Adams, Ansel (1902-1984); Aesthetics and Nature in China and Japan; Albert the Great (c. 1206-1280) Alchemy; Anarchism; Appiko Movement (India); Aztec Religion; Baha'i Faith; Bhagavadgita; Biosphere Reserves and World Heritage Sites; Blake, William (1757-1827); Cannibalism; Cetacean Spirituality Chinese Environmentalism; Creation Myths of the Ancient World; Crop Circles; Dalai Lama (1935-); Darwin, Charles (1809-1882); Delphic Oracle; Druids and Druidry; Earth Charter; Ecofeminism; Elves and Land Spirits in Pagan Norse Religion; Fengshui; Francis of Assisi (ca. 1181-1226); Fuller, Buckminster (1895-1983); Goodall, Jane (1934-); Greco-Roman World; Greenpeace; Hundredth Monkey; Huxley, Aldous (1894-1963); Incas; Indigenous Activism and Environmentalism in Latin America; Interfaith Council for Environmental Stewardship; Islamic Foundation for Science and Environment; Israel and Environmentalism; Japanese Religions; Kabbalah and Ecotheology; Kenya Greenbelt Movement; Khoisan Religion; Linnaeus, Carl (1707-1778); Magic; Maya Religion (Central America); Men's Movement; Muller, Friedrich Max (1823-1900); Music; Natural Law and Natural Rights; Nepal; Paleolithic Religions; Philippines, The; Polynesian Traditional Religions; Primate Spirituality; Rainbow Serpent; Russian Mystical Philosophy; Sacred Sites in England; Sagan, Carl (1934-1996); Shamanism; Slavic Religion; Sustainability and the World Council of Churches; Tibet and Central Asia; Transcendental Meditation; United Nations' 'Earth Summits'; Volcanoes; Whales and Whaling; World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF); Zoroastrianism
Bron Taylor is President of the International Society for the Study of Religion, Nature and Culture, and editor of the Journal for the Study of Religion, Nature and Culture. Since his appointment as the Samuel S. Hill Ethics Professor at the University of Florida in 2002, he has helped develop the world's first graduate program focusing on Religion and Nature. His projects and research are featured at www.religionandnature.com and www.brontaylor.com.
"'breath-takingly valuable, truly multicultural reference work, indispensable for libraries, religious institutions, and environmental organizations' Roger S. Gottlieb"
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