The Encyclopedia of Religion and...

44
The Encyclopedia of Religion and Nature

Transcript of The Encyclopedia of Religion and...

Page 1: The Encyclopedia of Religion and Natureusers.clas.ufl.edu/bron/ern/1-prelim(all-but-contents-pg).pdf · goes far beyond the question as to whether religions are naturally green, turning

The Encyclopedia ofReligion and Nature

Page 2: The Encyclopedia of Religion and Natureusers.clas.ufl.edu/bron/ern/1-prelim(all-but-contents-pg).pdf · goes far beyond the question as to whether religions are naturally green, turning

Associate Editors

David Landis BarnhillUniversity of Wisconsin Oshkosh

Christopher Key ChappleLoyola Marymount University

Richard C. FoltzUniversity of Florida

Matthew GlassUniversity of GuelphCanada

Rebecca Kneale GouldMiddlebury College

Graham HarveyThe Open UniversityUnited Kingdom

Lois Ann LorentzenUniversity of San Francisco

Anna PetersonUniversity of Florida

Sarah M. PikeCalifornia State University, Chico

Lynn Ross-BryantUniversity of Colorado

Leslie E. SponselUniversity of Hawai’i

Graham St JohnUniversity of QueenslandAustralia

Kocku von StuckradUniversity of AmsterdamThe Netherlands

Sarah McFarland TaylorNorthwestern University

Garry W. TrompfUniversity of SydneyAustralia

Assistant Editors

Sigurd BergmannNorwegian University of Scienceand TechnologyNorway

Penelope S. BernardRhodes UniversitySouth Africa

Lisle DaltonHartwick College

Rosalind HackettUniversity of Tennessee

Harry HahneGolden Gate Theological Seminary

Sian HallRhodes UniversitySouth Africa

Knut A. JacobsenUniversity of BergenNorway

Arne KallandUniversity of OsloNorway

Laurel KearnsDrew University

Vasilios N. MakridesUniversity of ErfurtGermany

Timothy MillerUniversity of Kansas

James A. NashBoston University School of Theology

Celia NyamweruSt Lawrence University

Terry ReyFlorida International University

David SeidenbergMaon Study Circle

Page 3: The Encyclopedia of Religion and Natureusers.clas.ufl.edu/bron/ern/1-prelim(all-but-contents-pg).pdf · goes far beyond the question as to whether religions are naturally green, turning

The Encyclopedia ofReligion and Nature

Bron R. TaylorEditor-in-Chief

The University of Florida

Jeffrey KaplanConsulting Editor

The University of Wisconsin Oshkosh

Executive Editors

Laura Hobgood-OsterSouthwestern UniversityAustin, Texas

Adrian IvakhivUniversity of VermontBurlington, Vermont

Michael YorkBath Spa UniversityBath, United Kingdom

Page 4: The Encyclopedia of Religion and Natureusers.clas.ufl.edu/bron/ern/1-prelim(all-but-contents-pg).pdf · goes far beyond the question as to whether religions are naturally green, turning

First published in 2005 by

Thoemmes Continuum11 Great George Street

Bristol BS1 5RR, England

http://www.thoemmes.com

The Encyclopedia of Religion and Nature2 Volumes: ISBN 1 84371 138 9

© Thoemmes Continuum, 2005

British Library Cataloguing-in-Publication DataA CIP record of this title is available from the British Library

All rights reserved. No part of this publication may bereproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or

transmitted in any way or by any means, electronic,mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise,

without the written permission of the copyright holder.

Typeset in Rotis Serif and Rotis Sans byRefineCatch Ltd, Bungay, Suffolk.

Printed and bound in the UK by Antony Rowe Ltd.This book is printed on acid-free paper, sewn, and

cased in a durable buckram cloth.

Page 5: The Encyclopedia of Religion and Natureusers.clas.ufl.edu/bron/ern/1-prelim(all-but-contents-pg).pdf · goes far beyond the question as to whether religions are naturally green, turning

IntroductionIntroducing Religion and Nature

What are the relationships between human beings,their diverse religions, and the Earth’s livingsystems?

The question animating this encyclopedia can be simplyput. The answers to it, however, are difficult and complex,intertwined with and complicated by a host of cultural,environmental, and religious variables. This encyclopediarepresents an effort to explore this question in a way thatilluminates these relationships without oversimplifyingthe dynamic relations between human beings, theirreligions, and the natural environment.

This introduction and the “readers guide” that follows itprovide a map to this terrain. The introduction explainsthe questions that gave rise to this project, describes theapproach taken and rationale for editorial judgmentsmade along the way, spotlights some of the volume’smost important entries, and speculates about the future ofnature-related religion as well as the increasingly inter-disciplinary scholarly field that has emerged to track it.The “Readers Guide,” located after this introduction,should not be missed, for it describes the different types ofentries included in the encyclopedia and explains how touse it.

Religion and Nature Conundrums

In the second half of the twentieth century, as environ-mental alarm grew and intensified, so did concern aboutthe possible role of religion in nature. Much of this con-cern has involved a hope for a “greening” of religion; inother words, it envisioned religion promoting environ-mentally responsible behavior. So fervent has this pre-occupation become that, since the early 1970s, “green” hasbecome a synonym for “environmental” in its originaladjectival form, and it has now also mutated into verb andadverb, regularly deployed to signal environmentallyprotective action. Indeed, the term “green” will be usedthroughout these volumes to convey environmentalconcern, awareness, or action.

Curiosity regarding the relationships between humanculture, religion, and the wider natural world, however,goes far beyond the question as to whether religions arenaturally green, turning green, or herbicidal. The kinds ofquestions that arise from the nexus of religion and natureare many and diverse – but they have not always been in

scholarly focus, a fact that this encyclopedia seeks toremedy.

In the Encyclopedia of Religion and Nature (ERN) we setforth a dozen analytical categories, both while pursuingentries and while guiding contributors, hoping this wouldarouse discussion and debate in a number of areas thathad received too little critical scrutiny. Additionally, theaim was to foster a more nuanced analysis in areas thathad already drawn significant attention. We asked pro-spective writers to illuminate the following questions,grouped into a dozen analytical categories, to the fullestextent possible, given their relevance to the specificsubject matter in focus:

1. How have ecosystems shaped human consciousness,behavior, and history, in general, and religions andtheir environment-related behaviors in particular, ifthey have?

2. What are the perceptions and beliefs of the world’sreligions toward the Earth’s living systems in generaland toward individual organisms in particular? Inwhat ways have these traditions promoted eco-logically beneficent or destructive lifeways? Are somereligions intrinsically greener than others?

3. Are religions being transformed in the face of growingenvironmental concern, and if so, how? To whatextent do expressed beliefs about duties towardnature cohere with behaviors toward it?

4. Do various religions have internal and externalresources for, or barriers to, the kind of transform-ations that are widely considered necessary if humansare to achieve ecologically sustainable societies? Ifthey can be, what are the effective ways in whichgreener religions have been and can be encouraged?

5. How are various and different religions, from old andestablished to new and emergent, influencing oneanother as people struggle to address – and to makesense of – their environmental predicaments? How arecontemporary environmental understandings influ-encing religion? Are ecological understandings moreinfluential on religions than the other way around?

6. To what extent (if at all) can contemporary environ-mental movements be considered religious? If theyare religious, should we consider all of the resource-related conflicts in which they are engaged to bereligious struggles?

7. What are the reciprocal influences between natureand religion in interhuman conflict and violence?Does natural resource scarcity play a significant role

Page 6: The Encyclopedia of Religion and Natureusers.clas.ufl.edu/bron/ern/1-prelim(all-but-contents-pg).pdf · goes far beyond the question as to whether religions are naturally green, turning

in this regard, intensifying conflicts and the likelihoodof religion-and-nature-related violence? Yet morespecifically, what are the reciprocal influences betweenapocalyptic or millenarian religions, and environ-mental sciences, which are producing increasinglyalarming prognostications?

8. What are the relationships among religious ideas,breeding, and population growth and decline? How isthis related to other questions listed here?

9. How are the sciences integrated into contemporarynature-related religion and ethics? Is it possible forreligions to consecrate scientific narratives, such asevolution, in such a way as to invent religions with nosupernatural dimension? If so, can we still call suchworldviews and perceptions religious?

10. With regard to nature religions, here defined asreligions that consider nature to be sacred: What arethe “spiritual epistemologies,” the perceptions innature, the sources and cultural constructions, whichhave shaped them? And how and to what extent arepolitical ideologies integrated into the nature-religionstew?

11. What are the impacts of “globalization” on nature-related religion and behavior; specifically, what arethe processes, pathways, and limits to cross-fertilization within and among different religionsand regions in our increasingly interconnectedworld? Are there any patterns or tendencies emergingglobally in contemporary Earth-related spiritualityand religion?

12. If, indeed, there are patterns and tendencies, how arethe people involved in nature-related religion andspiritualities reshaping not only the religious terrain,but also the political and ecological landscape aroundthe world?

Readers interested in such questions should find much ofinterest in these volumes.

The remainder of this introduction explores the emer-ging fields related to religion and nature that have vari-ously been dubbed “religion and ecology,” “ecologicalanthropology,” “cultural ecology,” and “environmentalhistory.” The discussion of these fields and subfieldsincludes several dimensions:

1. It provides and examines working definitions forterms that were critical to the framing of the project,including “religion,” “nature,” and “nature religion.”

2. It explores the genesis and evolution of interest in“religion and nature,” both among religionists andscholars. This section focuses first on the AmericanConservation Movement, and secondly on seven-teenth-century Europe and on developments up to theEnvironmental Age (shorthand in this introductionfor the age of environmental awareness that emerged

forcefully in the 1960s). It then spotlights the religionand nature debates during this period, includingdevelopments among “world religions,” “naturereligions,” and in theories purporting to explain thenatural origins and persistence of religion.

3. A concluding section overviews some of the ways inwhich this encyclopedia begins to address the futureof religion, nature, and the understandings of theserelationships.

Defining Religion, Nature, and NatureReligion

From the beginning of this project, the objective has beento encourage robust debate and to explore the widest pos-sible range of phenomena related to the relationshipsbetween religion, nature, and culture. This leads inevitablyto the very beginnings of the scholarly study of religion,for long and lively debates regarding what constitutesreligion have often been deeply connected to discussionsabout the role nature plays in it. Because even this defi-nitional terrain has been contested, in constructing thisencyclopedia the aim has been to avoid excluding by defi-nitional fiat some of the very phenomena and perspectivesthat are under discussion. Despite this reluctance toimpose a definition of religion on the overall endeavor,however, any study has to be guided by a consistent set ofstandards and has to be clear about its subject matter. Thisterminological section, therefore, explains the operationaldefinition of religion that has informed the constructionof these volumes. It also clarifies other terms critical forthis study, such as “spirituality,” “nature,” and “naturereligion.”

One reason for this terminological interlude is that incontemporary parlance, people increasingly replace theterm “religion” with “spirituality” when trying to expresswhat moves them most deeply. Nowhere is the preferencefor the term “spirituality” over “religion” more prevalentthan among those engaged in nature-based or nature-focused religion.

A number of scholars have noted and sought to under-stand the distinction between the terms spirituality andreligion, and the preference many contemporary peopleexpress for the former over the latter. In one seminal study,the sociologist of religion Wade Clark Roof found that formany, “to be religious conveys an institutional connota-tion [while] to be spiritual . . . is more personal andempowering and has to do with the deepest motivations inlife” (Roof 1993: 76–7). A number of subsequent empiricalstudies supported Roof’s analysis and found ample evi-dence that many people understood the distinction as Roofhad described it and considered themselves spiritual butnot religious. In survey research conducted by DanielHelminiak, for example, 19 percent of respondents called

viii Introduction

Page 7: The Encyclopedia of Religion and Natureusers.clas.ufl.edu/bron/ern/1-prelim(all-but-contents-pg).pdf · goes far beyond the question as to whether religions are naturally green, turning

themselves spiritual. For these people, religion “implies asocial and political organization with structures, rules,officials, [and] dues [while] spirituality refers only tothe sense of the transcendent, which organized religionscarry and are supposed to foster” (Helminiak 1996: 33).Another study similarly found that “religiousness isincreasingly characterized as ‘narrow and institutional,’and spirituality . . . as ‘personal and subjective’ ”(Zinnbauer et al. 1997: 563).

The distinction between religion as “organized” and“institutional” and spirituality as involving one’s deepestmoral values and most profound life experiences is prob-ably the most commonly understood difference betweenthe two terms. But there are additional idea clusters thatoften are more closely associated with spirituality thanreligion; and these ideas tend to be closely connected withnature and a sense of its value and sacredness.

Given its commonplace connection with environ-mental concerns, when considering nature-relatedreligion, it is important to include what some people callspirituality. This is not to say that scholars and otherobservers must maintain the same understanding of thedistinction between spirituality and religion that hasemerged in popular consciousness. Most of those whoconsider themselves to be spiritual can be consideredreligious by an external observer, for they generallybelieve that life has meaning and that there is a sacreddimension to the universe.

Some argue that religion requires belief in divinebeings and supernatural realities, however, and insist thateven profoundly meaningful experiences and strongmoral commitments cannot count as religion in theabsence of such beliefs. An entry on the “Anthropology ofReligion” by Jonathan Z. Smith and William Scott Greenin The HarperCollins Dictionary of Religion asserts, forexample, that religion is best defined as “a system ofbeliefs and practices that are relative to superhumanbeings” (1995: 893). They argue that such a restrictive defi-nition is best because it “moves away from definingreligion as some special kind of experience or worldview”and excludes “quasi-religious religious movements” suchas Nazism, Marxism, or Nationalism (1995: 893–4).

While the desire to exclude such movements as reli-gions is understandable, to strictly enforce this definitionwould be unduly restrictive. It would eliminate someforms of Buddhism, for example, as well as a wide varietyof people who consider themselves to be deeply spiritualand who regularly rely on terms like “the sacred” todescribe their understanding of the universe or their placesin it, but who do not believe in divine beings or super-natural realities. In short, such a restrictive definition ofreligion would preclude consideration of much nature-related religiosity.

By way of contrast, the framing of this encyclopediawas influenced more by religion scholar David Chidester’s

reflections on the sometimes violent debates and strugglesover understandings and definitions of religion. Chidesteracknowledges that some working definition of religion isrequired for its study. But he also argues that because theterm “religion has been a contested category, a single,incontestable definition of religion cannot simply beestablished by academic fiat” (Chidester 1996b: 254). Heproposes, instead, a self-consciously vague definition:religion is “that dimension of human experience engagedwith sacred norms” (1987: 4).

Chidester acknowledges that some will consider such adefinition not only vague but circular, but contends thatvagueness can be an asset when trying to understand thediversity of religion. Vagueness is certainly a virtue whenstudying nature-related religion, partly because there areso many forms of it. Circularity may be inevitable.Chidester asserts, “A descriptive approach to the study ofreligion requires a circular definition of the sacred: What-ever someone holds to be sacred is sacred.” He concludesthat the task of religious studies, therefore, “is to describeand interpret sacred norms that are actually held by indi-viduals, communities, and historical traditions” (1987: 4).

This encyclopedia is premised similarly, for to adopt amore restrictive definition would exclude a variety ofactors who regularly deploy metaphors of the sacred todescribe their deepest spiritual and moral convictions.Moreover, some substantive definitions of religion (whichspecify things that constitute religion, such as myths,beliefs in divine beings, symbols, rites and ethics) as wellas functional ones (which describe how religions operateand influence and/or are influenced by nature and cul-ture), create restrictive lenses that make it impossible forthem to apprehend some forms of nature spirituality. So toadopt such definitions would preclude from discussionmuch of what The Encyclopedia of Religion and Nature setout to illuminate.

Filling out further his understanding of religion as anengagement with the sacred, however this is understood,Chidester adds,

what people hold to be sacred tends to have twoimportant characteristics: ultimate meaning andtranscendent power . . . Religion is not simply a con-cern with the meaning of human life, but it is also anengagement with the transcendent powers, forces,and processes that human beings have perceived toimpinge on their lives (1987: 4).

Such a flexible understanding of religion provides a goodstarting point for this encyclopedia’s inquiry into the con-nections between nature, religion, and culture. The onlypart of Chidester’s definition that we might need occasion-ally to set aside is the nebulous term “transcendent” – atleast if this evokes a sense of something supernatural orsomehow beyond the observable and sensible world – for

Introduction ix

Page 8: The Encyclopedia of Religion and Natureusers.clas.ufl.edu/bron/ern/1-prelim(all-but-contents-pg).pdf · goes far beyond the question as to whether religions are naturally green, turning

much nature-based spirituality involves a perception ofthe sacred as immanent.

From the outset, then, an open operational definition,adapted from Chidester’s, has informed the construction ofthis encyclopedia. It understands religion as “that dimen-sion of human experience engaged with sacred norms,which are related to transformative forces and powers andwhich people consider to be dangerous and/or beneficentand/or meaningful in some ultimate way.” For many, thismeaningfulness and the sacred norms associated with ithave much to do with nature. And nature itself, anotherproblematic term that also has inspired robust discussion,can be for our purposes understood simply: Nature is thatworld which includes – but at the same time is perceived tobe largely beyond – our human bodies, and which con-fronts us daily with its apparent otherness.

