Gandhi and the Ecological Vision of Life

Environmental Ethics 22 (2):149-168 (2000)
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Abstract

Although recognized as one of the principal sources of inspiration for the Indian environmental movement, Gandhi would have been profoundly uneasy with many of the most radical strands of ecology in the West, such as social ecology, ecofeminism, and even deep ecology. He was in every respect an ecological thinker, indeed an ecological being: the brevity of his enormous writings, his everyday bodily practices, his observance of silence, his abhorrence of waste, and his cultivation of the small as much as the big all equally point to an extraordinarily expansive notion of ecological awareness.

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Gandhi and the ecological vision of life.Vinay Lal - 2000 - Environmental Ethics 22 (2):149-168.
Religion and Ecology, Gandhi's Khadi Spirit and "Neo-Asceticism".Adela Diubaldo Torchia - 1996 - Dissertation, The University of Manitoba (Canada)

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