Book Reviews
Hunting: Philosophy for Everyone (In Search of the Wild Life), Nathan Kowalsky (Ed.), 2010, West Sussex, UK: Wiley-Blackwell
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Jorge Conesa-Sevilla
The Forest
Bio
rge Conesa-Sevilla is an Associate Professor of Psychology at Northland College. In addition to writing Ecological Outcome Psychological Theory (1999) and recently Ecopsychology as Ultimate Force Psychology: A Biosemiotic Approach to Nature Estrangement and Nature Alienation (2006), he has published many articles in the areas of semiotics, ecopsychological biosemiotics, and environmental philosophy. In 1989 he received a B.A. (triple-special major--Whole Human) combining psychobiology, Eastern religion and biology from Humboldt State University in California. He received M.A. and Ph.D. degrees in experimental psychology from university of Toledo, Ohio. He is a co-founder of The European Ecopsychology Society (www.ecopsychology.net). Email: jconesa@northland.edu
Published
2010-10-11
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Abstract
"Presenting all these diverse views in one relatively small book, a mere 258 pages, is a vision implemented, without which, most readers invested in learning more about hunting, would sorely miss if they knew their want."