With such minimalist definitions of religion and naturein mind, how then are we to understand them when theyare combined into the term “nature religion”? Here alsothere is no scholarly consensus, as illustrated in the entryon NATURE RELIGION itself, as well as in my own entry on“Nature Religion” in The Encyclopedia of Religion (Taylor2005). (Encyclopedia entries mentioned in this intro-duction are indicated by SMALL CAPITAL LETTERS, as in theprevious sentence.) But in contemporary parlance theredoes seem to be a strong tendency to define as naturereligion any religiosity that considers nature to be sacred(extraordinarily powerful in both dangerous and ben-eficial ways) and worthy of reverent care. This is the simpledefinition that I will employ in this introduction as short-hand for what I have sometimes called “nature-as-sacred”religion.

This encyclopedia’s contributors have not, however,been bound to my own usage of the term in this introduc-tion. Catherine Albanese, for example, in NATURE RELIGION IN

THE UNITED STATES, which builds upon her influential bookNature Religion in America (1990), understands the termmore broadly. For Albanese, nature religion is a trope forall religious phenomena in which nature is an importantreligious symbol or conceptual resource, whether or notnature is considered sacred. Careful readers will be alert tothe different ways contributors in this encyclopedia mayuse the same terminology.

In sum, the definitions that shaped the construction ofthis encyclopedia, and this introduction and reader’sguide, were adopted for strategic reasons. The aim in find-ing simple and inclusive definitions of “religion” and“nature” has been to invite the widest variety of perspec-tives to engage the meaning and relationships that inhereto the human religious encounter with nature. The aim indefining nature religion as “nature-as-sacred” religion (inthis introduction only) has been to distinguish it from “thenatural dimension of religion,” an apt phrase borrowedfrom Albanese that I use to represent the entire “religionand nature” or “religion and ecology” field (Albanese

1990: 6). Understanding this wider, natural dimension ofreligion is certainly as important as understanding reli-gions that consider nature to be sacred. The rest of thisintroduction and the diversity of entries that follow makethis clear.

The Evolution of Interest in Religion andNature

This overview of the genesis and evolution of interestin religion and nature covers a lot of territory and isnecessarily selective. While impressionistic, it doesdescribe the major trends and tendencies characteristic ofthe religion and nature discussion. It is divided into threesections.

The first section is focused on the United Statesbetween the mid-nineteenth century and the age ofenvironmentalism which, despite the presence of con-servationists and conservation thinkers before this period,cannot be said to have arrived until the 1960s. This sectionintroduces the important role that differing perspectiveson religion and nature played in the rise of environ-mentalism globally. The second section focuses on theevolution of nature and religion-related thinking amongintellectuals, especially since the seventeenth century inEurope, and it follows these streams into the 1960s. Thissection explores the ways “nature religions” were under-stood before and after the Darwinian revolution, andsuggests some ways in which evolutionary theorytransformed the religion and nature debate, both forintellectuals and wider publics. Introducing these twostreams sets the stage for an introduction to the per-spectives and debates surrounding religion and natureduring the age of environmentalism. Taken together, thisoverview illuminates trends that are likely to continueand thus it poses questions about the future of religion andnature.

Religion and Nature in the American ConservationMovementWhen analyzing the ways and reasons people havethought about the relationships between religion andnature, it is wise to consider not only the cultural, but alsothe environmental context. This is certainly true when weexamine the emergence of the conservation movement,and its intersections with perspectives on religion andnature.

By the mid-nineteenth century, largely for buildingconstruction and the production of “pig iron,” deforesta-tion in the United States had begun to evoke environ-mental alarm. This led to a survey in the Federal Census of1880 that documented the dramatic decline of Americanforests. Meanwhile, the fossil-fuel age had begun withthe first pumping of petroleum from the ground in 1859

x Introduction

Page 9: The Encyclopedia of Religion and Natureusers.clas.ufl.edu/bron/ern/1-prelim(all-but-contents-pg).pdf · goes far beyond the question as to whether religions are naturally green, turning

(by Edwin L. Drake in Pennsylvania) and the inventionof practical and useful two- and four-stroke internalcombustion engines in Europe (in 1875 and 1876). Thesedevelopments led to the automobile age, which for allpractical purposes began in 1885.

The invention of the internal combustion motor wasaccompanied by a dramatic increase in self-consciousreflection on the role that religion plays in shapingenvironments. This occurred in no small part because thealteration (and degradation) of the world’s environmentsintensified and accelerated rapidly as humans developedand wielded ever-more powerful petroleum-fueled powertools as they reshaped ecosystems and their own, builtenvironments.

Not coincidentally, this was also a period whenROMANTICISM and other nature-related spiritualities, birthedfirst in Europe, as well as the modern conservation move-ment, were germinating on American ground. The artistFrederick Edwin Church, for example, painted “Twilight inthe Wilderness” (1860) inspiring the so-called HudsonSchool and generations of painters and later photographers(see ART), including the twentieth-century photographerANSEL ADAMS, who depicted the sublime that he found inthe American landscape. The American naturalist andpolitical writer HENRY DAVID THOREAU, who was also a leadingfigure in the religious movement known as TRANSCENDENTAL-

ISM, wrote Walden in 1854. He included in it a now-famousaphorism, “in wildness is the preservation of the world”and believed that nature not only has intrinsic value butprovides the source of spiritual truth. Thoreau kindled theWILDERNESS RELIGION that found fertile ground in Americaand provided a spiritual basis for conservation. In TheMaine Woods (1864) Thoreau called for the establishmentof national forest preserves, helping to set the stage forthe National Park movement and the BIOSPHERE RESERVES

AND WORLD HERITAGE SITES that would follow. In that veryyear, the American President Abraham Lincoln protectedCalifornia’s spectacular Yosemite Valley, which eventuallyexpanded in size and became one of the world’s firstnational parks.

Thoreau influenced JOHN MUIR, the Scottish-born naturemystic who, after growing up on a Wisconsin farm andhiking to the Gulf of Mexico as a young man, eventuallywandered his way to California in 1868. Muir became oneof the first Europeans to explore Yosemite and the restof the Sierra Nevada Mountains. He found in them asacred place where he could hear the “divine music” ofnature, even giving RALPH WALDO EMERSON, Thoreau’sTranscendentalist mentor, a tour of Yosemite Valley in1871. Muir was, however, bitterly disappointed byEmerson’s unwillingness to linger and listen to the valley’ssacred voices. In 1892 Muir founded the SIERRA CLUB toprevent the desecration of these mountains by insensitivehumans.

In the early twentieth century an archetypal battle was

joined between John Muir and GIFFORD PINCHOT. At this timeMuir was America’s foremost representative of an ethic of“nature preservation.” He would also become the spiritualgodfather of the international National Park movement,which was founded significantly on perceptions of thesacredness of natural systems. Pinchot served as the firstChief Forester of the United States between 1899 and1910. He influentially espoused a utilitarian environ-mental ethic of fair and responsible use of nature for thebenefit of all citizens, present and future.

Pinchot, like many politically progressive Christians ofhis day in North America, had been decisively influencedby its “Social Gospel” movement, a largely liberalexpression of Christianity that sought to apply Christianprinciples to the social problems of the day. ConsequentlyPinchot sought to promote “the conservation of naturalresources” (bringing the phrase into common parlance)partly to aid the poor and partly to promote democraticideals against powerful corporate interests, which hebelieved unwisely despoiled the country’s naturalheritage. Although Muir and Pinchot initially becamefriends, based in part on their mutual passion for theoutdoors, Pinchot’s utilitarian ethic and Muir’s preser-vationist one were incompatible. Their competing valuesled them, inexorably, into an epic struggle over whichmanagement philosophy, with its attendant religiousunderpinnings, would guide policies related to publicwildlands.

Muir considered the grazing of sheep in Yosemite, andlater, plans to dam Yosemite’s Hetch Hetchy Valley, forexample, to be desecrating acts. Pinchot became a power-ful federal official who successfully promoted grazing anddam building. Muir denounced Pinchot as an agent ofdesecration asserting that there was “no holier temple”than Hetch Hetchy Valley. Pinchot thought Muir hadfailed to apprehend the religious duty to develop naturalresources for the good of humankind. The historianRoderick Nash called the Hetch Hetchy controversy a“spiritual watershed” in American environmental history.This watershed demonstrated that a “wilderness cult”had become an important political force in Americanenvironmental politics (Nash 1967: 181). (See also WILDER-

NESS SOCIETY, MARSHALL, ROBERT and LEOPOLD, ALDO.) In sub-sequent decades such WILDERNESS RELIGION would remainpotent and lead to bitter land-based conflicts all aroundthe world. Indeed, as the preservationist national parksmodel spread, often alongside and competing withmanagement models that promoted a utilitarian, “multipleuse” doctrine for public lands, the cultural divide betweenthe competing ethical and religious orientations repre-sented by Muir and Pinchot appeared to go global.

There were many other dimensions to such religion-related land-use disputes, however, including the typicalderacination (displacement from their original habitats),sometimes by genocide, of the peoples already living on

Introduction xi

Page 10: The Encyclopedia of Religion and Natureusers.clas.ufl.edu/bron/ern/1-prelim(all-but-contents-pg).pdf · goes far beyond the question as to whether religions are naturally green, turning

lands designated “public” by nation-states. These peopleoften had their own religious claims and connections tothese lands. So as the demand to protect natural placesintensified around the world, it involved more than adispute between the spiritual biocentrism (life-centeredethics) of John Muir and the utilitarian anthropocentrism(human-centered ethics) of Gifford Pinchot. Whether inview or hidden from sight, the resulting disputes often, ifnot always, intertwined with disputes related to power,ethnicity, class, and nationality (see MANIFEST DESTINY).These controversies were inevitably mixed in with diverseand competing understandings regarding how properly tounderstand the sacred dimensions of life, and where thesacred might be most powerfully located.

Some of the peoples who survived deracination as theresult of the global expansion of nation-states wouldeventually claim a right to their original lands and land-based spiritual traditions. This trend further complicatedthe complex relationships between political, natural, andcultural systems. The disputes between Muir and Pinchotwere repeated in the years that followed; and to these wereadded disputes between their spiritual progeny and thosewho later condemned both conservationist and preser-vationist movements for promoting an imperial projectthat harmed the inhabitants of lands immorally, if notillegally, declared public. In the United States and manyother countries that established national parks, asenvironmental degradation continued, movements arosein resistance to them. Such conflicts provided one moretributary to the growing of scholarly interest in religion,nature, and culture.

Religion and Nature from Seventeenth-Century Europe tothe Environmental AgeCuriosity about the relationships between nature, religion,and culture, of course, predated the modern conservationera. Much of this resulted from the encounter betweenanthropological observers and indigenous people, andmuch of this occurred (from the mid-nineteenth centuryonward) in a Darwinian context involving an effort tounderstand the ways in which religions emerged, andchanged, through the processes of biological evolution.Put differently, a central question was: How and why didreligion evolve from the natural habitats from whichhumans themselves evolved?

Many answers have been proposed, and these haveoften been grounded largely upon analyses of the religionsof indigenous peoples. In many indigenous societies, theelements or forces of nature are believed to be inspiritedand in reciprocal moral relationships in which there aretwo-way ethical obligations between non-human andhuman beings. In the eighteenth century such perceptionswere labeled, for the first time, NATURE RELIGION and TOTEMISM

(which postulated early religion as involving a felt senseof spiritual connection or kinship relationship between

human and nonhuman beings). In the late nineteenth cen-tury the anthropologist E.B. Tylor coined the term ANIMISM

as a trope for beliefs that the natural world is inspirited.Many early anthropologists considered Totemism and/orAnimism to be an early if not the original religious form.Tylor and many other anthropologists and intellectualsobserving (or imagining) indigenous societies also con-sidered their religions to be “primitive,” and expectedsuch perceptions and practices to wither away as Westerncivilization expanded.

Over the past few centuries a variety of terms havebeen used which capture the family resemblances found inthe spiritualities of many indigenous societies, as well ascontemporary forms of religious valuation of nature,including “natural religion,” “nature worship,” “naturemysticism,” “Earth religion,” PAGANISM and PANTHEISM

(belief that the Earth, or even the universe, is divine).Whatever the terms of reference (and readers will dowell to consult the specific entries on these terms for theirvarious and often contested, specific definitions), naturereligion has been controversial, whether it is that of wilder-ness aficionados, indigenous people, or pagans. Here wecan introduce this rich and contested terrain only byunderscoring a few central tendencies, pivotal figures, andwatershed moments in the unfolding cultural ferment overreligion and nature. In-depth treatments are scattered, ofcourse, throughout the encyclopedia.

In mainstream occidental (Western) culture, whichwas shaped decisively by the monotheistic, Abrahamicreligions (Judaism, Christianity, and Islam), the tendencyhas been to view what we are calling nature religions (ingeneral) and paganism (in particular) as primitive, regres-sive, or even evil. (See PAGANISM: A JEWISH PERSPECTIVE, forone example). One way or another, these critics haveviewed nature religions negatively as having failed toapprehend or as having willfully rejected a true theo-centric understanding of the universe as God-created.According to this point of view, nature religions perilouslyworship the created order or elements of it rather than thecreator God.

Such criticisms came not only from monotheistic con-servatives but also from some of the Western world’sgreatest thinkers. The German philosopher FRIEDRICH HEGEL,for example, advanced an idealistic philosophy thatconsidered nature religions primitive because of theirfailure to apprehend the divine spirit moving through thedialectical process of history.

There were strong countercurrents, however, to thegeneral tendency to view nature religions negatively.The cultural movement known as ROMANTICISM, alreadymentioned as an influence on the American conservationmovement, emerged as a strong social force in theeighteenth century. Inspired in large measure by theFrench philosopher JEAN-JACQUES ROUSSEAU (1712–1778),Romanticism was further developed and popularized by a

xii Introduction

Page 11: The Encyclopedia of Religion and Natureusers.clas.ufl.edu/bron/ern/1-prelim(all-but-contents-pg).pdf · goes far beyond the question as to whether religions are naturally green, turning

number of literary figures including Samuel TaylorColeridge (1772–1834) in England and Johann Wolfgangvon Goethe (1749–1832) in Germany. Those philosopherswho labored to develop a compelling PHILOSOPHY OF NATURE

also played a major role in the influence of Romanticism,both in Europe and America.

The Romantics rejected destructive, dualistic andreductionistic worldviews, which they considered to be acentral feature of Western civilization. For Rousseau,and many dissenters to the occidental mainstream beforeand since, indigenous peoples and their nature religionswere not primitive but noble, providing models for anegalitarian and humane way of life, one that was immunefrom the avarice and strife characteristic of the dominantEuropean cultures. (See ROMANTICISM AND INDIGENOUS PEOPLES

and NOBLE SAVAGE.)It was into this social milieu, in which views about

nature religion were already polarized, that CHARLES DARWIN

introduced On the Origin of Species in 1859. The workelaborated the nascent theory of evolution that hadalready begun to emerge, perhaps most significantly,by specifying natural selection as its central process. Thetheory soon made its own, decisive impact.

For many, evolutionary theory disenchanted (took thespirits out of) the world. Generations of scholars afterDarwin came to view religions as originating in misper-ceptions that natural forces were animated or alive. Aclose friend of Darwin, John Lubbock, initiated suchreflection in The Origin of Civilization and the PrimitiveCondition of Man (1870), citing as evidence Darwin’sobservation that dogs mistake inanimate objects for livingbeings. Lubbock asserted that religion had its origin in asimilar misapprehension by early humans.

In the next century an explosion of critically importantscholarly works appeared. Most wrestled with what theytook to be the natural origins of religion, or with “naturalreligion,” or with what they considered to be the “worshipof nature,” or with the symbolic importance and functionof natural symbols in human cultural and religious life.Among the most important were J.F. McLennan’s articleson “The Worship of Animals and Plants” (1869–1870),E.B. Tylor’s Primitive Culture (1871), F. Max Müller’s Nat-ural Religion (1888), Robertson Smith’s Lectures on theReligion of the Semites (1889), Baldwin Spencer and F.J.Gillen’s Native Tribes of Central Australia (1899), EmileDurkheim’s Elementary Forms of the Religious Life (1912),James G. Frazer’s Totemism and Exogamy (1910) and TheWorship of Nature (1926), Mircea Eliade’s Patterns inComparative Religion (1958) and The Sacred and the Pro-fane (1959), Claude Lévi-Strauss’s Totemism (1962, trans-lation 1969), Victor Turner’s Forest of Symbols (1967), andMary Douglas’s Purity and Danger (1966) and NaturalSymbols (1970).

