Caring for our common home

Press/Media: Expert Comment

Description

The article offers an intertexual reading of Dan Brown's Inferno and Pope Francis' green encyclical 'Laudato Si'' to argue that caring for our common home calls for us to discern the full ethical implications of human culpability, capability and compassion in living out what it means to be human in a human-centred (anthropocentric) creation. 

Period1 Mar 2016

Media contributions

1

Media contributions

  • TitleCaring for our common home
    Degree of recognitionInternational
    Media name/outletThe First (Newsletter of the Catholic Theological Ethics in the World Church)
    Media typeWeb
    Duration/Length/Size500-600 words
    Country/TerritoryUnited States of America
    Date1/03/16
    DescriptionThe article offers an intertexual reading of Dan Brown's Inferno and Pope Francis' green encyclical 'Laudato Si'' to argue that caring for our common home calls for us to discern the full ethical implications of human culpability, capability and compassion in living out what it means to be human in a human-centred (anthropocentric) creation. 
    Producer/AuthorCatholic Theological Ethics in the World Church
    URLhttps://catholicethics.com/forum/caring-for-our-common-home/
    PersonsSharon Bong

Keywords

  • Laudato Si
  • Climate justice
  • reproductive health