The world we have : a Buddhist approach to peace and ecology

by Thich Nhat Hanh

Paperback, 2008

Publication

Imprint: Berkeley : Parallax Press, 2008. Responsibility: Thich Nhat Hanh with an introduction by Alan Weisman. OCLC Number: 209594939. Physical: Text : 1 volume : xv, 141 pages ; 17 cm. Features: Includes glossary, index.

Call number

Steward / Nhat

Barcode

BK-05889

ISBN

9781888375886

CSS Library Notes

Description: Using the Buddhist teaching of the impermanence of all things, Zen Buddhist teacher Thich Nhat Hanh offers solutions to the problems of global warming, disappearing fossil fuels, massive overconsumption, and unsupportable population growth. He demonstrates how this teaching can offer inner peace and help us use our collective wisdom and technology to restore the Earth's balance. -- from publisher

Table of Contents:
pt. I.A collective awakening. The bells of mindfulness --
A global ethic --
Diet for a mindful planet --
Nature and nonviolence --
Overcoming fear --
pt. II. Our message is our action. A beautiful continuation --
Caring for the environmentalist --
The city with only one tree --
Transforming our communities --
The eyes of the elephant queen --
pt. III. Practices for mindful living. Earth gathas --
Breathing exercise --
Deep relaxation --
Touching the earth --
Earth peace treaty.

FY2010 /

Physical description

xv, 141 p.; 17 cm

Description

In this provocative book, noted Buddhist teacher Thich Nhat Hanh offers a dramatic vision of the future of a planet overheated by rapidly disappearing fossil fuels, degraded by massive overconsumption, and besieged by unsupportable population growth. Hanh finds answers to these critical problems in the Buddhist teaching of the impermanence of all things. He demonstrates how this teaching can offer inner peace and help us use our collective wisdom and technology to restore the Earth's balance. Mixing inspiring insights with practical strategies, Hanh cites projects his own monastic community has undertaken that can serve as models for any community. Both his " No Car Day," observed once a week, and the "Earth Peace Treaty Commitment Sheet" can impact our ecological footprint on the Earth. Above all, he shows how acceptance of problems is that first critical step toward a deeper understanding of the best way to care for our Earth. Includes Thich Nhat Hanh's speech at UNESCO from October 2006 introducing his proposal for a global "No Car Day." Foreword by Alan Weisman.… (more)

Language

Original language

English

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User reviews

LibraryThing member mrs.starbucks
I'm being generous only because he rallied towards the end and said a few things that added to my perspective. The rest was extremely predictable and I felt like he was either insulting MY intelligence or I had severely overestimated him.

Rating

½ (8 ratings; 3.8)
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