Among the high points in these works were E.B. Tylor’sinvention of the term animism as a name for indigenous

nature religion and a corresponding theory to explainhow it came into existence; and FRIEDRICH MAX MÜLLER’shistoriography which traced the origin of Indo-Europeanreligion to religious metaphors and symbolism groundedin the natural environment, especially the sky and sun. SirJames Frazer, who had been decisively influenced by bothof these figures, added his own theories that the personifi-cation and “worship of nature” was the common root of allreligion and that the remnants of pagan religion can bediscerned in European folk culture. Quoting Frazer pro-vides a feeling for the ethos prevalent among these earlyanthropologists.

[By] the worship of nature, I mean . . . the worship ofnatural phenomena conceived as animated, con-scious, and endowed with both the power and thewill to benefit or injure mankind. Conceived as suchthey are naturally objects of human awe and fear. . . to the mind of primitive man these naturalphenomena assume the character of formidable anddangerous spirits whose anger it is his wish to avoid,and whose favour it is his interest to conciliate. Toattain these desirable ends he resorts to the samemeans of conciliation which he employs towardshuman beings on whose goodwill he happens to bedependent; he proffers requests to them, and hemakes them presents; in other words, he prays andsacrifices to them; in short, he worships them. Thuswhat we may call the worship of nature is based onthe personification of natural phenomena (Frazer1926: 17).

Reflecting the influence of the evolutionary perspec-tive, Frazer thought that nature religions were anthropo-morphic superstitions and would naturally be supplanted,first by polytheism, then by monotheism. He also believedthat this was part of a “slow and gradual” process thatwas leading inexorably among civilized peoples to the“despiritualization of the universe” (Frazer 1926: 9). Manyanthropological theorists during the nineteenth and earlytwentieth century seemed to agree that the nature religioncharacteristic of early humans and the world’s remaining“primitives” would eventually be supplanted either withmonotheistic forms or no religion at all. Many of theseearly anthropologists were, therefore, also early pro-ponents of the secularization thesis, which generallyexpects the decline of religion.

MIRCEA ELIADE drew on much of this earlier scholarshipwhen publishing his seminal works in the 1950s and early1960s, but in contrast to much of it, he maintained a sub-tle, positive evaluation of religion, including naturereligion. At the heart of his theory lay his belief thatearly religion was grounded in a perception that a “sacred”reality exists that is different from everyday, “profane”realities, and that it manifests itself at special times and

Introduction xiii

Page 12: The Encyclopedia of Religion and Natureusers.clas.ufl.edu/bron/ern/1-prelim(all-but-contents-pg).pdf · goes far beyond the question as to whether religions are naturally green, turning

places, usually through natural entities and places. Indeed,for Eliade, the sacred/profane dichotomy was at thecenter of all religious perception. Moreover, for Eliade, therecognition of the sacred has something fundamental todo with what it means to be human.

Although Eliade’s theory was sharply criticized inthe latter half of the twentieth century, his exhaustivecomparative scholarship helped to establish that, in thehistory of religions, natural systems and objects areintimately involved in the perception of the sacred, andthat this is an important aspect of religious life. Symbolicanthropologists, including Claude Lévi-Strauss (in someminds), Victor Turner, and Mary Douglas, for their part,scrutinized the functions of natural symbols in religionand culture, making provocative suggestions as to whynature draws human attention in a religious way.

Clearly, while there have been many competing per-spectives about the relationships between religion andnature, some generalizations can be made. Many peoplehave considered forces and entities in nature to have theirown powers, spiritual integrity, or divinity, and haveconsidered plants and animals, as well as certain earthlyand celestial places, to be sacred. Certainly, these kindsof beliefs have often enjoined specific ritual and ethicalobligations. Undoubtedly, the forces and entities of naturehave been important and sometimes central religioussymbols that work for people and their cultures in oneway or another. Even when these entities and forces arenot themselves considered divine, sacred, or even per-sonal, they can point or provide access to divine beings orpowers that are beyond ordinary perception. In sum, toborrow an expression from Claude Lévi-Strauss who firstused it when reflecting, more narrowly, about animals inthe history of religion, nature, from the most distantreaches of the imagined universe, to the middle of theEarth, is religiously “good to think.”

Religion and Nature in the Environmental AgeThis brief review brings us up to the 1960s, the cusp of theage of environmental awareness and concern, which wassymbolically inaugurated with the celebration of the firstEarth Day in 1970. This was a period characterized by anexplosion of interest in religion and nature, althoughsuch interest was not new. What was novel was a wide-spread and rapidly growing alarm about environmentaldeterioration, which for some added an apocalypticurgency to the quest to determine whether religion was toblame or might provide an antidote. If so, the questionnaturally followed, of what sort would such an antidotebe?

A multitude of entries in this encyclopedia explore thisperiod and its competing perspectives. Here we will outlinethe main streams of discussion from this period to thepresent, noting especially how the environmental con-sequences of religious belief and practice came to the fore-

front of the discussion for the first time. Discussion of themain issues and questions that were engaged are listed inthe following three subsections.

World Religions and EnvironmentalismIn 1967 CLARENCE GLACKEN published Traces on the RhodianShore: Nature and Culture in Western Thought fromAncient Times to the End of the Eighteenth Century. It wasthe most important historical overview of the complicatedand ambiguous relationships between religion and naturein the Western world. Especially detailed in its analysisof Classical culture (including its pagan dimensions andlong-term cultural echoes) and Christianity, it brought thereader right up to the advent of the Darwinian age. DonaldWorster in Nature’s Economy: A History of EcologicalIdeas (1977, second edition 1994) continued the storyup and into the age of ecology. This work helped inspirefurther scholarly investigation during the 1960s and 1970sof the environmental impacts brought on by Western cul-ture and its philosophical, religious, and scientific under-pinnings. Taken together, these works portray (sometimesin an oversimplified manner) an epic struggle in Westernculture between organicist and mechanist worldviews –and concomitantly – between those who view the naturalworld as somehow sacred and having intrinsic value, andthose who view the Earth as a way station to a heavenlyrealm beyond the Earth, or, who viewed life on Earth in autilitarian way, as having value only in its usefulness tohuman ends. A common dialectic in these works, as seenin the growing body of literature that followed, was thenotion that religious ideas were decisive variables inhuman culture, and thus, they were either culprit or saviorwith regard to environmental and social well-being.

It was during the decade between the publicationof Glacken’s and Worster’s works (1967 and 1977) thatENVIRONMENTAL ETHICS sprang forth as a distinct sub-discipline in philosophy. While there were many factorsthat led to this outpouring of ethical interest in nature,a short article by the historian Lynn White became alightning rod for much of the subsequent discussion.Indeed, the LYNN WHITE THESIS became well known andplayed a significant role in the intense scrutiny thatwould soon be focused on the environmental values andpractices that inhere to the so-called “world religions.”(“World religions” is shorthand for Judaism, Christianity,Islam, Daoism, Confucianism, Buddhism, Hinduism, andsometimes Jainism, which are commonly considered ofmajor importance either because of their antiquity,influence, transnational character, or large number ofadherents.)

Published in 1967 in the widely read journal Science,White’s article contended that monotheistic, occidentalreligions, especially Christianity, fostered anti-natureideas and behaviors. His most striking and influentialclaim, however, may have been: “Since the roots of our

xiv Introduction

Page 13: The Encyclopedia of Religion and Natureusers.clas.ufl.edu/bron/ern/1-prelim(all-but-contents-pg).pdf · goes far beyond the question as to whether religions are naturally green, turning

[environmental] trouble[s] are so largely religious, theremedy must also be essentially religious” (White 1967:1207). Although others had expressed such views longbefore he did, the increasing receptivity in America tonon-Western religious beliefs that accompanied the 1960scultural upheavals, combined with the simultaneousgrowth of environmental alarm, made the ground fertilefor the reception and debate of such views. Much of theenvironmental alarm was precipitated by RACHEL CARSON –an American scientist who was motivated by her owndeep, spiritual connections to nature – whose SilentSpring (1962) warned about the environmentally devastat-ing consequences of industrial pollution and pesticide use.With such works fueling environmental anxieties, White’sassertions quickly engendered several types of response,both among scholars and the wider public.

From those already acquainted with such arguments,there was often hearty agreement. Some had already beeninfluenced by Romantic thought, or by historical analysessuch as Perry Miller’s classic work, Errand into the Wilder-ness (1956), which analyzed the Puritans’ encounter withwild nature in America, or Max Weber’s The ProtestantEthic and the Spirit of Capitalism (1958), which found inreligious ideas the roots of capitalism’s voracious appetitefor nature’s resources. White’s thesis also inculcated orreinforced beliefs that were becoming more prevalent inAmerica, that religions originating in Asia, or naturereligions including those of indigenous societies, werespiritually and ethically superior to those which had cometo predominate in the Western world. This was ironic,for White thought there were currents in the Christiantradition that could provide solid ground for environ-mental ethics.

Those in the monotheistic, Abrahamic traditions, whoencountered such perspectives, tended to respond in oneof three ways: either apologetically, arguing that properlyunderstood, their traditions were environmentally sensi-tive; in a confessional way, acknowledging that there weretruths to such criticisms and that internal religious reformshould be undertaken to make their religions environ-mentally responsible; or with indifference, viewing thecriticisms, and environmental concern, as of minor if anyimportance to their religious faith. This latter responseironically provided evidence for the critical aspects ofWhite’s thesis.

These types of responses came from both laypeople andscholars. Scholarly experts in sacred texts, both thosereligiously committed and uncommitted to the traditionsassociated with them, began investigating these texts andother evidence about their traditions for their explicit orimplicit environmental values.

Before long, the soul searching White’s thesis helped toprecipitate within occidental religions began to be takenup by devotees and scholars of religions originating inAsia. This occurred, in part, because of certain scholarly

reactions to White’s thesis. The geographer Yi Fu Tuan, forexample, pointed out in an influential article published in1968, that deforestation was prevalent before the adventof Christianity. Moreover, he asserted, in China there wasgreat abuse of the land before Western civilization couldinfluence it.

Following Tuan, gradually, more scholars began to ask,“Why has environmental decline been so pronounced inAsia if, as had become widely believed, Asian religionspromote environmental responsibility?” Just as White’sthesis had precipitated apologetic, confessional, and indif-ferent reactions within the world’s Abrahamic traditions,the diverse reactions to White’s thesis triggered similarreactions among religionists and scholars engaged withAsian religions.

In the case of both Western and Asian religions,religious studies scholars played a significant role in theefforts to understand the environmental strengths andweaknesses of their traditions. Scholars of religion haveoften played twin roles as observers and participants in thereligions they study, of course, so it is unsurprising that, inthe face of newly perceived environmental challenges,they would play a role in rethinking the traditions’responsibilities in the light of them. Quite a number ofthem, indeed, became directly involved in efforts to pushthe traditions they were analyzing toward ethics thattake environmental sustainability as a central objective.The many, diverse entries exploring the world’s religioustraditions describe in substantial detail the emergence ofefforts to turn the world’s major religious traditions green.The role of religion scholars in these efforts is reviewed inRELIGIOUS STUDIES AND ENVIRONMENTAL CONCERN.

What is perhaps most remarkable about these efforts ishow rapidly the environment became a centerpiece ofmoral concern for substantial numbers of religious practi-tioners, and scholars engaged with the world’s majorreligious traditions. More empirical work is needed tounderstand the extent to which and in what waysenvironmental values have been influencing practitionersof the world’s dominant religions. Early efforts by socialscientists to understand these trends, and the challengesthey face as they seek to do so, are assessed in SOCIAL

SCIENCE ON RELIGION AND NATURE.

Nature Religions and EnvironmentalismIn addition to the view that Asian religions provide anantidote to the West’s environmental destructiveness,nature religions have been offered as alternatives whichfoster environmentally sensitive values and behaviors.While indigenous societies have been foremost in mind inthis regard, paganism, whether newly invented or revital-ized from what can be reconstructed of a pre-Christianpast (or both), has also been considered by some to offeran environmentally sensitive alternative. In this light orsense, a variety of new religious movements, recreational

Introduction xv

Page 14: The Encyclopedia of Religion and Natureusers.clas.ufl.edu/bron/ern/1-prelim(all-but-contents-pg).pdf · goes far beyond the question as to whether religions are naturally green, turning

practices, scientific endeavor, and other professional work,can also be understood as nature religions.

As was the case in the late nineteenth and early twen-tieth century, during the age of ecology, anthropology wasa major contributor to the debates. But the tendency toview negatively such cultures was decisively reversed assome anthropologists began to ask questions from anevolutionary perspective. The most important of thesewas whether religion in general (and the religions ofindigenous societies in particular) served to enhance thesurvival of the human organism. Put differently, theyasked: Does religion help the human species to adaptsuccessfully to its natural habitats, and if so, under whatcircumstances?

The answer that many came to was that the taboos,ethical mores, and rituals that accompany religiousworldviews often evolve in such a way that the religionpromotes environmental health and thus individualreproduction and group survival.

This kind of perspective can be briefly illustrated. In themid-twentieth century, the anthropologist Julian Steward,whose own work in “cultural ecology” was based foremoston his analyses of the relationships between indigenouspeoples of western North America’s Great Basin, arguedthat human culture represents an ecological adaptationof a group to its specific environment. He asserted thatsuch adaptation always involved the effort to harness andcontrol energy. The anthropologist Leslie White, who likeSteward based his perspective on studies of NorthAmerican Indians, also considered social evolution toinvolve the effort to harness and control energy. In the1960s, MARVIN HARRIS followed their lead, especially spot-lighting the role of religion. He found, for example, thatthe myth of the sacred cow in India confers on the humancultures of South Asia material and ecological advantages.The myth functioned in an ecologically adaptive manner,he argued, by helping to maintain the nutrient cyclesnecessary for India’s agro-ecosystems, thus maintainingthe carrying capacity of the land. An often cited quotefrom Harris conveys his perspective:

Beliefs and rituals that appear to the nonanthropol-ogical observer as wholly irrational, whimsical, andeven maladaptive have been shown to possessimportant positive functions and to be the depend-ent variable of recurrent adaptive processes (1971:556).

ROY RAPPAPORT was another anthropologist who beganpublishing in the mid-1960s, including his path-breakingbook, Pigs for the Ancestors: Ritual in the Ecology of a NewGuinea People (1968). His arguments had affinities withSteward and Harris, but his focus was on how religiousrituals and symbol systems can function in ecologicallyadaptive ways. Indeed, for Rappaport, “Religious rituals

. . . are . . . neither more nor less than part of thebehavioral repertoire employed by an aggregate oforganisms in adjusting to its environment” (Rappaport1979: 28).

For such theorists, religions evolve and function to helppeople create successful adaptations to their diverseenvironmental niches. Moreover, naturalistic evolutionaryassumptions (rather than the supernaturalistic beliefs oftheir adherents) are sufficient for understanding thecomplex relationships between religions and ecosystems.Such a theoretical perspective, it is important to note, isthe opposite of the idealistic premises informing much ofthe rest of the religion-and-nature discussion, which hastended to assume that religious ideas are the driving forcebehind environmental changes.

Steward, White, Harris, and Rappaport are consideredpioneers of the fields variously called “cultural ecology,”“ecological anthropology,” and “historical ecology.”Sometimes dismissed as “environmental determinists” bytheir critics, in their own distinct ways, they broughtevolution forcefully back into the analysis of human/ecosystem relationships by insisting that, while therecertainly are reciprocal influences between human beingsand the natural world, the ways human beings and theirreligious cultures are shaped by nature and its evolution-ary processes should not be forgotten.

ETHNOBOTANY is another sub-field of anthropology thatwas influenced by and contributed to analyses of eco-logical adaptation. Its roots can be traced to earlytwentieth-century efforts to document the uses of plantsby indigenous peoples. By mid-century, however, its focushad expanded to an analysis of the ways in which plantsare used in traditional societies to promote the health ofpeople, their cultures, and environments. Ethnobotanyhas been interested in the way plants are used to effecthealing and facilitate connection and harmony withdivine realities, as well as (sometimes) in the ecosystemchanges brought on by such uses.

Ethnobotany became a major tributary to a related butbroader line of anthropological inquiry into “indigenousknowledge systems” and TRADITIONAL ECOLOGICAL KNOWLEDGE,which is a subset of such knowledge systems. Here thefocus was on the entire corpus of ecological knowledgegained by a people in adapting to their environments overtime. Quite often, this analysis attended to the ways inwhich religious beliefs and practices become intertwinedwith such knowledge and inseparable from it. Leadingfigures in ethnobotany and in the analysis of traditionalecological knowledge included Harold Conklin, RichardSchultes, Darrell Posey, William Balée, Gerardo Reichel-Dolmatoff, and Stephen Lansing. In various ways anddrawing on research among different peoples, theyasserted that religious beliefs in general, including thosehaving to do with the spiritual importance or power ofplants, animals, and sacred places, can lead to practices

xvi Introduction

Page 15: The Encyclopedia of Religion and Natureusers.clas.ufl.edu/bron/ern/1-prelim(all-but-contents-pg).pdf · goes far beyond the question as to whether religions are naturally green, turning

that maintained the integrity of the ecosystems to whichthey belonged. A large volume edited by Darrel Poseyentitled Cultural and Spiritual Values of Biodiversity(1999), which was published by the United NationsEnvironmental Programme, shows the growing influenceof such analysis.

