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Awards
OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Melissa LanePublisher: Princeton University Press Imprint: Princeton University Press Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 1.50cm , Length: 23.50cm Weight: 0.397kg ISBN: 9780691162201ISBN 10: 0691162204 Pages: 256 Publication Date: 24 November 2013 Audience: College/higher education , Professional and scholarly , General/trade , Tertiary & Higher Education , Professional & Vocational Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Out of stock The supplier is temporarily out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you on backorder and shipped when it becomes available. Language: English Table of ContentsReviewsA New Jersey Council for the Humanities Book Honor Award for 2012 Honorable Mention for the 2012 Green Book Festival, General Non-Fiction To deploy Plato may seem one of the more desperate strategies for saving the planet. Classical Athens had no inkling of environmental catastrophe, and Plato hated democracy. But in Eco-Republic Melissa Lane succeeds wonderfully not only in separating the useful in Plato from the useless, but also in demonstrating that the useful contains a surprising amount of what we need if we are to survive... Lane demonstrates that the humanities, so far from being negligible, can play a vital role in averting environmental catastrophe. --Richard Seaford, Times Literary Supplement Lane makes a compelling case that the Greek vices of pleonexia (overreaching desire for more than one's share) and hubris (arrogance against natural order) need to be disparaged with the same vigor today as they were by the ancients... Eco-Republic offer(s) important intellectual provocation to reevaluate current inertia on environmental policy. Whether or not Plato may be our guide on these matters, the roles of science and the humanities in grappling with ecological urgency deserve to be deliberated. --Saleem H. Ali, Science Lane's intriguing implication is that sustainability leadership is as much about fostering a new mindset as it is about adopting cleaner technologies or more equitable social policies. Leaders in the ancient world thought and made decisions differently. They understood that they were embedded in an interdependent social web and they knew that their decisions had to take into account not just self-interest but the collective interest as well. --Gregory Unruh, Forbes.com In this provocative, accessible reflection on the potential contributions of Platonic political thought to the resolution of contemporary environmental problems, Lane attempts to craft 'an intuitive and imaginative model inspired by the ancients.' As a work in political theory, the book offers new insights into Plato and contemporary debates regarding climate change. --Choice Lane's re-imagined Plato is worth heeding: the unPlatonic vision of bottom-up change that Lane offers may after all offer a realistic path to a better and more sustainable future. If she is right, Lane's visions of how to bring about a sustainable future will be validated. This requires rethinking the social good in the ways that Lane describes. Her important book can help us do just that. --Owen Goldin, Polis Lane's reading of the Republic is rigorous, thorough, and generally fruitful... Eco-Republic is an extremely thought provoking exercise in the application of political theory to political life, and in this sense, Lane's work imitates the Republic in its methodologies as much as in its political conclusions... [R]eading Eco-Republic is an exercise in political thinking that leaves us understanding both Plato and the world around us more fully than we did before. --Joseph H. Lane, Jr., Review of Politics [A] readable and riveting inquiry into and critique of some of our most cherished but unexamined assumptions and prejudices... What Lane does, in effect, is to help us read and begin to understand [this] charmingly complex work, and in a way that will lead us to live our lives as thoughtful stewards and citizens of an environmentally sustainable society. --Terence Ball, Perspectives on Politics Lane's very general appeal to Plato as a model for thinking in our time of crisis is well worth reading... [R]eaders of various intellectual commitments will find inspiration in Lane's creative integration of ancient philosophy and contemporary scholarship on environmental issues. --Robert Metcalf, Environmental Philosophy Honorable Mention for the 2012 Green Book Festival, General Non-Fiction A New Jersey Council for the Humanities Book Honor Award for 2012 To deploy Plato may seem one of the more desperate strategies for saving the planet. Classical Athens had no inkling of environmental catastrophe, and Plato hated democracy. But in Eco-Republic Melissa Lane succeeds wonderfully not only in separating the useful in Plato from the useless, but also in demonstrating that the useful contains a surprising amount of what we need if we are to survive... Lane demonstrates that the humanities, so far from being negligible, can play a vital role in averting environmental catastrophe. --Richard Seaford, Times Literary Supplement Lane makes a compelling case that the Greek vices of pleonexia (overreaching desire for more than one's share) and hubris (arrogance against natural order) need to be disparaged with the same vigor today as they were by the ancients... Eco-Republic offer(s) important intellectual provocation to reevaluate current inertia on environmental policy. Whether or not Plato may be our guide on these matters, the roles of science and the humanities in grappling with ecological urgency deserve to be deliberated. --Saleem H. Ali, Science Lane's intriguing implication is that sustainability leadership is as much about fostering a new mindset as it is about adopting cleaner technologies or more equitable social policies. Leaders in the ancient world thought and made decisions differently. They understood that they were embedded in an interdependent social web and they knew that their decisions had to take into account not just self-interest but the collective interest as well. --Gregory Unruh, Forbes.com In this provocative, accessible reflection on the potential contributions of Platonic political thought to the resolution of contemporary environmental problems, Lane attempts to craft 'an intuitive and imaginative model inspired by the ancients.' As a work in political theory, the book offers new insights into Plato and contemporary debates regarding climate change. --Choice Lane's re-imagined Plato is worth heeding: the unPlatonic vision of bottom-up change that Lane offers may after all offer a realistic path to a better and more sustainable future. If she is right, Lane's visions of how to bring about a sustainable future will be validated. This requires rethinking the social good in the ways that Lane describes. Her important book can help us do just that. --Owen Goldin, Polis Lane's reading of the Republic is rigorous, thorough, and generally fruitful... Eco-Republic is an extremely thought provoking exercise in the application of political theory to political life, and in this sense, Lane's work imitates the Republic in its methodologies as much as in its political conclusions... [R]eading Eco-Republic is an exercise in political thinking that leaves us understanding both Plato and the world around us more fully than we did before. --Joseph H. Lane, Jr., Review of Politics [A] readable and riveting inquiry into and critique of some of our most cherished but unexamined assumptions and prejudices... What Lane does, in effect, is to help us read and begin to understand [this] charmingly complex work, and in a way that will lead us to live our lives as thoughtful stewards and citizens of an environmentally sustainable society. --Terence Ball, Perspectives on Politics Author Information"Melissa Lane is professor of politics at Princeton University. She is the author of Method and Politics in Plato's ""Statesman"" and Plato's Progeny: How Plato and Socrates Still Captivate the Modern Mind." Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |