
Swimming Lessons
Keeping Afloat in the Age of Technology
David Ehrenfeld(Author)
Oxford University Press Inc
Published on 28. February 2002
Book
Hardback
272 pages
978-0-19-514852-7 (ISBN)
Description
David Ehrenfeld is a highly esteemed writer on ecology and conservation biology. The founding editor of The Journal of Conservation Biology and author of The Arrogance of Humanism and Beginning Again, his new book is an elegant study of the cost to human dignity and potential, of the shrinking wilderness and the ongoing degredation of the environment. He ruminates on the impacts of short-sighted governmental and economic policies, and of new technologies on human values and communities, tracing the human impacts upon the urban, agricultural and wilderness environments. Ehrenfeld has a unique, unmistakable voice as a major spokesperson for the conservation ethic and the human values implicit in environmentalism and conservation biology. This book should appeal strongly to readers of Ehrenfeld's earlier books and essays, and reach and satisfy a broad constituency on the green end of the political spectrum.
Reviews / Votes
"With wit, humor, a calm voice, and great authority, Swimming lessons gives a clear view of what our world has become ... a delight to read. ... David Ehrenfeld fills the chapters of Swimming lessons with remarkable and often moving stories from his own life and the lives of his wife and children, colleagues, and students."--Ethology, Ecology and Evolution"Ehrenfeld, who eschews corporate funding, is independent-minded. He writes about big ideas - vanishing species, globalization, genetic engineering and a diminishing "sense of place" are among his favorite topics. He is not afraid of complexity. ... Throughout, Ehrenfeld conveys a sense of calm and authority. The text is stunning in its use of visual imagery, pace and varying sentence structure."--The Newark Star-Ledger
"For a world struggling to stay afloat ecologically, morally, and economically, SWIMMING LESSONS, could not come at a better time. And there is no better or wiser author than David Ehrenfeld."--David Orr, Oberlin College, author of The Nature of Design
"We are entering a perilous century. Our technologies have brought us benefits but also a severely damaged environment. We need such a book of guidance as David Ehrenfeld has written. He understands the natural world, the wonderful gifts it makes to us. He understands our technologies, their limited use. If we would listen to him, both ourselves and our children would know the immense delight of living in the 21st century. We would experience the
excitement of swimming safely through oncoming currents." --Thomas Berry, author of The Great Work: Our Way into the Future
"With wit, humor, a calm voice, and great authority, Swimming lessons gives a clear view of what our world has become ... a delight to read. ... David Ehrenfeld fills the chapters of Swimming lessons with remarkable and often moving stories from his own life and the lives of his wife and children, colleagues, and students."--Ethology, Ecology and Evolution
"Ehrenfeld, who eschews corporate funding, is independent-minded. He writes about big ideas - vanishing species, globalization, genetic engineering and a diminishing "sense of place" are among his favorite topics. He is not afraid of complexity. ... Throughout, Ehrenfeld conveys a sense of calm and authority. The text is stunning in its use of visual imagery, pace and varying sentence structure."--The Newark Star-Ledger
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
New York
United States
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Dimensions
Height: 240 mm
Width: 161 mm
Thickness: 19 mm
Weight
570 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-19-514852-7 (9780195148527)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions

E-Book
02/2002
OUP eBook
€15.49
Available for download
Person
Content
SECTION 1: THE LIES WE LIVE ; Brainstorming ; Pretending ; The Magic of the Internet ; Nothing Simple ; Sherlock, Nero, and Us ; SECTION 2: WRECKING OUR SOCIETY-A MANUAL ; Rejecting Gifts ; Adaptation ; Forecast: Chilly, Overcast, Light Drizzle, No People Left ; Pseudocommunities ; Obsolescence ; Social Evolution Versus Sudden Change ; Writing ; SECTION 3: DEADLY ECONOMICS ; Affluence and Austerity ; Durable Goods ; Spending Our Capital ; Saving by Selling ; Hot Spots and the Globalization of Conservation ; The Gingko and the Stump ; The Death Penalty ; SECTION 4: RELATING TO NATURE IN A MANMADE WORLD ; The Vine Cleaners ; A Connoisseur of Nature ; Death of a Plastic Palm ; Scientific Discoveries and Nature's Mysteries ; I Reinvent Agriculture ; Thinking about Breeds and Species ; Teaching Field Ecology ; More Field Ecology: Rightofway Island ; A Walk in the Woods ; Degrees of Intimacy ; SECTION 5. RESTORING THE COMMUNITY ; The Utopia Fallacy ; Traditions ; Jane Austen and the World of the Community ; Universities and Their Communities ; An Invalid's Guide ; Swimming Lessons ; BIBLIOGRAPHY AND SUGGESTED READINGS