This book is an introduction to psychology as it applies to environmental problems. Chapter 1 outlines the main features of our environmental difficulties and argues that because they have been caused by human behaviors, beliefs, decisions, and values, psychology is crucial for finding solutions to them. Chapter 2 discusses some historical contributions in Western intellectual thought to contemporary views about nature. Chapters 3 to 7 each examine a particular field or theory in psychology and applies it to a selected environmental problem. Chapter 8 summarizes and compares these five psychological approaches and analyzes where psychology has been and where the author believes it should go in order to make stronger and more potent contributions to solving the environmental problems. As an introduction to psychology applied to environmental problems, this book is written for the introductory psychology student, the environmental studies student, and for the layperson who may wonder if psychology has anything useful to say about mounting ecological difficulties.
It's been about three years since I read this book for a class in Environmental psychology, so I can only offer an impression right now: it is a sensitively written introduction to psychology from an ecological point of view, stretching from the usual beginnings to modern transpersonal psychology and deep ecology, cumulating in an original hypothesis. The writing is extremely lucid and beautiful, almost poetic at times. It stands as my favorite textbook of all, required reading for the lucky and a lucky find for the leisurely.
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