Notes

  1. . Prometheus Bound. trans. Paul Elmer More, in Complete Greek Drama, ed. Whitney J. Oates and Eugene O'Neill, Jr., 2 vols. (New York: Random House, 1938), 1:140.
  2. . George P. Murdock, Social Structure (New York: Macmillan Co., 1949), chap. 8, esp. table 60, p. 224.
  3. . E. D. Chapple and C. S. Coon, Principles of Anthropology (New York: Henry H. Holt 8; Co., 1942), chap. 10.
  4. . In his address, “Dimensions of the Ecological Crisis,” Seventeenth Summer Conference, Institute on Religion in an Age of Science, Star Island, New Hampshire. July 25‐August 1, 1970; it also appears elsewhere in this issue of Zygon under the title “Dimensions of the Environmental Crisis.”
  5. . Kenneth Boulding has consistently used an ecological approach in economic analysis. See Beyond Economics (Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 1968).
  6. . Herman Kahn and Anthony J. Wiener, “Faustian Powers and Human Choices.” in Environment and Change: The Next Fifty Years, ed. William R. Ewald, Jr. (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1968), pp. 101–31. About environmental pollution Kahn and Wiener say, “‘Only money’ is needed to control contamination and degradation of the environment” (p. 111).
  7. . J. B.Calhoun, “Population Density and Social Pathology,”Scientific American  206 (1962):139–49.
  8. . HudsonHoagland, “Mechanisms of Population Control,” Daedalus  93 (1964):812–29.
  9. . John R. Platt distinguishes these three forms of problem‐solving in “Life Where Science Flows,” in Environment and Change, p. 78 (see n. 6, above).
  10. . For a general discussion and critical evaluation of planning accomplishments see Carl Feiss, “Taking Stock: A Resume of Planning Accomplishments in the United States,” in Environment and Change, pp. 214–36 (see n. 6, above).
  11. . What is here applied to highway planning can be generalized to all engineering projects using cost‐benefit analysis. Ecological cost must be included.
  12. . Paul Goodman raises the question about rural reconstruction in “Two Points of Philosophy and an Example,” in The Fitness of Man's Environment, Smithsonian Annual 2 (Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution Press, 1968), pp. 25–38.
  13. . The reference is to the plan for a sea‐level canal in Dr. William E. Martin's address, “Industrial and Legal Problems in Ecology,” Seventeenth Summer Conference, Institute on Religion in an Age of Science, Star Island, New Hampshire, July 25‐August 1, 1970, also published in this issue of Zygon under the title “Simple Concepts of Complex Ecological Problems.”
  14. . A Sand County Almanac (New York: Oxford University Press, 1968), p. 209.
  15. . Trends in Housing 14, no. 4 (1970):8.
  16. . Ian McHarg, Design with Nature (New York: Natural History Press, 1969). This is a pioneering demonstration of ecological planning.
  17. . “Civil Religion in America,” Daedalus  96 (1967):1–21.