For many of the anthropologists investigating religion/environment relationships in indigenous cultures, it wasirrelevant whether indigenous people accurately perceiveddimensions of experience outside of the powers of ordin-ary observation (such as divine spirits in natural entities).Some analysts of such systems, however, based on experi-ences they had while living among indigenous peoplesand participating in their lifeways and ceremonies,became convinced that there were important spiritualtruths expressed by their worldviews and practices. Forthose moved spiritually by these cultures there was valuein them beyond their ability to foster environmentallysustainable lifeways.

The preceding developments, leading to the conclusionthat the worldviews of indigenous cultures promoteenvironmentally sustainable lifeways, represented aremarkable shift in the understanding of such peoples. Butthis change did not go unchallenged. Critics includingShepard Kretch argued that these sorts of perspectives –which purported to find ecological sensitivity embeddedin cultures living in relatively close proximity to naturalecosystems – actually expressed an unfounded andromantic (and often denigrating) view of indigenouspeople. Some such critics complained that tropes of the“ecological Indian” perpetuate views of indigenous peopleas primitive and unable to think scientifically. The use ofplants and animals in traditional medicines, which hascontributed significantly to the dramatic decline of somespecies, was used as evidence to question assertions thatindigenous, nature-oriented religions are adaptive, ratherthan maladaptive, with regard to ecosystem viability.

This introduction to the lively debates about indigen-ous societies and their nature religions can be followed upin a number of entries (and the cross-references in them),including AMERICAN INDIANS AS “FIRST ECOLOGISTS,” ANTHRO-

POLOGY, ANTHROPOLOGY AS A SOURCE OF NATURE RELIGION, ECOLOGY

AND RELIGION, ECOLOGICAL ANTHROPOLOGY, ETHNOBOTANY,RELIGIOUS ENVIRONMENTALIST PARADIGM, and TRADITIONAL

ECOLOGICAL KNOWLEDGE.PAGANISM, including WICCA, HEATHENRY, and DRUIDRY, to

name a few types, is another form of nature religion thathas also enjoyed a positive reappraisal during the age ofecology. Contemporary Paganism is now often labeled“neo-paganism” to contrast current forms with Classicalones, or to indicate that such spirituality has been under-going a process that involves (depending on the analysis)either revitalization (based on formerly underground andsuppressed knowledge), or imaginative reconstruction(based on what can be surmised about pre-monotheistic

religions through archeological and historical research).Much of this new religious production draws directly on(sometimes discredited) scholarly work. James Frazer’sbelief that remnants of pagan worldviews and lifewayscan be discerned in the folk customs of Europe providedpagans a sourcebook in folk culture for the constructionof their religions. The poet and literary figure ROBERT VON

RANKE GRAVES in The White Goddess (1948) offered aninfluential work subsequently used by many pagans toconstruct their own goddess-centered, Earth-reveringspirituality. And the archeologist Marija Gimbutas – whocontroversially claimed in the 1980s and 1990s that agoddess-centered culture, which honored women and theEarth, existed in much of Eastern Europe prior to the inva-sion of a bellicose and patriarchal Indo-European society –provided what for many pagans was an inspiring vision ofthe potential to reestablish egalitarian, Earth-revering,pagan culture.

Indeed, toward the end of the twentieth century, agrowing number of scholars who identified themselves aspagan were involved in the diverse efforts to make viablereligious options out of these traditions. A part of thisendeavor has involved assertions that paganism holdsnature sacred and therefore has inherent reason to pro-mote its protection and reverent care. This kind of perspec-tive proliferated as did the number of tabloids, magazines,journals, and books devoted to analyzing, and promoting,contemporary paganism.

Paganism thus became an attractive religious alterna-tive for some non-indigenous moderns, perhaps especiallyenvironmentally concerned ones, who value indigenousreligious cultures for their environmental values, buteither found them largely inaccessible, or chose not toborrow from them because of the often strongly assertedview that efforts to “borrow” from indigenous peoplesactually constitute cultural theft. (Various perspectivesin this regard are discussed in INDIGENOUS RELIGIONS AND

CULTURAL BORROWING.) Paganism also sometimes shares ideasand members, and certainly has some affinities, with thoseenvironmental movements that expressly consider natureto be sacred, such as BIOREGIONALISM, DEEP ECOLOGY, ECOFEMI-

NISM, ECOPSYCHOLOGY, and RADICAL ENVIRONMENTALISM. Partici-pants in these movements usually view both indigenousand pagan religions as environmentally salutary and oftenlink their own identity to such spirituality.

A growing number of scientists, including those pion-eering the fields of CONSERVATION BIOLOGY and RESTORATION

ECOLOGY, and those promoting RELIGIOUS NATURALISM, share acentral, common denominator belief in nature religionsregarding the sacredness of life. Unlike many of the otherforms of nature religion, they tend to stress the sacralityof the evolutionary processes that produce biologicaldiversity. Participants in such scientific professions oftenview their work as a spiritual practice. Some of these havebeen influenced by those who, like the religion scholar

Introduction xvii

Page 16: The Encyclopedia of Religion and Natureusers.clas.ufl.edu/bron/ern/1-prelim(all-but-contents-pg).pdf · goes far beyond the question as to whether religions are naturally green, turning

THOMAS BERRY, believe that science-grounded cosmologicaland evolutionary narratives should be understood assacred narratives, and that so understood, they will pro-mote reverence-for-life ethics. The entomologist EDWARD O.

WILSON’s apt phase for the grandeur of the evolutionaryprocess, which he called the “EPIC OF EVOLUTION”; the “GAIA”theory, which was developed by atmospheric scientistJAMES LOVELOCK and conceives of the biosphere as a self-regulating organism; as well as CHAOS and COMPLEXITY

THEORY, which draw on advanced cosmological scienceand reinforce metaphysics of interdependence, have allbeen used to express this kind of spirituality.

Such science has contributed, through EVOLUTIONARY

EVANGELISM and ritual processes such as the COUNCIL OF

ALL BEINGS, to efforts to resacralize the human perceptionof the Earth. Indeed, scientific narratives reverencingcosmological and biological evolution are increasinglybeing grafted onto existing world religions. They are alsoemerging as new religious forms, independent of the long-standing religious traditions. Some such scientific naturereligion, while relying on metaphors of the sacred todescribe feelings of belonging and attachment to the bio-sphere, sometimes also self-consciously express a non-supernaturalistic worldview.

Whether they retain or eschew supernaturalism, sac-ralized evolutionary narratives are proving influential ininternational venues – perhaps most significantly throughthe EARTH CHARTER initiative and during the UNITED NATION’s“EARTH SUMMITS” – in which belief in evolution and areverence for life are increasingly affirmed. These sorts ofreligious developments suggest some of the directions thatnature religion may continue to move in the future.

Many NEW RELIGIOUS MOVEMENTS and forms of NEW AGE

spirituality also qualify as nature religions, includingreligiosity related to ASTROLOGY, CROP CIRCLES, DOLPHINS,SATANISM, THE COUNCIL OF ALL BEINGS, THE HARMONIC CONVERGENCE,THE MEN’S MOVEMENT, and UFOs and EXTRA TERRESTRIALS. A widevariety of recreational and other practices that might notseem at first glance to have anything to do with naturespirituality can on close observation also qualify, such asMOUNTAINEERING, ROCK CLIMBING, SURFING, FLY FISHING, HUNTING,GARDENING, and even attendance at MOTION PICTURES andTHEME PARKS. As was the case with PAGANISM, during theenvironmental age, these diverse practices and formsof spirituality have increasingly taken on green charac-teristics, which are then, to an uncertain degree, integratedinto worldviews and ethics.

The New Age movement has contributed significantlyto the spiritualities and ritualizing of other nature reli-gions, including paganism and radical environmentalism,to name just two. The reciprocal influences among non-mainstream religious subcultures have begun to drawmore scholarly attention, as for example in The CulticMilieu: Oppositional Subcultures in an Age of Globaliza-tion (Kaplan and Lööw 2002). Such an analysis is pertinent

to the examination of much nature-related religiousproduction, as can be seen in PAGAN FESTIVALS, NEW AGE, andthe CELESTINE PROPHESY, among other entries.

Like most religions, nature religions carve out theirreligious identity in contrast (indeed often in self-conscious opposition) to other religious perspectives andinterests. Participants in nature religions tend especially tocriticize other religions for their environmental failings.Nature religions themselves, as we have seen, have longbeen criticized as misguided, primitive, and dangerous.Beginning in the 1980s they have also sometimes beencharged with being violence-prone and criticized for pro-moting ethnic nationalism, and even racism and Fascism.(See also NEO-PAGANISM AND ETHNIC NATIONALISM IN EASTERN

EUROPE.)In the age of ecology, then, it is clear that nature

religions received a mixed reception, both denigratedas regressive and lauded for promoting environmentalsensitivity. While scholars and laypeople continued toexpress both points of view and the issue may havebecome more polarized, it is also true that significantgrowth toward more positive views occurred. Indeed, asillustrated in RELIGIOUS ENVIRONMENTALIST PARADIGM, anincreasing number of scholars express a Rousseau-likebelief in the superiority of those societies that can becharacterized as having intimate spiritual relationshipswith nature; especially when such societies are comparedto those with otherworldly cosmologies and/or whichprivilege science-based epistemologies.

Theories on the Natural Origins and Persistence of ReligionA third important area of discussion regarding the rela-tionships between religion and nature intensified duringthe age of ecology. It reprised the effort to uncover theorigins and persistence of religious and ethical systems, byexamining both biological and cultural evolution.

Like James Frazer, who viewed religion as a productof evolution grounded in an anthropomorphism thatpersonifies natural phenomena, these newer theoriescontinued to be reductionistic; they implicitly orexplicitly discounted what believers consider to be the“truths” involved. While such evolutionary theories wereinevitably speculative in nature, the newer ones had theadvantage of being able to draw on new fields such asevolutionary psychology and cognitive science, as wellas on a much more sophisticated and critical body ofethnographic data.

Edward Wilson began his career as an entomologistand became, by the end of the twentieth century, oneof America’s best-known scientists, in part due to hiswork on biological diversity and because of the growingconcern about losses to it. But in 1984 he publishedBiophilia: The Human Bond with Other Species, in whichhe articulated an important theory that purported toexplain the origins of the human love for nature. His

xviii Introduction

Page 17: The Encyclopedia of Religion and Natureusers.clas.ufl.edu/bron/ern/1-prelim(all-but-contents-pg).pdf · goes far beyond the question as to whether religions are naturally green, turning

thinking along these lines was an outgrowth of his broadertheory on the origins of ethical systems, published asSociobiology (in 1975). This theory asserted that affective,spiritual, and moral sentiments all evolve from evolution-ary processes because they favor individual and collectivesurvival. Ethics in general and environmental values inparticular, therefore, are the natural result of humanorganisms finding their ecological niche and adapting totheir environment. Wilson’s ideas stimulated much ofthe subsequent discussion over the possibility of anevolutionary root of religion, ethics, and environmentalconcern.

Among the most important works to follow wereStewart Guthrie’s Faces in The Clouds: A New Theoryof Religion (1993), Pascal Boyer’s The Naturalness ofReligious Ideas: A Cognitive Theory of Religion (1994) andReligion Explained: The Evolutionary Origins of ReligiousThought (2002), Walter Burkert’s Creation of the Sacred:Tracks of Biology in Early Religions (1996), V.S. Ramach-andran and Sandra Blakeslee’s Phantoms in the Brain(1998), David Sloan Wilson’s Darwin’s Cathedral:Evolution, Religion, and the Nature of Society (2002), andScott Atran’s In Gods We Trust: The Evolutionary Land-scape of Religion (2002).

Guthrie sounded much like Frazer, drawing on cogni-tive science and psychology to argue that religion is,essentially, anthropomorphism, resulting from the humanpenchant to explain realities by attributing them to some-thing other than human agency. According to Guthrie,humans opt for such beliefs unconsciously, for the mostpart, but they do so for what are ultimately rationalreasons, for if the belief is correct, then there is much togain from it and little to lose if the belief is unfounded.

Boyer, Burkert, and Atran agreed with much ofGuthrie’s analysis, tracing religiosity, at least in part, tothe existential challenges that come with the uncertaintiesof life, and a corresponding tendency to anthropomor-phize natural entities and forces. Boyer lucidly explainedthe logic behind such human cognitive tendencies. Boyerargued, in summarizing a number of studies including adoctoral dissertation by Justin Barrett, that it is natural toinvent

agent-like . . . gods and spirits [because] our agencydetection systems are biased toward over-detection.Our evolutionary heritage is that of organisms thatmust deal with both predators and prey. In eithersituation, it is far more advantageous to overdetectagency than to underdetect it. The expense of falsepositives (seeing agents where there are none) isminimal, if we can abandon these misguided intui-tions. In contrast, the cost of not detecting agentswhen they are actually around (either predator orprey) could be very high (Boyer 2001: 145; [See alsoHUNTING AND THE ORIGINS OF RELIGION.]).

David Sloan Wilson takes a similar approach to thesetheorists, drawing on evolutionary and cognitive science,agreeing that religion is a product of evolution and thatthe religious beliefs of its practitioners are fallacious. Likethem, he sees survival value in the tendencies that spurreligion. He concluded, however, in a way that seemed toecho Edward O. Wilson’s arguably more positive view ofreligion: religion promotes individual and collectivefitness by providing values that promote cooperativebehaviors that in turn enhance the prospects for survival.This point of view resembles that of Edward Wilson’s laterwork, in which he expressed hope that new religious formsand values would evolve that would be grounded inscience and promote environmental conservation.

The theorists introduced here agree that nature plays amajor, if not the decisive role in shaping human culture,religion, and survival strategies. But they disagree aboutmany of the particulars – for example, about whetherreligion is ecologically adaptive, maladaptive, both, orneither. Moreover, they face strong criticisms fromscholars who believe they overemphasize the influence ofnature on people and their societies, and neglect theimportance of human agency and the power of culture.The archeologist Jacques Cauvin, for one importantexample, disputes those who claim to have revealedenvironmental or materialist causes for the shift fromforaging lifeways and animistic spiritualities to agri-culture and theistic religions. In The Birth of the Gods andthe Origins of Agriculture (2000), he claimed that archeo-logical evidence proves that belief in gods predated theagricultural revolution. He deduced from this his con-clusion that those who believe theistic religion is a product(or an adaptation related to) the domestication ofplants and animals, cannot muster compelling supportingevidence.

The body of research available as data for those explor-ing such issues has grown rapidly. Discussion and debatewill continue over the origins, persistence, or “naturaldecline” of religion, as well as over its possible ecologicalfunctions. New lines of inquiry may play increasinglyimportant roles. Just as cognitive science exploring humanconsciousness has spurred further debate, ethology (thestudy of animal cognition and behavior) is also beginningto make some interesting if speculative suggestions.In this encyclopedia, for example, JANE GOODALL reflectson the possibility of a kind of nature-related PRIMATE

SPIRITUALITY, based on her observations of chimpanzeebehavior near jungle waterfalls, and Mark Beckoff, inCOGNITIVE ETHOLOGY, SOCIAL MORALITY, AND ETHICS, argues thatsuch science may well revolutionize human under-standings of both religion and ethics, extending bothbeyond humankind.

While there is a robust debate under way among thevarious theorists and perspectives which is here onlybriefly introduced, it is critical to remember that these

Introduction xix

Page 18: The Encyclopedia of Religion and Natureusers.clas.ufl.edu/bron/ern/1-prelim(all-but-contents-pg).pdf · goes far beyond the question as to whether religions are naturally green, turning

perspectives are not mutually exclusive. There may bestrong “natural” inclinations to religious perception, aswell as maladaptive and/or adaptive functions of suchreligions, for example. With regard to the possible eco-logical functions of religion, it would be wise to remember,as Gustavo Benavides suggests in ECOLOGY AND RELIGION, that“adaptation is a process rather than a state.” Therefore, itis important to analyze both maladaptive and adaptivereligious phenomena, and even more importantly forenvironmental conservation, to determine the circum-stances under which religion might shift from maladaptiveto adaptive forms.

Religion and Nature and the Future ofReligion and Nature

Shortly before his death in 1975, the British historianArnold Toynbee argued

The present threat to mankind’s survival can beremoved only by a revolutionary change of heart inindividual human beings. This change of heart mustbe inspired by religion in order to generate the willpower needed for putting arduous new ideals intopractice (Porritt 1984: 211; for the original quote seeToynbee and Ikeda 1976: 37).

Jonathan Porritt, who paraphrased Toynbee in this quote,was a prominent member of the International Green Partymovement in the 1970s and went on to lead Friends ofthe Earth (UK) in 1984. Porritt’s subsequent comment onToynbee’s view illustrates a common understanding aboutreligion found within green subcultures all around theworld:

I would accept this analysis, and would argue there-fore that some kind of spiritual commitment, orreligion in its true meaning (namely, the reconnec-tion between each of us and the source of all life), isa fundamental part of the transformation thatecologists are talking about (Porritt 1984: 211).

Obviously, Lynn White was not the only one who wasconvinced that religion was a decisive factor in theenvironmental past and that it could play an equallyimportant role in the future. For his part, Toynbee thoughtthat humankind needed a new religion that respectednatural systems and that such a religion would resemblepantheism. Moreover, such a religion would have more incommon with Buddhism than with historical monotheism,which he thought (again like White) was especiallyresponsible for environmental decline.

Such views, that religion could be both a cause and asolution to environmental decline, precipitated much

of the ferment over religion and nature throughout theenvironmental age. It certainly led to efforts to awakenthe world’s predominant religious traditions to an under-standing that the protection of the Earth and its livingsystems should be considered a “sacred trust” (as the EARTH

CHARTER ecumenically put it). This idealistic assumption,that religious ideas can shape environmental behavior,has also inspired many efforts to revitalize or inventnature religions, all of which in one way or anotherconsider nature to be sacred, and deduce from this percep-tion a reverence-for-life ethic. It is not easy to answerwhether this idealistic perspective is correct; this intro-duction and many of the entries to which it pointsdemonstrate how complicated such an assessment can be.It may well be that those who argue that religion is animportant or decisive variable in the ways in whichhuman beings relate to the Earth’s living systems aresimply exaggerating the importance of religious ideaswhen it comes to their influence on environment-relatedbehavior.

If those who think that religion is a decisive or impor-tant variable in the human impact on nature are correct,however, or even on the right track and in need only ofminor correction, then the inquiry into the relationshipsbetween people and Earth’s living systems is not merely anintellectual exercise. The answers, however murky, mightilluminate the paths to an environmentally sustainable,and perhaps even a socially just future. The answers mightjust suggest promising ways to think about the properrelationships between people and other forms of life, andinspire actions in concert with them. Although manyengaged in the religion-and-nature field hope for such apayoff, the diverse and contested approaches to religionand nature revealed in this encyclopedia suggest that anyconsensus will be difficult to achieve.

In addition to questions about whether and to whatextent religion has shaped or might shape environments(negatively or positively), this encyclopedia introducesand addresses a battery of additional conundrums. Theseinclude questions along a path less often traveled duringthe debates over religion and ecology: especially questionsregarding the impact of nature, and different natures forthat matter, on human consciousness in general and onreligion (and religion-inspired environmental practices) inparticular.

Perhaps these sorts of questions, while fundamentallyscientific in nature, are themselves a reflection of new eth-ical forms that began to flower in the wake of Darwinianthought. These values are quite easily deduced from anevolutionary worldview, which promotes a sense ofkinship grounded in an understanding that all life sharesa common ancestor and came into existence throughthe same survival struggle. These values displace humanbeings from an isolated place, alone at the center of moralconcern. Perhaps these scientific questions, in reciprocal

xx Introduction

Page 19: The Encyclopedia of Religion and Natureusers.clas.ufl.edu/bron/ern/1-prelim(all-but-contents-pg).pdf · goes far beyond the question as to whether religions are naturally green, turning

production with new forms of religious thought, will shapethe religious hybrids that will come to characterize mostthe religious future. Perhaps these hybrids will proveadaptive, facilitating the survival not only of the human

community, but also of the wider community of life, uponwhich humans depend. If so, this exceptionally interestingspecies, Homo sapiens sapiens, might yet live up to itslofty (if self-designated and highly ironic) name.

Introduction xxi

Page 20: The Encyclopedia of Religion and Natureusers.clas.ufl.edu/bron/ern/1-prelim(all-but-contents-pg).pdf · goes far beyond the question as to whether religions are naturally green, turning

Bibliography

Albanese, Catherine L. Nature Religion in America: Fromthe Algonkian Indians to the New Age. Chicago: ChicagoUniversity Press, 1990.

Albanese, Catherine L. Reconsidering Nature Religion.Harrisburg, PA: Trinity Press International, 2002.

Anderson, Eugene N. Ecologies of the Heart: Emotion,Belief, and the Environment. Oxford, United Kingdom:Oxford University Press, 1996.

Atran, Scott. In Gods We Trust: The Evolutionary Land-scape of Religion. New York: Oxford University Press,2002.

Axelrod, Lawrence J. and Peter Suedfeld. “Technology,Capitalism, and Christianity: Are They Really the ThreeHorsemen of the Eco-Collapse?” Journal of Environ-mental Psychology 15:3 (1995), 183–95.

Balée, William. Footprints of the Forest: Ka’Apor Ethno-botany; The Historical Ecology of Plant Utilization by anAmazonian People. New York: Columbia UniversityPress, 1994.

Bekoff, Marc, Colin Allen and Gordon Burghardt, eds. TheCognitive Animal: Empirical and Theoretical Perspec-tives on Animal Cognition. Cambridge: MIT Press, 2002.

Benavides, Gustavo. “Cognitive and Ideological Aspects ofDivine Anthropomorphism.” Religion 25 (1995), 9–22.

Berkes, Fikret. Sacred Ecology: Traditional EcologicalKnowledge and Resource Management. Philadelphia,PA: Taylor and Francis, 1999.

Blain, Jenny. Nine Worlds of Seid-Magic: Ecstasy and Neo-Shamanism in North European Paganism. London &New York: Routledge, 2001.

Boyer, Pascal. The Naturalness of Religious Ideas: A Cogni-tive Theory of Religion. Berkeley, CA: University ofCalifornia Press, 1994.

Boyer, Pascal. Religion Explained: The Evolutionary Ori-gins of Religious Thought. New York: Basic, 2001.

Bramwell, Anna. Ecology in the 20th Century: A History.New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 1989.

Bruun, Ole and Arne Kalland. Asian Perceptions of Nature:A Critical Approach. London: Curzon Press, 1995.

Burhenn, Herbert. “Ecological Approaches to the Study ofReligion.” Method and Theory in the Study of Religion9:2 (1997), 111–26.

Burkert, Walter. Creation of the Sacred: Tracks of Biologyin Early Religions. Cambridge, MA: Harvard UniversityPress, 1996.

Burnham, Philip. Indian Country, God’s Country: NativeAmericans and the National Parks. Washington, D.C.:Island Press, 2000.

Callicott, J. Baird and Roger T. Ames, eds. Nature inAsian Traditions of Thought: Essays in EnvironmentalPhilosophy. Albany, NY: State University of New YorkPress, 1989.

Campbell, Colin. “The Cult, the Cultic Milieu and Secular-ization.” A Sociological Yearbook of Religion in Britain 5(1972), 119–36.

Capra, Fritjof and David Steindl-Rast. Belonging to theUniverse: Explorations on the Frontiers of Science andSpirituality. San Francisco: HarperCollins, 1991.

Carson, Rachel. Silent Spring. New York City: HoughtonMifflin, 1962.

Catton, William. Overshoot: The Ecological Basis ofRevolutionary Change. Urbana & Chicago: University ofIllinois Press, 1980.

Cauvin, Jacques. The Birth of the Gods and the Origins ofAgriculture. Trevor Watkins, trans. Cambridge, UnitedKingdom: Cambridge University Press, 2000.

Chidester, David. “The Church of Baseball, the Fetish ofCoca-Cola, and the Potlatch of Rock ‘N’ Roll: TheoreticalModels for the Study of Religion in American PopularCulture.” Journal of the American Academy of Religion64:4 (1996a), 743–65.

Chidester, David. Patterns of Action: Religion and Ethics ina Comparative Perspective. Belmont, CA: Wadsworth,1987.

Chidester, David. Savage Systems: Colonialism and Com-parative Religion in Southern Africa. Charlottesville:University Press of Virginia, 1996b.

Cohen, Michael P. The Pathless Way: John Muir andAmerican Wilderness. Madison: University of Wiscon-sin Press, 1984.

Campolo, Anthony. How to Rescue the Earth withoutWorshipping Nature. Nashville: Thomas Nelson,1992.

Conklin, Harold C. The Relations of Hanunóo Culture to thePlant World. New Haven: Yale University Press, 1954.

Douglas, Mary. Natural Symbols: Explorations in Cos-mology. New York: Vintage, 1970.

Douglas, Mary. Purity and Danger: An Analysis of theConcepts of Pollution and Taboo. London: Routledge &Kegan Paul, 1966.

Page 21: The Encyclopedia of Religion and Natureusers.clas.ufl.edu/bron/ern/1-prelim(all-but-contents-pg).pdf · goes far beyond the question as to whether religions are naturally green, turning

Durkheim, Emile. Elementary Forms of the Religious Life.New York: Free Press, 1912 (reprint 1995).

Eliade, Mircea. Shamanism: Archaic Techniques ofEcstasy. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press,1964.

Eliade, Mircea. The Sacred and the Profane: The Nature ofReligion. New York: Harcourt Brace & World, 1959.

Eliade, Mircea. Patterns in Comparative Religion. Lincoln:University of Nebraska Press, 1958.

Fisher, Andy. Radical Ecopsychology: Psychology in theService of Life. Albany, NY: State University of NewYork Press, 2002.

Fox, Stephen. The American Conservation Movement:John Muir and His Legacy. Madison: University of Wis-consin Press, 1981.

Frazer, Sir James George. The Golden Bough: A History ofMyth and Religion. London: Chancellor Press, 1994.

Frazer, Sir James George. Totemism and Exogamy: Treatiseon Certain Early Forms of Superstition and Society.London: Dawsons Pall Mall, reprint 1968 (orig., 1910).

Frazer, Sir James George. The Worship of Nature. London:Macmillan, 1926.

Gardell, Mattias. Gods of the Blood: The Pagan Revival andWhite Separatism. Durham, NC: Duke University Press,2003.

Gimbutas, Marija. The Civilization of the Goddess. SanFrancisco: HarperCollins, 1991.

Gimbutas, Marija. The Gods and Goddesses of Old Europe,7000 to 3500 B.C.: Myths, Legends, and Cult Images.Berkeley: University of California Press, 1974.

Glacken, Clarence. Traces on the Rhodian Shore: Natureand Culture in Western Thought From Ancient Times tothe End of the Eighteenth Century. Berkeley: Universityof California Press, 1967.

Goodall, Jane. Reason for Hope: A Spiritual Journey. NewYork: Time Warner Books, 1999.

Goodenough, Ursula. The Sacred Depths of Nature. NewYork & Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1998.

Goodrick-Clarke, Nicholas. The Occult Roots of Nazism:Secret Aryan Cults and Their Influence on Nazi Ideology.New York: New York University Press, 1994.

Gottlieb, Roger, ed. This Sacred Earth: Religion, Nature,Environment. New York & London: Routledge, 1996.

Griffin, Donald R. Animal Minds: Beyond Cognition toConsciousness. Chicago: University of Chicago Press,2001.

Guthrie, Stewart. Faces in the Clouds: A New Theory ofReligion. New York & Oxford: Oxford University Press,1993.

Harmon, Dave and Allen D. Putney, eds. The Full Value ofParks: From Economics to the Intangible. Lanham, MD:Rowman & Littlefield, 2003.

Harris, Marvin. “The Cultural Ecology of India’s SacredCattle.” Current Anthropology 7 (1966), 51–66.

Harris, Marvin. Culture, Man, and Nature: An Introduction

to General Anthropology. New York City: Thomas Y.Crowell, 1971.

Harris, Marvin. “The Myth of the Sacred Cow.” In Man,Culture, and Animals, eds. Anthony Leeds and AndrewP. Vaya. Washington, D.C.: American Association forthe Advancement of Science, 1965.

Harvey, Graham. Contemporary Paganism: ListeningPeople, Speaking Earth. New York: New York UniversityPress, 1997.

Harvey, Graham and Charlotte Hardman, eds. PaganismToday. New York: Thorsons/Harper Collins, 1996.

Helminiak, Daniel A. The Human Core of Spirituality.Albany: State University of New York Press, 1996.

Hutton, Ronald. The Triumph of the Moon: A History ofModern Pagan Witchcraft. Cambridge, MA: OxfordUniversity Press, 2000.

Ingold, Tim. The Perception of the Environment: Essays inLivelihood, Dwelling and Skill. London: Routledge,2000.

Ivakhiv, Adrian. Claiming Sacred Ground: Pilgrims andPolitics at Glastonbury and Sedona. Bloomington, IN:Indiana University Press, 2001.

Kaplan, Jeffrey, ed. Encyclopedia of White Power: ASourcebook on the Radical Racist Right. Lanham, MD:Altamira, 2000.

Kaplan, Jeffrey and Heléne Lööw, eds. The Cultic Milieu:Oppositional Subcultures in an Age of Globalization.Lanham, MD: Altamira, 2002.

Kellert, Stephen R. “Concepts of Nature East and West.”In Reinventing Nature? Responses to PostmodernDeconstruction. Michael Soulé and Gary Lease, eds.Washington, D.C.: Island Press, 1995.

Kempton, Willett, James S. Boster and Jennifer A. Hartley.Environmental Values in American Culture. Cambridge:MIT Press, 1995.

King, Anna S. “Spirituality: Transformation and Meta-morphosis.” Religion 26 (1996), 343–51.

Kinsley, David. Ecology and Religion: Ecological Spiritual-ity in Cross-Cultural Perspective. Englewood Cliffs, NJ:Prentice Hall, 1995.

Krech, Shepard (3rd). The Ecological Indian: Myth andHistory. New York: Norton, 1999.

Lansing, J. Stephen. Priests and Programmers: Tech-nologies of Power in the Engineered Landscape of Bali.Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1991.

Lawson, Thomas E. and Robert N. McCauley. RethinkingReligion: Connecting Cognition and Culture. Cambridge:Cambridge University Press, 1990.

Lévi-Strauss, Claude. Totemism. Boston, MA: BeaconPress, 1969.

Lööw, Heléne. “The Idea of Purity: The Swedish RacistCounterculture, Animal Rights and Environmental Pro-tection.” In The Cultic Milieu: Oppositional Subculturesin an Age of Globalization. Jeffrey Kaplan and HélèneLööw, eds. Lanham, MD: Altamira, 2002.

xxiv Bibliography

Page 22: The Encyclopedia of Religion and Natureusers.clas.ufl.edu/bron/ern/1-prelim(all-but-contents-pg).pdf · goes far beyond the question as to whether religions are naturally green, turning

Lovelock, James. Gaia: A New Look At Life on Earth.Revised edn, Oxford: 1979; reprint, Oxford & New York:Oxford University Press, 1995.

Lubbock, John. The Origin of Civilization and the PrimitiveCondition of Man. London: Longmans, Green, 1889(orig., 1870).

Marty, Martin E. and R. Scott Appleby. The Fundamen-talism Project (5 volumes). Chicago: University ofChicago Press, 1991–1995.

Messer, Ellen and Michael Lambek. Ecology and the Sac-red: Engaging the Anthropology of Roy A. Rappaport.Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 2001.

Miller, Perry. Errand into the Wilderness. Cambridge, MA:Harvard University Press, 1956.

Müller, Friedrich Max. Natural Religion. London:Longmans, Green, 1888.

Nash, Roderick Frazier. Wilderness and the AmericanMind. New Haven: Yale University Press, 1967.

Naylor, D. Keith. “Gifford Pinchot, the ConservationMovement, and the Social Gospel.” In Perspectives onthe Social Gospel: Papers From the Inaugural SocialGospel Conference At Colgate Rochester Divinity School.Christopher Evans, ed. New York City: Edwin MellonPress, 1999.

Nicolson, Marjorie Hope. Mountain Gloom and MountainGlory: The Development of the Aesthetics of the Infinite.Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 1959.

Oelschlaeger, Max. The Idea of Wilderness: From Pre-history to the Age of Ecology. New Haven, CT: YaleUniversity Press, 1991.

Orsi, Robert A. “Is the Study of Lived Religion Irrelevant tothe World We Live in?” Journal for the Scientific Studyof Religion 42:2 (2002), 169–74.

Pearson, Joanne, Richard H. Roberts, Geoffrey Samuel andRichard Roberts, eds. Nature Religion Today: Paganismin the Modern World. Edinburgh: Edinburgh UniversityPress, 1998.

Perlin, John. A Forest Journey: The Role of Wood in theDevelopment of Civilization. Cambridge, MA: HarvardUniversity Press, 1989.

Pike, Sarah. New Age and Neopagan Religions in America.New York: Columbia University Press, 2004.

Polis, R.A. National Socialism and the Religion of Nature.London: Croom Helm, 1986.

Porritt, Jonathan. Seeing Green: The Politics of EcologyExplained. Oxford and New York: Basil Blackwell,1984.

Posey, Darrell A. and William Balée, eds. Resource Manage-ment in Amazonia: Indigenous and Folk Strategies.New York: New York Botanical Gardens, 1989.

Posey, Darrell Addison. Cultural and Spiritual Values ofBiodiversity. Nairobi, Kenya: United Nations Environ-mental Programme, 1999.

Public Broadcasting Service. Battle for Wilderness: Muirand Pinchot (Video). Washington D.C., 1990.

Ramachandran, V.S. and Sandra Blakeslee. Phantoms inthe Brain. New York: Morrow, 1998.

Rappaport, Roy A. Ritual and Religion in the Making ofHumanity. Cambridge, MA: Cambridge UniversityPress, 1999.

Rappaport, Roy A. Ecology, Meaning and Religion.Richmond, CA: North Atlantic, 1979.

Rappaport, Roy A. Pigs for the Ancestors: Ritual in theEcology of a New Guinea People. New Haven, CT: YaleUniversity Press, 1968.

Reichel-Dolmatoff, Gerardo. The Forest Within: TheWorldview of the Tukano Amazonian Indians. Totnes,United Kingdom: Themis-Green Books, 1996.

Reichel-Dolmatoff, Gerardo. “Cosmology as EcologicalAnalysis: A View From the Rainforest.” Man 2:3 (1976),307–18.

Roof, Wade Clark. A Generation of Seekers. San Francisco:Harper, 1993.

Schultes, Richard Evans. “Reasons for EthnobotanicalConservation.” In Traditional Ecological Knowledge: ACollection of Essays. R.E. Johannes, ed. Geneva: Inter-national Union for the Conservation of Nature, 1989.

Schultes, Richard Evans and Siri Reis. Ethnobotany:Evolution of a Discipline. Portland, OR: Timber Press,1995.

Selin, Helaine, ed. Nature Across Cultures: Views of Natureand the Environment in Non-Western Cultures.Dordrecht, The Netherlands: Kluwer Academic, 2003.

Sessions, George, ed. Deep Ecology for the 21st Century.Boston: Shambhala Publications, 1995.

Smith, Johnathan Z. and William Scott Green, eds. TheHarperCollins Dictionary of Religion. New York:HarperCollins, 1995.

Spence, Mark David. Dispossessing the Wilderness: IndianRemoval and the Making of the National Parks. Oxford:Oxford University Press, 1999.

Steward, Julian. Basin-Plateau Aboriginal Socio-PoliticalGroups. Salt Lake City: University of Utah Press, 1938.

Steward, Julian. Evolution and Ecology. Urbana andChicago: University of Illinois Press, 1977.

Swimme, Brian and Thomas Berry. The Universe Story:From the Primordial Flaring Forth to the Ecozoic Era:A Celebration of the Unfolding of the Cosmos. SanFrancisco: HarperCollins, 1992.

Taylor, Bron. “Nature Religion.” In The Encyclopedia ofReligion. Lindsay Jones, ed. New York: Macmillan, 2ndedn, 2005.

Taylor, Bron. “A Green Future for Religion?” FuturesJournal 36:9 (2004), 991–1008.

Taylor, Bron. “Earth and Nature-Based Spirituality (PartII): From Deep Ecology to Scientific Paganism.” Religion31:3 (2001), 225–45.

Taylor, Bron. “Earth and Nature-Based Spirituality (Part I):From Deep Ecology to Radical Environmentalism.”Religion 31:2 (2001), 175–93.

Bibliography xxv

Page 23: The Encyclopedia of Religion and Natureusers.clas.ufl.edu/bron/ern/1-prelim(all-but-contents-pg).pdf · goes far beyond the question as to whether religions are naturally green, turning

Taylor, Bron. “Resacralizing Earth: Pagan Environmental-ism and the Restoration of Turtle Island.” In AmericanSacred Space. David Chidester and Edward T. Linenthal,eds. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1995.

Taylor, Bron, ed. Ecological Resistance Movements: TheGlobal Emergence of Radical and Popular Environ-mentalism. Albany, New York: State University of NewYork Press, 1995.

Toynbee, Arnold. “The Religious Background of thePresent Environmental Crisis.” International Journal ofEnvironmental Studies 3 (1972), 141–6.

Toynbee, Arnold J. and Daisaku Ikeda. The Toynbee-IkedaDialogue. Tokyo, New York & San Francisco: KodanshaInternational, 1976.

Tuan, Yi-Fu. Topophilia: A Study of EnvironmentalPerception, Attitudes, and Values. Englewood Cliffs, NJ:Prentice-Hall, 1974.

Tuan, Yi-Fu. “Discrepancies between EnvironmentalAttitude and Behaviour: Examples from Europe andChina.” The Canadian Geographer 12 (1968), 176–91.

Tucker, Mary Evelyn. Worldly Wonder: Religions EnterTheir Ecological Phase. LaSalle, Illinois: Open Court,2003.

Tucker, Mary Evelyn and John Grim, eds. “Religions of theWorld and Ecology Series” (10 volumes). Cambridge,MA: Harvard University Press, 1997–2004.

Tucker, Mary Evelyn and John A. Grim, eds. Worldviewsand Ecology: Religion, Philosophy, and the Environ-ment. Maryknoll, NY: Orbis Books, 1994.

Turner, Victor W. 1967. The Forest of Symbols: Aspects ofNdembu Ritual. Ithaca and London: Cornell UniversityPress.

Tylor, E.B. Primitive Culture: Researches Into the Develop-ment of Mythology, Philosophy, Religion, Art andCustom. London: John Murray, 1871.

Wall, Glenda. “Barriers to Individual EnvironmentalAction: The Influence of Attitudes and Social Experi-

ence.” Canadian Review of Sociology and Anthropology32:4 (1995), 465–89.

Weaver, Jace, ed. Defending Mother Earth: NativeAmerican Perspectives on Environmental Justice.Maryknoll, New York: Orbis, 1996.

Weber, Max. The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit ofCapitalism. New York: Scribners, 1958.

White, Leslie Alvin. The Evolution of Culture: TheDevelopment of Civilization to the Fall of Rome. NewYork: McGraw-Hill, 1959.

White, Lynn. “The Historic Roots of Our Ecologic Crisis.”Science 155 (1967), 1203–7.

Whitney, Elspeth. “Lynn White, Ecotheology, and History.”Environmental Ethics 15 (1993), 151–69.

Wilson, David Sloan. Darwin’s Cathedral: Evolution,Religion, and the Nature of Society. Chicago & London:Chicago University Press, 2002.

Wilson, Edward Osborne. The Diversity of Life. Cambridge,MA: Harvard University Press, 1992.

Wilson, Edward Osborne. Biophilia: The Human Bondwith Other Species. Cambridge, MA: Harvard UniversityPress, 1984.

Wilson, Edward Osborne. Sociobiology: The New Syn-thesis. Cambridge, MA: Belknap/Harvard UniversityPress, 1975; reprint, 25th Anniversary Edition,2000.

Worster, Donald. Nature’s Economy: A History of Eco-logical Ideas. Cambridge, MA: Cambridge UniversityPress, 1977.

York, Michael. Pagan Theology. Washington Square, NY:New York University Press, 2004.

York, Michael. The Emerging Network: A Sociology of theNew Age and Neo-Pagan Movements. Lanham, MD:Rowman & Littlefield, 1995.

Zinnbauer, Brian J., Kenneth I. Pargament, et al. “Religionand Spirituality: Unfuzzying the Fuzzy.” Journal for theScientific Study of Religion 36:4 (1997), 549–64.

xxvi Bibliography

Page 24: The Encyclopedia of Religion and Natureusers.clas.ufl.edu/bron/ern/1-prelim(all-but-contents-pg).pdf · goes far beyond the question as to whether religions are naturally green, turning
Page 25: The Encyclopedia of Religion and Natureusers.clas.ufl.edu/bron/ern/1-prelim(all-but-contents-pg).pdf · goes far beyond the question as to whether religions are naturally green, turning

Acknowledgments andDescription of the Genesis andEvolution of the Encyclopedia

The idea for this encyclopedia was hatched by JeffreyKaplan who suggested it to me over lunch during theAmerican Academy of Religion meeting in San Franciscoin November, 1997. He became interested in the relation-ships between religion and nature when noting someinteresting similarities in the nature spiritualities thatcould be found within two distinct, radical subcultures inEurope and America, that of the racist right, which he hadbeen studying for years, and radical environmentalism, amovement with which I had conducted extensive fieldwork. He knew I had been focusing broadly on “religionand nature” and thought that given his extensive workwith major reference works – including his own Encyclo-pedia of White Power (2000) and as a graduate studentassisting in the production of The Fundamentalism Project(Marty and Appleby 1991–1995) – that we could producea valuable reference work. I agreed and began to work up aprospective list of entries.

It was obvious from the outset that the field was verybroad and that to do it justice we would need to reachwidely across disciplinary lines. During the next two yearswe brainstormed over 400 entries and contributors, beganissuing invitations to those we hoped would agree to beassociate or assistant editors, secured a publisher, andbrought Sean Connors on board to develop a beautifulwebsite for introducing and administering the project,which was set up at www.religionandnature.com. Connorsbecame a web guru in the subsequent years, and I amgrateful he stuck through this project. He did so graciouslydespite many pressures, and moreover, has put in a signifi-cant amount of pro bono time.

A number of scholars were invited to a November 1998meeting in Boston, immediately before the AmericanAcademy of Religion meeting, to think about the project.The night before, during a conversation over what namewould be best for the encyclopedia, of many options,“religion and nature” was offered up, and it quicklyappeared to provide the broadest trope for the project,superior therefore to the more common “religion andecology” appellation. The next day some twenty scholarsjoined in a day-long discussion of the breadth and framingof the project, as well as its specific entries and contribu-tors. From there we developed lists of cooperating editorsand an additional list of entries to pursue. After themeeting the amalgamated list was distributed to all of

those then involved in the project. These scholars werethen asked what entries, contributors, and perspectiveswere missing. Throughout the project, I invited newlyidentified contributors to consult the online lists of entries(which could be sorted and reviewed in a number of ways)and suggest how we could strengthen it. This encyclopediahas, therefore, been shaped by a snowball methodology.Snowball it did, to nearly 1000 entries and over 500contributors.

Throughout the project we sought to provide broadcoverage of the subject matter, both chronologically andwith regard to religious type, geographical region, and anumber of other themes (such as science, religion, andnature). With the enthusiastic help of the University ofTennessee’s Rosalind Hackett, who served as conferencechair for the 2000 International Association for theHistory of Religions in Durban, South Africa, I convened aseries of sessions on religion and nature. These sessionshelped to ensure that the African continent would not beneglected, and led to many valuable connections. I alsohad many meetings and a great deal of correspondencewith all of the collaborating editors and many of theencyclopedia’s contributors. I followed up every sugges-tion that seemed promising.

This is not to say that the encyclopedia succeeded atbeing comprehensive – there are some regions where Ifailed to find able and willing contributors; North Africawest of Egypt and Antarctica come immediately tomind as examples. We did cover more ground than Ithought would be possible at the outset, however. It turnedout that there are many scholars who, when asked, cananalyze religion and nature in the regions or traditionsor periods they are most familiar with, even if they hadnot previously focused their view in this direction.Nevertheless, some readers will no doubt wonder whyone subject and not another was covered. There may bejustifiable criticisms along these lines, although mostof the subjects likely to be identified as missing wereprobably pursued without success. More importantly,however, is the recognition that today no referencework can be entirely comprehensive, so perhaps abetter test of an encyclopedia’s efficacy is its success atdemarcating the territory to be covered and analyzingcarefully a representative sample of the phenomena inquestion.

Page 26: The Encyclopedia of Religion and Natureusers.clas.ufl.edu/bron/ern/1-prelim(all-but-contents-pg).pdf · goes far beyond the question as to whether religions are naturally green, turning

One incurs many debts in orchestrating a scholarlyproject like this and I wish to acknowledge the many andsometimes extraordinary contributions that have beenmade. First, I would like to thank those I have, in agree-ment with Consulting Editor Jeffrey Kaplan, designatedExecutive, Associate and Assistant Editors. Thesedecisions were based on their overall contributions tothe project. Associate Editors played significant roles inshaping a sub-area in the encyclopedia, often helping toidentify entries and recruit contributors and providingpeer reviews of entries in their own areas of expertise, aswell as making substantial contributions of their ownto it. Assistant Editors provided significant assistance inrecommending entries and/or recruiting contributors,sometimes played a role in reviewing submissions, andusually contributed their own entries. They are listedimmediately after the title page of this encyclopedia. Threescholars who deserve special recognition have beendesignated Executive Editors: Michael York, AdrianIvakhiv, and Laura Hobgood-Oster. They have doneeverything the other editors have done but more of it, andalways in an exceptionally good-natured and timelymanner.

Many of the 518 contributors, in addition to their ownwriting, provided suggestions and leads which enrichedthe project significantly. I cannot remember where all suchgood ideas came from, but wish to thank those who pro-vided them. I would also like to thank those contributorswho, at one point or another, went out of their way to finda prospective contributor, a bibliographical reference, orprovided a peer review of one or more entries. These extraefforts represented extraordinary kindness, which I willnot forget. Every standard entry in this encyclopediawas fully peer reviewed, not only by Jeffrey Kaplan andmyself, but by one or more scholars familiar with the sub-ject under scrutiny. I also wish to thank the fine scholarswho reviewed and helped me improve my own contribu-tions to this encyclopedia, including Sarah McFarlandTaylor, Becky Gould, Sarah Pike, Graham Harvey,Arne Kalland, Michael York, Adrian Ivakhiv, MichaelZimmerman, Curt Meine, Ron Engel, Les Sponsel, StephenHumphrey, and Anna Peterson. Having such friendsand colleagues is one of the great rewards of this kind ofcollaborative scholarship.

I would like to thank the pioneers of the emerging

scholarly fields which have most often been labeled“environmental ethics” and “religion and ecology.” Someof these figures have entries about them, for their contri-butions have been seminal. Many others (but not all whocould have been mentioned) appear in RELIGIOUS STUDIES

AND ENVIRONMENTAL CONCERN, ENVIRONMENTAL ETHICS, or otherentries. These scholars provided the foundational workthat made this project possible, and in some ways timelyand necessary. They were the ones who raised many of thequestions that are probed in these pages.

I also need to thank a number of student assistants whohave assisted in this project, often for short periods oftime, but without whom this encyclopedia would not havebeen completed as promptly as it was. A number of thesewere involved with the Environmental Studies program atthe University of Wisconsin Oshkosh, where I was beforeI moved to the University of Florida (in 2002) to helpdevelop a graduate program that has an emphasis inReligion and Nature. Now settled in, I have had the ableassistance of several exceptional graduate students,Todd Best, Gavin Van Horn, Luke Johnson, and BridgetteO’Brien, who handled, with scrupulous attention to detail,many of the production tasks. I have also, already, learneda great deal from my new colleagues in Florida, includingthrough their contributions to this encyclopedia; eightfaculty members and three graduate students havecontributed articles to it.

As is usually the case, the greatest debts of gratitudethat accumulate during a scholarly project are to thosewho have suffered the most from it. I wish to underscore,therefore, my gratitude to Jeffrey Kaplan for seeingthrough this project. Over its course it more than doubledin size. Despite this unwelcome increase in workload, heread nearly every entry (sometimes several times). Withhis broad, history of religion training, he made regular andsubstantial contributions to its quality. I am grateful, aswell, to Jeff’s wife, Eva. She has been remarkably graciousconsidering the hours this project has consumed thatmight otherwise have been more family focused. Finally tomy children, Anders, Kaarin, and Kelsey, and to my wifeBeth, I owe the greatest measure of thanks, for their longforbearance and support, which affords me the luxury ofpursuing the issues engaged in these pages.

Bron Taylor, The University of Florida

xxviii Acknowledgments

Page 27: The Encyclopedia of Religion and Natureusers.clas.ufl.edu/bron/ern/1-prelim(all-but-contents-pg).pdf · goes far beyond the question as to whether religions are naturally green, turning

Reader’s GuideThis encyclopedia explores the conundrums addressed inthe volume’s introduction and it does so by examining awide variety of religion-and-nature-related phenomena. Italso does so in a variety of ways, including through itsthree distinct entry genres.

Scholarly entries have been written in a standardencyclopedia genre in which the premium has been tointroduce a theme, historical period or event, region,tradition, group, or individual, while analyzing its rele-vance to the overall discussion in a scholarly and balancedway. With these fully peer-reviewed entries, care has beentaken to provide readers with sufficient information andrecommended readings to enable independent follow-upand further research.

Scholarly Perspectives entries, which are demarcatedand are denoted by the symbol SP , afford prominentfigures an opportunity to reflect on the religion and naturefield in a more personal and reflective way, or theirauthors may advance an argument in a way that would beatypical in a standard, scholarly encyclopedia entry.

Practitioner entries, which are also demarcated by thesymbol P are written by individuals actively engaged inone or another form of nature-related spirituality. Theyfurther illuminate the ferment over religion and nature byproviding wide latitude for religious practitioners who areinterested in religion and nature to express themselves intheir own words.

Most entries are easy to find alphabetically. Some thatare closely related to longer ones are nestled adjacent tothem in “sidebar” entries, which are enclosed in a linedbox. Sidebars are designed to illuminate or otherwiseextend the discussion in the associated entry.

