The author believes
Christian environmental thinking must move beyond simplistic sloganeering or vacuous platitudes and provide concrete answers on the extent of human dominion.
Not exact matches
Andy Lester from
Christian environmental charity A Rocha UK told Premier's News Hour he
thinks England will follow.
Process thinkers have offered a theology of nature — a topic sadly neglected in neo-orthodoxy, existentialism, and most other twentieth - century schools of
Christian thought — and it would strongly support an
environmental ethic.28
Although Christianity has seldom been recognized as an ally to the ecological movement, with the Church proving all too often too slow to meet the
environmental challenge — there are many
Christian theologians that contributed to and significantly participated in the early ecological
thought.
With a BA in French and German and an MSc in Environment and Sustainable Development both from UCL,
Christian has a belief that business can and must do more to contribute to finding solutions for both social and
environmental problems and has been heavily influenced by systemic
thinking and the work of James Lovelock.