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References

  1. See Baker, Ellsworth,Man In The Trap, Macmillan, New York, 1967, for a comprehensive account of Reich's psychological work.

  2. Holly, Marilyn, “Wilhelm Reich's Theory: Ethical Implications,”American Imago, Vol. 28, No. 3, Fall 1971. (Originally published under the name M. B. Zweig.)

  3. Holly, Marilyn, “Wilhelm Reich on Women,” inHumane Social Psychiatry, Paul Adams ed., Tree of Life Press, Florida, 1972.

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  4. See Raknes, Ola,Wilhelm Reich And Orgonomy, St. Martin's Press, New York, 1970, for a comprehensive account of Reich's environmental findings.

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Authors

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Gary Nabhan is an ethnobotanist and plant resource conservationist currently serving as Assistant Director for Research at the Desert Botanical Gardens in Phoenix. Nabhan is author of three books and several articles about native agriculture andin situ conservation.

Dr. Franklin P. Gardner has been Professor of Agronomy, University of Florida since 1980. Previously, he was Professor and Dean, Western Illinois University. His presant research and teaching interests are crop ecology and physiology.

Roger Paden is a Research Associate at the Department of Philosophy, University of Maryland, College Park, and a contributing editor withAg & Human Values. He is the author of more than twenty articles on ethics and political philosophy and is currently working on a book on Ethical Traditions.

John Lyon has a Ph.D. in History from the University of Pittsburgh. He has taught history and philosophy of science and chaired the Program in Liberal Studies at Notre Dame, and was Dean, Whitney Young College, Kentucky State University. He is currently Associate Professor in the Dept. of English at Lakeland College in Wisconsin. His research interests include the structure and function of the liberal arts, the ethical presumptions of and consequences flowing from systems of resource allocation, and the nature of language. He co-authoredEpisodes in American History andFrom Natural History to the History of Nature and has published a translation of Etienne Gilson'sD'Aristotle a Darwin et Retour.

Marilyn Holly is an Associate Professor of Philosophy at the University of Florida. Extending her interests in philosophy of mental health and in philosophy of feminism, she has currently been doing research and writing in the area of environmental ethics and is teaching a course in Ethics and Ecology.

Michael A. Gold is an Assistant Professor of International Forestry and Director of the Department of Forestry's international forestry program at Michigan State University. He teaches a course on agroforestry systems and has developed a multidisciplinary graduate program focused on agroforestry. His most recent publication, in the Agroforestry Systems Journal, is titled "Agroforestry Systems for the Temperate Zone." He has a special interest in agroforestry systems which incorporate and expand the use of multipurpose trees on small farms in the tropics.

Tom Edens is Associate Professor of Resource Development and Entomology at Michigan State University, where he teaches courses in Energy Policy and Natural Resources Management. He also maintains an ongoing research program in the areas of Sustainable Agriculture, Community Economic Development, and Natural Resources Management. He has authored numerous scientific papers and articles, and is a regular reviewer of literature in the field of sustainable agriculture. He recently organized and published the proceedings of an international conference on sustainable agriculture and integrated farming systems. He is on the editorial board and is a book review editor for theAmerican Journal of Alternative Agriculture.

Robert Lawless is in the Department of Anthropology at the University of Florida and is affiliated with the Center for Latin American Studies at the same university. He received his M.A. in Asian Studies from the University of the Philippines and his Ph.D. in anthropology from the New School for Social Research in New York City.

Dr. Lawless spent seven years in Southeast Asia doing anthropological research on urban scavengers in Manila, peasants in the Central Plains of Luzon, neo-colonial warfare on the Indonesian island of Timor, and headhunters in the North Luzon Highlands. For several years in New York City he investigated the social organization of hospitals in Manhattan and the survival strategies of street people on the Lower East Side. Most recently he spent a year in Haiti studying Voodoo and tourism.

The author of two monographs, two book-length bibliographies, a textbook, and over 30 articles in professional journals, Dr. Lawless is currently conducting research into cross-cultural concepts of time and space in relation to agricultural systems.

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Nabhan, G.P., Gardner, F.P., Paden, R. et al. Book reviews. Agric Hum Values 4, 111–136 (1987). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF01530648

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF01530648

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