I am excited to let you know about the publication of:

Saviours or Destroyers: The relationship between the human species and the
rest of life on Earth


http://www.amazon.com/dp/1907962522/ref=nosim?tag=cranmorpublic-20


http://www.cranmorepublications.co.uk/73



Here is the amazon info:

>From the Author
At the start of Chapter Two I quote an all too familiar view:

"The lesson we need to learn urgently is this: we cannot do without the
rest of the planet's biodiversity, but it can do very well without us."

My objective in this book is to make it clear why this contemporarily
fashionable view is completely and utterly wrong. This view has been
forwarded and propagated by a wide range of intellectuals, academics and
environmentalists. I hope that through this book, and the rest of my
writings, that these people will come to see where they have gone wrong.
Some components of the view that I forward in the book are open to debate.
However, that the human species is the saviour of life, rather than the
destroyer which the rest of life on Earth "can do very well without", is so
obvious that it shouldn't be one of these debatable components.


Book Description
Publication Date: March 15, 2012


There are many ways in which humans can conceptualise the relationship
between their species and their surroundings; these 'surroundings' can be
taken to be the rest of the life-forms which exist on the Earth, or
everything non-human that exists in the universe. In this book I focus on
various possible relationships between the human species and the rest of
the life-forms that exist (and those that have existed, and those that will
exist in the future) on the Earth. Is there no deeply significant and
meaningful relationship? Or, is the human species superior in some way? Or,
is the human species inferior in some way?

If you are familiar with my previous work you will be aware that I am
particularly interested in how the relationship we are exploring relates to
the 'environmental crisis'. I have suggested that the human species is
superior in some way, and that the environmental crisis/human-induced
global warming are positive events which indicate that the human species is
fulfilling its role as saviour of life on Earth.

I take this book to be a valuable addition to my previous writings. In it I
consider at length the opposing view that the human species is an 'inferior
destroyer' of the rest of life on Earth. I also outline the whole range of
ways in which it is obvious that technology is in the interests of life on
Earth. I also develop the view that the universe is a 'feeling universe'
whose movements/evolution is directed by all parts of the universe seeking
to move to higher states of feeling; and I explore how this plays out in
the day-to-day lives of individual humans as they seek to live more happy
and fulfilling lives. Furthermore, I describe how we live in an epoch which
can best be described as a 'birthing process'; life on Earth is bringing
forth the technological armour which will ensure its future survival. This
is a birthing process, which like almost all births, entails a lot of pain
and suffering. I suggest that this process will come to an end when the
temperature of the atmosphere is being successfully technologically
regulated. Finally, I outline the serious environmental problems that we
face on the surface of the Earth and urge that we take both technological
and non-technological actions to address these problems. If we can
successfully do this then we can forge a sustainable and harmonious future
for all life on Earth.



There are both paperback and ebook/kindle versions available.

Dr NPC

http://neilpaulcummins.blogspot.co.uk/

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