Because website locations are notoriously ephemeral,unless direct quotes are taken from them they have notbeen included in the further reading sections. The manygroups and individuals discussed in these volumescan, of course, be easily found through internet searchengines. The website associated with this project, whichis located at www.religionandnature.com, has links tomany of the groups noted in the text, as well as to supple-mentary information related to many of the entries.This information includes graphics, photographs, music,non-English bibliographic resources, and bibliographicinformation available after the encyclopedia was pub-lished. Readers will be able to learn more by visiting thiswebsite in the future, which is intended to be periodicallyupdated.

Cross-references follow most entries. These do morethan point to directly related entries; they provide con-trasts and sometimes unexpected comparative referencepoints. In this introduction, cross-references are indicatedby SMALL CAPS in the text, as are the cross-references intwo entries that were written to complement the intro-duction: ENVIRONMENTAL ETHICS and RELIGIOUS STUDIES AND

ENVIRONMENTAL CONCERN.Indeed, after reading the introduction most readers

would do well to begin with these two entries, addingECOLOGY AND RELIGION, ECOLOGICAL ANTHROPOLOGY, and SOCIAL

SCIENCE ON RELIGION AND NATURE for an overview ofanthropological and other social scientific approaches tounderstanding the religion/nature/culture nexus. Com-bined with the adjoining encyclopedia introduction, theseentries provide a broad introduction to the religion andnature field.

Of course, some will prefer to begin immediately bypaging through the volumes and reading entries thatstrike their interest, then following the cross-references atthe end of each entry. Another approach would be to pagethrough the general index and read entries clustered there,for example, by religion or region. Alternatively, onecould follow a particular figure of interest through manyentries where she or he might be mentioned, an approachthat would illuminate that individual’s contributions andinfluence. The work can be read in other ways as well –regional overviews first, or all the entries on specific tradi-tions or themes. It could also be read chronologically,starting with our entries on PALEOLITHIC RELIGIONS and thenthose exploring ancient civilizations, for example, beforemoving to later periods. Another way to start would beto turn to the volume’s list of contributors and readthe entries written by writers with whom one is alreadyfamiliar. The voices in the Encyclopedia of Religion andNature include some of the world’s environmental,religious, and scholarly luminaries, as well as a widevariety of scholars and religious practitioners from aroundthe world. For many of the contributors, English is nottheir first language, and their writing reflects some of thegrammatical conventions of their mother tongues. Wehave edited such entries lightly, and hopefully, haveretained the sense as well as the feel for the originalsubmission.

The approaches to this work will, little doubt, be asnumerous and diverse as the contributors to it and thereaders of it.

Page 28: The Encyclopedia of Religion and Natureusers.clas.ufl.edu/bron/ern/1-prelim(all-but-contents-pg).pdf · goes far beyond the question as to whether religions are naturally green, turning
Page 29: The Encyclopedia of Religion and Natureusers.clas.ufl.edu/bron/ern/1-prelim(all-but-contents-pg).pdf · goes far beyond the question as to whether religions are naturally green, turning

List of ContributorsKhaled Abou El FadlUniversity of California, Los Angeles, Law School

David AbramAlliance for Wild Ethics

Carol J. AdamsRichardson, Texas

Julius O. AdekunleMonmouth University

Kaveh L. AfrasiabiAlbion College

Ahmed AfzaalDrew University

Safia AggarwalCenter for Applied Biodiversity Science at ConservationInternational

Ali AhmadBayero UniversityNigeria

Catherine L. AlbaneseUniversity of California, Santa Barbara

Thomas G. AlexanderBrigham Young University

Kelly D. AlleyAuburn University

Nawal AmmarKent State University

JoAllyn ArchambaultSmithsonian Institution, National Museum of NaturalHistory

Jose ArgüellesValum Votan, Foundation for the Law of Time

Kaj ÅrhemGöteborg UniversitySweden

Ellen L. ArnoldEast Carolina University

Philip P. ArnoldSyracuse University

Shawn ArthurBoston University

David BackesUniversity of Wisconsin, Milwaukee

Paul G. BahnContributing Editor, Archaeology and Advisory Editor,AntiquityUnited Kingdom

William Sims BainbridgeWashington, D.C.

Don BakerUniversity of British ColumbiaCanada

Karen Baker-FletcherSouthern Methodist University

Peter W. BakkenAu Sable Institute of Environmental Studies

William BaléeTulane University

Connie BarlowTheGreatStory.org

David Landis BarnhillUniversity of Wisconsin Oshkosh

Ara BarsamUniversity of OxfordUnited Kingdom

Brian BartlettSaint Mary’s UniversityCanada

Libby BassettProject on Religion and Human Rights

Tom BaughSummerville, Georgia

Robert M. BaumIowa State University

John BaumannUniversity of Wisconsin Oshkosh

Marc BekoffUniversity of Colorado

Franca BellarsiUniversité Libre de BruxellesBelgium

Page 30: The Encyclopedia of Religion and Natureusers.clas.ufl.edu/bron/ern/1-prelim(all-but-contents-pg).pdf · goes far beyond the question as to whether religions are naturally green, turning

Gustavo BenavidesVillanova University

David H BennettAustralian Academy of the HumanitiesAustralia

Robert W. BensonLoyola Law School, Los Angeles

Helen A. BergerWest Chester University of Pennsylvania

Sigurd BergmannNorwegian University of Science and TechnologyNorway

Fikret BerkesNatural Resources Institute, University of ManitobaCanada

Penelope S. BernardRhodes UniversitySouth Africa

Edwin BernbaumSacred Mountains Program, The Mountain Institute

Evan BerryUniversity of California, Santa Barbara

Thomas BerryGreensboro, North Carolina

Steven BestUniversity of Texas, El Paso

Sharon V. BetcherVancouver School of TheologyCanada

Santikaro BhikkhuLiberation Park (Missouri)

Brent BlackwelderFriends of the Earth United States

Jenny BlainSheffield Hallam UniversityUnited Kingdom

John BlairThe Queen’s College, OxfordUnited Kingdom

J. David BleichCardozo School of Law

Ben BohanePacific WeeklyAustralia

George D. BondNorthwestern University

Marion BowmanThe Open UniversityUnited Kingdom

Veronica BradyUniversity of Western Australia

Susan Power BrattonBaylor University

Morgan BrentChaminade UniversityHonolulu

Harald Beyer BrochUniversity of OsloNorway

Paul Custodio BubeLyon College

Rogene A. BuchholzLoyola University New Orleans

Raymond A. BuckoCreighton University

Gina BuijsUniversity of ZululandSouth Africa

Douglas Burton-ChristieLoyola Marymount University

H. James ByersMillian Byers Associates

Ernest CallenbachBerkeley, California

J. Baird CallicottUniversity of North Texas

Heidi CampbellUniversity of EdinburghUnited Kingdom

Jane CaputiFlorida Atlantic University

Adrian CastroMiami, Florida

Maria G. CattellHillside Haven Sculpture Gardens

Joseph G. ChampColorado State University

David W. ChappellSoka University of America

Christopher Key ChappleLoyola Marymount University

xxxii List of Contributors

Page 31: The Encyclopedia of Religion and Natureusers.clas.ufl.edu/bron/ern/1-prelim(all-but-contents-pg).pdf · goes far beyond the question as to whether religions are naturally green, turning

David ChidesterUniversity of Cape TownSouth Africa

Jamsheed K. ChoksyIndiana University

John ChryssavgisBoston, Massachusetts

John P. ClarkCity College, Loyola University (New Orleans)

Richard O. ClemmerUniversity of Denver

Chas S. CliftonColorado State University-Pueblo

John B. Cobb, Jr.Claremont School of Theology

Jane CoffeyNew York City

Juan ColeUniversity of Michigan

Karen Colligan-TaylorUniversity of Alaska Fairbanks

Ernst M. ConradieUniversity of the Western CapeSouth Africa

Jonathan CookYale University

Robert S. CorringtonDrew University

Harold CowardUniversity of VictoriaCanada

Elaine CraddockSouthwestern University

C.A. CranstonUniversity of TasmaniaAustralia

Harriet CrawfordInstitute of Archaeology, University College LondonUnited Kingdom

Paul Jerome CroceStetson University

Helen CrovettoIndependent Scholar

Mary CurrierPueblo Community College (Colorado)

Patrick CurryLondon, United Kingdom

Arthur DahlInternational Environment ForumSwitzerland

Lisle DaltonHartwick College

Inus (M.L.) DaneelBoston University School of Theology

Barbara Darling-SmithWheaton College (Norton, Massachusetts)

Susan M. DarlingtonHampshire College

John DavisNaropa University

Mark DavisAustralian Broadcasting Commission

Richard DavisAustralian Institute of Aboriginal and Torres StraitIslander Studies

Barbara Jane DavyConcordia University (Montreal)Canada

Jan DawsonSouthwestern University

Filip De BoeckCatholic University of LeuvenBelgium

Mahinda DeegalleBath Spa University CollegeUnited Kingdom

Vine Deloria, Jr.University of Colorado

Raymond J. DeMallieIndiana University

Calvin B. DeWittUniversity of Wisconsin-Madison and Au Sable Instituteof Environmental Studies

Laura E. DonaldsonCornell University

William G. DotyThe University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa

Michael DowdTheGreatStory.org

Brad DraperSanta Fe, New Mexico

List of Contributors xxxiii

Page 32: The Encyclopedia of Religion and Natureusers.clas.ufl.edu/bron/ern/1-prelim(all-but-contents-pg).pdf · goes far beyond the question as to whether religions are naturally green, turning

Julian DrooganThe University of SydneyAustralia

Ulrich DuchrowHeidelberg University, Kairos EuropaGermany

Meredith DudleyTulane University

Vilius Rudra DundzilaTruman College

Meghan DunnOttawa, Ontario, Canada

Jim DwyerCalifornia State University, Chico

Heater EatonSt Paul College

Felicity EdwardsRhodes UniversitySouth Africa

Evan EisenbergNew York City

Robert EllwoodUniversity of Southern California

Heather ElmattiLake Sumter Community College

Anne ElveyMonash University

JeDon A. EmenhiserHumboldt State University

J. Ronald EngelMeadville/Lombard Theological School

Mikhail EpsteinEmory University

Shaneen FantinUniversity of QueenslandAustralia

Paul FaulstichPitzer College

Louis E. FenechUniversity of Northern Iowa

Anne FerlatBath Spa University CollegeUnited Kingdom

Andrew FialaUniversity of Wisconsin, Green Bay

David N. FieldAfrica UniversityZimbabwe

Stephen L. FieldTrinity University (San Antonio, Texas)

Robert Melchior FigueroaColgate University

Martha L. FinchSouthwest Missouri State University

Andy FisherPsychotherapistCanada

Richard C. FoltzUniversity of Florida

Selena FoxCircle Sanctuary

Nick FreemanBath, United Kingdom

William FrenchLoyola University of Chicago

Urte Undine FrömmingInstitut für Ethnologie, Freie UniversitätGermany

Robert C. FullerBradley University

Betsy GainesBozeman, Montana

Juan Carlos GaleanoFlorida State University

Virginia Garrard-BurnettUniversity of Texas

Joel GeffenUniversity of California, Santa Barbara

Manfred GerstenfeldJerusalem Center for Public AffairsIsrael

Peter H. GilmoreChurch of Satan

Samson GitauUniversity of NairobiKenya

Matthew GlassUniversity of GuelphCanada

Stephen D. GlazierUniversity of Nebraska-Lincoln

xxxiv List of Contributors

Page 33: The Encyclopedia of Religion and Natureusers.clas.ufl.edu/bron/ern/1-prelim(all-but-contents-pg).pdf · goes far beyond the question as to whether religions are naturally green, turning

James M. GloverSouthern Illinois University, Carbondale

Ann Grodzins GoldSyracuse University

Tom GoldtoothIndigenous Environmental Network

Carlos Valério A. GomesUniversity of Florida

Jane GoodallJane Goodall Institute

Ursula GoodenoughWashington University (St Louis, Missouri)

Roger S. GottliebWorcester Polytechnic Institute

Rebecca Kneale GouldMiddlebury College

Marion GrauChurch Divinity School of the Pacific

Arthur GreenBrandeis University

Niels Henrik GregersenUniversity of AarhusDenmark

Roger GriffinOxford Brookes UniversityUnited Kingdom

Wendy GriffinCalifornia State University, Long Beach

Ronald L. GrimesWilfrid Laurier UniversityCanada

Frik GrobbelaarRustler’s ValleySouth Africa

Rita M. GrossUniversity of Wisconsin, Eau Clare

Richard A. GroundsEuchee (Yuchi) Language Project

Andreas GruenschlossUniversity of GöttingenGermany

Sigridur GudmarsdottirDrew University

Christine E. GudorfFlorida International University

Mathias GuentherWilfrid Laurier University (Waterloo, Ontario)Canada

Roxanne Kamayani GuptaAlbright College

Norman HabelFlinders University of South Australia

David L. HabermanIndiana University (Bloomington)

Ruben L.F. HabitoSouthern Methodist University

Rosalind HackettUniversity of Tennessee

Heidi HadsellHartford Seminary

Harry HahneGolden Gate Theological Seminary

John R. HaleUniversity of Louisville

Sian HallRhodes UniversitySouth Africa

Max O. HallmanMerced College

William David Hammond-TookeUniversity of the WitwatersrandSouth Africa

Ian HancockUniversity of Texas

Jesse Wolf HardinThe Earthen Spirituality Project

Adrian HarrisDragon Environmental NetworkUnited Kingdom

Paul HarrisonWorld Pantheist Movement

John HartBoston University School of Theology

Graham HarveyThe Open UniversityUnited Kingdom

Veronica HatutasiUniversity of SidneyAustralia

Randy HayesRainforest Action Network

List of Contributors xxxv

Page 34: The Encyclopedia of Religion and Natureusers.clas.ufl.edu/bron/ern/1-prelim(all-but-contents-pg).pdf · goes far beyond the question as to whether religions are naturally green, turning

Jennifer HeathBoulder, Colorado

Marguerite HelmersUniversity of Wisconsin Oshkosh

Martin HenigInstitute of Archaeology, University of OxfordUnited Kingdom

Glenn HeningGroundswell Society

Nimachia HernandezUniversity of California, Berkeley

Dieter T. HesselProgram on Ecology, Justice and Faith

Anne HillSerpentine Music, University of Creation Spirituality

Robert HinshawDaimon Verlag PublishersSwitzerland

Laura Hobgood-OsterSouthwestern University

Dorothy L. HodgsonRutgers University

Götz HoeppeFreie Universität BerlinGermany

Steven J. HolmesRoslindale, Massachusetts

Stewart M. HooverUniversity of Colorado

Liz HoskenThe Gaia FoundationUnited Kingdom

Richard HoskinsBath Spa University CollegeUnited Kingdom

Nancy J. HudsonUniversity of Toledo

Kirk HuffmanVanuatu Cultural Centre and the Australian MuseumVanuatu and Australia

J. Donald HughesUniversity of Denver

Lynne HumeThe University of QueenslandAustralia

Michael Llewellyn HumphreysDrew University

Richard HuntKirkwood Community College

Edvard HvidingUniversity of BergenNorway

Peter IllynRestoring Eden

Matthew ImmergutDrew University

Timothy IngalsbeeUniversity of Oregon

Shaya IsenbergUniversity of Florida

Adrian IvakhivUniversity of Vermont

Christopher IvesStonehill College

Knut A. JacobsenUniversity of BergenNorway

George A. JamesUniversity of North Texas

William Closson JamesQueen’s University at KingstonCanada

Maria JansdotterKarlstad UniversitySweden

David JasperUniversity of GlasgowUnited Kingdom

David JeffreysUniversity College London Institute of ArchaeologyUnited Kingdom

Sabine Jell-BahlsenSan Antonio, Texas

Molly JensenSouthwestern University

Tim JensenUniversity of Southern DenmarkDenmark

Xu JianchuCenter for Biodiversity and Indigenous KnowledgePeople’s Republic of China

xxxvi List of Contributors

Page 35: The Encyclopedia of Religion and Natureusers.clas.ufl.edu/bron/ern/1-prelim(all-but-contents-pg).pdf · goes far beyond the question as to whether religions are naturally green, turning

David JohnsPortland State University

Elizabeth JohnsonUniversity of SydneyAustralia

Greg JohnsonFranklin & Marshall College

William R. Jordan IIIThe New Academy for Nature and Culture

Arne KallandUniversity of OsloNorway

Jeffrey KaplanUniversity of Wisconsin Oshkosh

George KaramanolisKeble College (Oxford)Greece

James KarmanCalifornia State University, Chico

Joseph KasofUniversity of California, Irvine

Sadamichi KatoNagoya UniversityJapan

Stephanie KazaUniversity of Vermont

Laurel KearnsDrew University

Will KeepinSatyana Institute

Stephen R. KellertYale University

Justin KenrickUniversity of GlasgowUnited Kingdom

Stephen A. KentUniversity of AlbertaCanada

Richard KerridgeBath Spa UniversityUnited Kingdom

Fazlun M. KhalidIslamic Foundation for Ecology and Environmental

SciencesUnited Kingdom

James P. KiernanUniversity of NatalSouth Africa

Sallie B. KingJames Madison University

Marda KirnUniversity of Colorado

Leeona KlippsteinSpirit of the Sage Council

Maureen KorpSt Paul University and Carleton University

Kenneth KraftLehigh University

James KrausChaminade University (Hawai’i)

Shepard Krech IIIBrown University

Andrea A. KresgeUniversity of Colorado

P. KrishnaKrishnamurti Foundation IndiaIndia

Heinz KuckertzSouth Africa

Satish KumarDirector of Programmes, Schumacher College and Editor

of ResurgenceUnited Kingdom

László KürtiUniversity of MiskolcHungary

John LabandUniversity of NatalSouth Africa

Winona LaDukeAnishinaabe, White Earth Reservation and Honor theEarth

Vinay LalUniversity of California, Los Angeles

Katherine LangtonFormer member, Findhorn Foundation and New Findhorn

Association

David K. LarsenUniversity of Chicago

Marty LaubachCovenant of the Unitarian Universalist Pagans and

Marshall University

Frédéric LaugrandUniversité LavalQuébec, Canada

List of Contributors xxxvii

Page 36: The Encyclopedia of Religion and Natureusers.clas.ufl.edu/bron/ern/1-prelim(all-but-contents-pg).pdf · goes far beyond the question as to whether religions are naturally green, turning

Gary LeaseUniversity of California, Santa Cruz

Berel Dov LernerWestern Galilee CollegeIsrael

Andy LetcherKing Alfred’s CollegeWinchester, United Kingdom

Mags LiddyGluaiseacht, Ireland

Andrew LightNew York University

Dennis LishkaUniversity of Wisconsin Oshkosh

Roland LittlewoodUniversity College LondonUnited Kingdom

Michael LodahlPoint Loma Nazarene University

Deryck O. LodrickUniversity of California, Berkeley

Jack LoefflerSanta Fe, New Mexico

Beverley LomerFlorida Atlantic University

Mark C. LongKeene State College

Lois Ann LorentzenUniversity of San Francisco

Johannes LoubserNew South Associates, Inc.

