.' Take all of this to its logical conclusion and of course we have environmental crisis, an Earth being sucked dry. **But it is hard to recognize the root cause when we don't have a word for it** Resourcism shows this world-view for what it is: a relentless, single-minded, narrow value-system, and certainly not the only one possible. (p. 115)In sum, there are a few good reasons to read this book. If you're in need of a boost to your moral imagination, if you're hungry for social change but dissatisfied with the binary, oppositional terms of contemporary debate, or if you want to teach your students to think creatively about ethics and political philosophy, in terms of possibilities rather than abstract theories and criteria. Don't expect a lot of philosophical depth or intellectual rigor, though; that's not what this book is trying to do.