This book examines the moral dimensions of the climate crisis, focusing on land-use emissions and biodiversity loss. It argues that nations have moral obligations to halt deforestation, proposing a new framework for climate ethics and shared responsibility.
This book explores Environmental Ethics from the Nine Schools of Indian philosophy. It argues that external woes like pollution and climate change are merely manifestations of humanity’s internal disharmony, and that the solution requires a profound internal transformation.
An [Un]Likely Alliance
This study explores ‘environment’ and ‘ecology’ in the philosophy of Deleuze and Guattari. It is a call to think complexity, evading dualisms like nature vs. culture to conceptualize a radical, non-anthropocentric ecoscience.