James LovelockGreen College, University of OxfordUnited Kingdom

Abdur-Razzaq LubisIndependent Scholar/ActivistMalaysia

Phillip Charles LucasStetson University

Ralph H. LuttsGoddard College

Dana LyonsBellingham, Washington

Oren LyonsState University of New York, Buffalo

Iain S. MacleanJames Madison University

Joanna MacyBerkeley, California

Lisa Maria MaderaEmory University

Sabina MaglioccoCalifornia State University, Northridge

Fiona MagowanAdelaide UniversityAustralia

Daniel C. MaguireMarquette University

Harry O. MaierVancouver School of TheologyCanada

Vasilios N. MakridesUniversity of ErfurtGermany

Susan MartensWageningen UniversityThe Netherlands

James B. Martin-SchrammLuther College

Freya MathewsLa Trobe UniversityAustralia

Tilar J. MazzeoColby College

Gathuru MburuKenya Green Belt MovementKenya

Judy McAllisterFindhorn FoundationUnited Kingdom

Kate McCarthyCalifornia State University, Chico

Mary A. McCayLoyola University of New Orleans

Jay McDanielHendrix College

Sean McDonaghColumban Missionary PriestIreland and the Philippines

Sallie McFagueVancouver School of TheologyCanada

xxxviii List of Contributors

Page 37: The Encyclopedia of Religion and Natureusers.clas.ufl.edu/bron/ern/1-prelim(all-but-contents-pg).pdf · goes far beyond the question as to whether religions are naturally green, turning

Michael Vincent McGinnisSanta Ynez Watershed

Davianna Pomaika’i McGregorUniversity of Hawai’i, Manoa

Mark McGuireCornell University

Alastair McIntoshCentre for Human EcologyScotland, United Kingdom

Michael McKenzieKeuka College

Bill McKibbenVermont

Jay MechlingUniversity of California, Davis

Curt MeineWisconsin Academy of Sciences, Arts and Letters

Paul MemmottUniversity of QueenslandAustralia

Sophia MenacheUniversity of HaifaIsrael

Eduardo MendietaState University of New York, Stony Brook

Kathryn MilesUnity College of Maine

James MillerQueen’s UniversityCanada

Timothy MillerUniversity of Kansas

Seth MirskySanta Clara University

Yotaro MiyamotoKansai UniversityJapan

Jean Molesky-PozUniversity of San Francisco

Jürgen MoltmannTübingen UniversityGermany

Patricia MonaghanDePaul University

Bruce MonserudUniversity of Florida

Victor MontejoUniversity of California, Davis

Michael D. MooreWilfrid Laurier UniversityCanada

John MortonLa Trobe UniversityAustralia

Michael MoynihanPortland State University

Leina MpokeKenya

Isabel MukonyoraUniversity of Virginia

Jane MulcockUniversity of Western Australia

Patrick D. MurphyIndiana University of Pennsylvania

Ched MyersBartimaeus Cooperative Ministries

Arne NaessUniversity of OsloNorway

Vasudha NarayananUniversity of Florida

James A. NashBoston University School of Theology

Poranee Natadecha-SponselChaminade University (Honolulu)

Ricardo A. NavarroCESTA and Friends of the Earth InternationalEl Salvador

D. Keith NaylorOccidental College

Michael P. NelsonUniversity of Wisconsin-Stevens Point

William NicholsDenison University

Daniel C. Noel(Deceased 2003)

Richard NollDeSales University

Helena Norberg-HodgeInternational Society for Ecology and CultureUnited Kingdom

List of Contributors xxxix

Page 38: The Encyclopedia of Religion and Natureusers.clas.ufl.edu/bron/ern/1-prelim(all-but-contents-pg).pdf · goes far beyond the question as to whether religions are naturally green, turning

Tumani NyajekaInterdenominational Theological Center

Celia NyamweruSt Lawrence University

Becky O’BrienUniversity of Colorado

Tara O’LearyCentre for Human EcologyScotland, United Kingdom

Max OelschlaegerNorthern Arizona University

Oyeronke OlajubuUniversity Of IlorinNigeria

Asenath OmwegaKenya

Beverly OrtizCalifornia State University, Hayward

David OrtonGreen WebCanada

John OsborneArt of Living Foundation

Sven OuzmanNational MuseumSouth Africa

Ibrahim OzdemirAnkara UniversityTurkey

Jordan PaperYork University (Toronto) and University of Victoria

(British Columbia)Canada

Robert PapiniKwaMuhle Museum and Durban Metro Local History

MuseumsSouth Africa

Mohammad Aslam ParvaizIslamic Foundation for Science and EnvironmentIndia

Cathrien de PaterRhenenThe Netherlands

Joanne PearsonCardiff UniversityUnited Kingdom

David PecoticUniversity of SydneyAustralia

Kusumita P. PedersenSt Francis College, Brooklyn

Juha PentikäinenUniversity of HelsinkiFinland

David PetersenSan Juan Mountains, Colorado

Anna PetersonUniversity of Florida

Brandt Gustav PetersonUniversity of Texas at Austin

Mark C.E. PetersonUniversity of Wisconsin Colleges

Daniel J. PhilipponUniversity of Minnesota

Sarah M. PikeCalifornia State University, Chico

Sarah PinnockTrinity University

Alexandra PlowsUniversity of Wales BangorUnited Kingdom

Mario PoceskiUniversity of Florida

Amanda PorterfieldUniversity of Wyoming

Paula J. PosasAlexandria, Virginia

Grant PottsUniversity of Pennsylvania

John PowersAustralian National University

Frans PrinsNatal MuseumSouth Africa

James D. ProctorUniversity of California, Santa Barbara

Daniel QuinnHouston, Texas

Selva J. RajAlbion College

Susan Elizabeth RamírezTexas Christian University

xl List of Contributors

Page 39: The Encyclopedia of Religion and Natureusers.clas.ufl.edu/bron/ern/1-prelim(all-but-contents-pg).pdf · goes far beyond the question as to whether religions are naturally green, turning

Richard O. RandolphSaint Paul School of Theology

Shelagh RangerOxford, United Kingdom

Terence RangerUniversity of ZimbabweZimbabwe

Larry RasmussenUnion Theology Seminary

Shishir R. RavalNorth Carolina State University

Kay A. ReadDePaul University

Calvin RedekopConrad Grebel GollegeCanada

Elizabeth ReichelUniversity of WalesUnited Kingdom

Mary Judith RessCon-spirando CollectiveChile

Terry ReyFlorida International University

Xavier Ricard LanataCollège de France and Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences

Sociales (EHESS)Peru

Keith RichmondMonash UniversityAustralia

Joerg RiegerSouthern Methodist University

Marguerite RigogliosoCalifornia Institute of Integral Studies

Laura RivalUniversity of OxfordUnited Kingdom

Catherine M. RoachThe University of Alabama

Richard H. RobertsUniversities of Lancaster and StirlingUnited Kingdom

Steven C. RockefellerMiddlebury College

Holmes Rolston, IIIColorado State University

Deborah Bird RoseThe Australian National University

Jean E. RosenfeldUniversity of California at Los Angeles

Sandra B. RosenthalLoyola University New Orleans

Nicole RoskosDrew University

Eric B. RossInstitute of Social Studies, The HagueThe Netherlands

Lynn Ross-BryantUniversity of Colorado

David RothenbergNew Jersey Institute of Technology

Loyal RueLuther College

Håkan RydvingUniversity of BergenNorway

Scott C. SabinFloresta USA

Jone SalomonsenUniversity of OsloNorway

Richard C. SalterHobart and William Smith Colleges

Mercedes Cros SandovalMiami, Florida

H. Paul SantmireWatertown, Maryland

Zeki SaritoprakJohn Carroll University (Cleveland, Ohio)

Most Rev. Peter K. SarpongCatholic Archbishop of KumasiGhana

Jame SchaeferMarquette University

Stephen Bede ScharperUniversity of TorontoCanada

Judith SchleheInstitut für Völkerkunde, Albert-Ludwigs-UniversitätFreiburg, Germany

Sigrid SchmidtGermany

List of Contributors xli

Page 40: The Encyclopedia of Religion and Natureusers.clas.ufl.edu/bron/ern/1-prelim(all-but-contents-pg).pdf · goes far beyond the question as to whether religions are naturally green, turning

Lambert SchmithausenUniversity of HamburgGermany

Nancy SchwartzUniversity of Northern Iowa

Richard SchwartzCollege of Staten Island

Susan L. ScottWater Stories ProjectCanada

Estuardo SecairaThe Nature Conservancy (Guatemala)Guatemala

John SeedRainforest Information CentreAustralia

David SeidenbergMaon Study Circle

Rebecca Self HillUniversity of Colorado

Kim SellingUniversity of SydneyAustralia

John SeniorRhodes UniversitySouth Africa

Lynda SexsonMontana State University

Myra ShackleyNottingham Trent UniversityUnited Kingdom

Cybelle ShattuckKalamazoo College

Victor A. ShnirelmanRussian Academy of SciencesRussia

David ShorterWesleyan University

Leanne SimpsonTrent UniversityCanada

Andrea SmithThe University of Michigan

J. Andy Smith, IIIEarth Ethics

B.W. SmithUniversity of the WitwatersrandSouth Africa

Keith Harmon SnowWilliamsburg, Massachusetts

Samuel D. SnyderUniversity of Florida

Eleni SotiriuUniversity of ErfurtGermany

Daniel T. SpencerDrake University

Thomas SplainThe Gregorian UniversityRome, Italy

Leslie E. SponselUniversity of Hawai’i

Graham St JohnUniversity of QueenslandAustralia

Mary Zeiss StangeSkidmore College

Joan SteigerwaldYork UniversityCanada

Naomi SteinbergRedwood Rabbis

William SteinerUnited States Geological SurveyPacific Island Ecosystems Research Center

Dale StoverUniversity of Nebraska

Virginia StrausBoston Research Center for the 21st Century

Michael F. StrmiskaMiyazaki International CollegeJapan

Craig S. StrobelConSpiritu: A Center for Earth*Spirit*Arts*Justice

Kocku von StuckradUniversity of AmsterdamThe Netherlands

Gary SuttlePantheist Association for Nature

Donald K. SwearerSwarthmore College

Will SweetmanUniversity of OtagoNew Zealand

xlii List of Contributors

Page 41: The Encyclopedia of Religion and Natureusers.clas.ufl.edu/bron/ern/1-prelim(all-but-contents-pg).pdf · goes far beyond the question as to whether religions are naturally green, turning

Alexandra SzalayAdelaide, Australia

Alon Tal,The Arava Institute for Environmental StudiesIsrael

Bron R. TaylorUniversity of Florida

Sarah McFarland TaylorNorthwestern University

Andy ThomasSouthern Circular ResearchUnited Kingdom

N.C. ThomasAnthroposophical SocietyUnited Kingdom

Gene ThursbyUniversity of Florida

Hava Tirosh-SamuelsonArizona State University

J. Terry ToddDrew University

Brian TokavInstitute for Social Ecology

Friedegard TomasettiUniversity of SydneyAustralia

Des TramacchiUniversity of QueenslandAustralia

Geo Athena TrevarthenUniversity of Edinburgh and the Centre for HumanEcologyUnited Kingdom

Garry W. TrompfUniversity of SydneyAustralia

Mary Evelyn TuckerBucknell University

Masen UlissUniversity of California, Santa Barbara

Hugh B. UrbanOhio State University

Gavin Van HornUniversity of Florida

Louke van WensveenLoyola Marymount University

Manuel VasquezUniversity of Florida

Phra Paisal VisaloWat Pasukato, Thailand

Robert VoeksCalifornia State University, Fullerton

Paul WaldauTufts University

Deward E. Walker, Jr.University of Colorado

Faith M. WalkerMonash UniversityAustralia

Derek WallGoldsmiths College

Mark I. WallaceSwarthmore College

Richard H. WallaceUniversity of Florida

Robert J. WallisSheffield Hallam UniversityUnited Kingdom

Jacob WanyamaKenya

Paul WapnerAmerican University

Faith WarnerBrookes UniversityUnited Kingdom

Captain Paul WatsonSea Shepard Conservation Society

Hattie WellsKykeon HerbalisationUnited Kingdom

Richard E. WentzArizona State University

James L. Wescoat, Jr.University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

Sarah WhedonUniversity of California, Santa Barbara

Dolores WhelanEducation for Changing TimesIreland

David Gordon WhiteUniversity of California, Santa Barbara

Gavin WhitelawNatal Museum & University of KwaZulu-NatalSouth Africa

List of Contributors xliii

Page 42: The Encyclopedia of Religion and Natureusers.clas.ufl.edu/bron/ern/1-prelim(all-but-contents-pg).pdf · goes far beyond the question as to whether religions are naturally green, turning

Elspeth WhitneyUniversity of Nevada, Las Vegas

Matt WiebeUniversity of New Mexico

Jane Williams-HoganBryn Athyn College

David Sloan WilsonBinghamton University

Paul WiseMichigan State University

Akiva WolffJerusalem College of TechnologyIsrael

Mick WomersleyUnity College

Harold WoodUniversal Pantheist Society

Fiona WorthingtonThe Gaia FoundationUnited Kingdom

Phoebe WrayThe Center for Action on Endangered Species

Bill Wylie-KellermannThe Seminary Consortium for Urban Pastoral Education

Michael YorkBath Spa UniversityUnited Kingdom

Michael ZimmermanTulane University

xliv List of Contributors

Page 43: The Encyclopedia of Religion and Natureusers.clas.ufl.edu/bron/ern/1-prelim(all-but-contents-pg).pdf · goes far beyond the question as to whether religions are naturally green, turning

The earth holds manifold treasures in secret places;wealth, jewels, and gold shall she give to me.She bestows wealth liberally; let that kindlygoddess bestow wealth upon us! (44)

Your snowy mountain heights, and your forests,O earth, shall be kind to us!The brown, the black, the red, the multi-colored,the firm earth that is protected by Indra,I have settled upon, not suppressed, not slain, not wounded. (11)

(Hymns of the Atharva Veda,tr. Maurice Bloomfield,

University of Oxford Press, 1897).

The gentle Way of the universe appears to be empty,yet its usefulness is inexhaustible . . .It harmonizes all thingsAnd unites them as one integral whole.

Dao Te Ching, 4

The virtue of the universe is wholenessIt regards all things as equalThe virtue of the sage is wholenessHe too regards all things as equal

Dao Te Ching, 5

When people lack a sense of pure spiritual pietyToward natural life,then awful things happen in their life.Therefore, respect where you dwell.

Dao Te Ching, 72

God made wild beasts of every kind and cattle of every kind,and all kinds of creeping things of the earth.And God saw that this was good.

Genesis 1:25(New Jewish Publication

Society Translation, 1985)

Page 44: The Encyclopedia of Religion and Natureusers.clas.ufl.edu/bron/ern/1-prelim(all-but-contents-pg).pdf · goes far beyond the question as to whether religions are naturally green, turning