| Preface |
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vii | |
| Introduction |
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1 | (72) |
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Part I: The Historical Question |
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On Classical Judaism and Environmental Crisis |
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73 | (7) |
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The Hebrew View of Nature |
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80 | (6) |
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Concepts of Nature in the Hebrew Bible |
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86 | (19) |
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The Forestry of the Prophets |
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105 | (7) |
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The Agricultural and Ecological Symbolism of the Four Species of Sukkot |
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112 | (13) |
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Judaism and the Practice of Stewardship |
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125 | (11) |
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Man and Nature in the Sabbatical Year |
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136 | (7) |
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Commentary on the Book of Genesis, Chapter 1 |
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143 | (18) |
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Part II: The Ethical Question |
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Our Covenant with Stones: A Jewish Ecology of Earth |
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161 | (11) |
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Created in the Image of God: Humanity and Divinity in an Age of Environmentalism |
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172 | (11) |
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Is Gaia Jewish? Finding a Framework for Radical Ecology in Traditional Judaism |
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183 | (23) |
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``One, Walking and Studying...'': Nature vs. Torah |
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206 | (24) |
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Bal Tashchit: A Jewish Environmental Precept |
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230 | (20) |
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Contemporary Problems in Ethics from a Jewish Perspective |
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250 | (17) |
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Part III: The Philosophical Question |
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267 | (16) |
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Some Thoughts on Nature and Judaism |
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283 | (3) |
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Comments on the Unnatural Jew |
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286 | (3) |
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Judaism and the Sanctification of Nature |
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289 | (8) |
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Judaism and Nature: Theological and Moral Issues to Consider While Renegotiating a Jewish Relationship to the Natural World |
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297 | (12) |
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Nature's Healing Power, the Holocaust, and the Environmental Crisis |
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309 | (12) |
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Ethical Issues of Animal Welfare in Jewish Thought |
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321 | (12) |
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Judaism and Animal Experimentation |
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333 | (38) |
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Vegetarianism and Judaism |
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371 | (13) |
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384 | (26) |
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| Bibliography |
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410 | (5) |
| Index |
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415 | (5) |
| About the Contributors |
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420 | |