"Wirth's passion, resulting from his avoidance of academic distance, produces an urgent sense of the ecological stakes of the current crisis, as well as the practical value of Snyder and Dogen's ideas for producing potential solutions. Mountains, Rivers, and the Great Earth is a powerful exercise in interdisciplinarity. Its eclecticism invites students of literature, philosophy, religion, and ecology, as well as anyone interested in the question of how to live during a time of ongoing environmental degradation." -- Journal for the Study of Religion, Nature and Culture "This book is an exemplary work of scholarship and practice in cross-cultural environmental philosophy . With its philosophical grounding, moral and spiritual compass, alliance with indigenous people, and commitment to the commons, Wirth's radical proposal for earth democracy makes this book particularly compelling." -- Journal of the Pacific Association for the Continental Tradition ".Wirth's book offers rich material for scholars of Buddhist ethics." -- Journal of Buddhist Ethics ".
Mountains, Rivers, and the Great Earth is a profound spiritual meditation upon the work of the American poet and environmental activist Gary Snyder and the thirteenth-century Zen Master Eihei Dogen, and it represents the most sincere expression of engaged Zen practice as 'the cultivation of wisdom and compassion within our interdependent becoming with, through, and in, some way, as all other forms of life' . As a book from and about the Dharma, Mountains, Rivers, and the Great Earth awakens within us the heart of the Buddha." -- Frontiers of Philosophy in China "There are numerous books that discuss Snyder's ecological view and, to a lesser extent, his relation to Dogen. There are also many books on Buddhism and ecology. But this book is unique in its focus and format and its authorial voice. It's a distinctive, ambitious, and timely work." -- David Landis Barnhill, translator of Basho's Journey: The Literary Prose of Matsuo Basho "This is a very interesting book on, arguably, the most crucial topic that we are facing today. It makes us realize how deep we are in the ecological crisis, and that this crisis is not merely a crisis outside of us, but lies first and foremost deeply in ourselves.
An incredibly timely and important book--I could not stop reading it and thinking about it." -- Gerard Kuperus, author of Ecopolitical Homelessness: Defining Place in an Unsettled World.