Further reading


 

Vol. 7 No. 2
October/November 2004

Upon Reflection
University leadership urges a new "discipline" of planning

My job is to make sure that the academic focus of the institution is always front and center.
Earl Lewis, Provost and Executive Vice President for Academic Affairs


If we’re going to be rigid, operating in the nineteenth century and resisting change, then we’ll go the way of the Light Brigade.
Kenneth Thorpe, Woodruff Professor of Health Policy and Management


Phase to phase

Strategic Planning Steering Committee

To learn more

Scholarship in Time
Or, Sipping champagne from a fire hydrant
Bruce Knauft, Samuel C. Dobbs Professor of Anthropology
and Executive Director,
The Institute for Comparative and International Studies

Is the Bible Green?
Ancient Israelite and early Christian perspectives
on the natural world
Carol A. Newsom, Professor of Old Testament

Further reading

The Mind and the Machine
A Review of Digital People by Sidney Perkowitz
Darryl Neill, Professor of Psychology

Endnotes

Return to Contents


Dieter Hessel and Rosemary R. Ruether. Christianity and Ecology: Seeing the Well-being of Earth and Humans. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Center for the Study of World Religions, 1999

James Nash. Loving Nature: Ecological Integrity and Christian Responsibility. Nashville: Abingdon, 1991

Paul Santmire. Nature Reborn: the Ecological and Cosmic Promise of Christian Theology. Minneapolis: Fortress, 2000, and
The Travail of Nature: the Ambiguous Ecological Promise of Christian Theology. Philadelphia: Fortress, 1985

Hava Tirosh-Samuelson. Judaism and Ecology: Created World and Revealed Word. Cambridge, MA: Harvard Center for the Study of the World Religions, 2002.