edited by Donald K. Swearer and Susan Lloyd McGarry
contributions by Bill McKibben, Anne Monius, Chandra Muzzafar, Daniel P. Schrag, Barry Schwartz, Ronald F. Theimann, Archana Venkatesan, Steven B. Bloomfield, Lawrence Buell, Diana L. Eck, Paul Farmer, Bridget Hanna, Arthur Kleinman and Sallie McFague
Harvard University Press
Paper: 978-0-945454-45-8

ABOUT THIS BOOK | REVIEWS
ABOUT THIS BOOK

In this volume, prominent Buddhist scholar Donald Swearer posits that the future requires a radical shift toward living in recognition of the interdependence of all life forms and the consequent ethic of communality and a life style of moderation or “enoughness” that flows from that recognition, which he calls “an ecology of human flourishing.” Swearer has assembled world-class thinkers to explore and imagine several dimensions of an ecology of human flourishing: economic, sociological, religious, ethical, environmental, historical, literary; how notions of human flourishing, quality of life, and common good have been constructed; and, in the contemporary world, how they are illuminated or are challenged by issues of distributive justice, poverty and economic inequality, global health, and environmental sustainability.

With contributors ranging from ecoactivist Bill McKibben and medical anthropologist Arthur Kleinman, to transformative theologian Sallie McFague and Malaysian critic of global injustice Chandra Muzzafar, this book expresses ethical and religious aspirations to remake the world in the midst of the contradictions, injustices, and problems of our daily lives and today's global economic and climate crises.