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New Book on Environmental Issues Published by Rensselaer Professor
In his new book, Wisdom for a Livable Planet
(Trinity University Press, April 2005), Carl McDaniel provides
an introduction to many of today's critical environmental
issues, including toxic waste, biodiversity, globalization,
population, economic justice, climate change, and environmental
education. McDaniel is professor of biology at Rensselaer.
Carl McDaniel will be signing copies of his new book on
March 31 from noon until 1:30 p.m. at Mother's in the
Rensselaer Union on campus. McDaniel will also be signing books
on April 2 from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. at Market Block Books in
Troy.
The book examines environmental issues through the life and
work of eight individuals who have worked toward improving the
ecological health of their communities and the world beyond.
Organized topically, each chapter of the book summarizes one
person's persistence, creativity, and dedication in the face of
challenging environmental issues, according to McDaniel.
The profiled individuals are: Terri Swearingen, nurse, mother,
and environmental advocate; Dave Foreman, co-founder of the
Wildlands Project; Wes Jackson, geneticist and co-founder of
the Land Institute; Helena Norberg-Hodge, founder of the
International Society for Ecology and Culture; Werner Fornos,
president of the Population Institute; Herman Daly, University
of Maryland professor and past World Bank economist; Steven
Schneider, Stanford University climate expert; and, David Orr,
professor of environmental studies at Oberlin College.
McDaniel avows that a durable, healthy society begins with the
work of individuals who take action. He writes in the last
chapter, "My hope is that if we all fully grasp the stories
that express our connection to the rest of life and our
absolute dependence on the bugs and the weeds of the world —
and we tell these stories — they will become part of humanity's
sacred beliefs and lay the foundation for a future of
continuous progress. Through the actions of each one of us,
global culture can embrace an urgently needed ecologically
centered pattern of living."
McDaniel is co-author, with Rensselaer economics professor
John Gowdy, of Paradise for Sale: A Parable of Nature
(University of California, 2000). He joined Rensselaer in 1975,
where he teaches environmental and introductory biology
courses. McDaniel earned his doctoral degree at Wesleyan
University.
Published
March 28,
2005
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