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Rewilding Our Hearts: Building Pathways of Compassion and Coexistence Kindle Edition
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Editorial Reviews
Review
Celia Deane-Drummond, professor of theology, University of Notre Dame
A practical way for people to reconnect with natural landscapes and animals through understanding and compassion.”
Jane Goodall, PhD, DBE, United Nations Messenger of Peace
I wish the ideas of Rewilding Our Hearts would become an integral part of all scientific conferences, university conservation courses, animal shows on TV, children’s books, etc.”
— George Schaller, PhD, wildlife biologist and vice-president of Panthera
Marc Bekoff is one of the leading compassionate reformers of our time....This is a book for anyone who is interested in nurturing themselves and healing our alienated relationships with each other, other animals, and the beautiful planet we all call home.”
Lori Gruen, PhD, professor of environmental studies, Wesleyan University
Dr. Marc Bekoff’s latest work of art of compassion in action is a deeply philosophical, extraordinarily accessible, and powerfully composed message for our times....A simply brilliant work!”
Michael Charles Tobias, president, Dancing Star Foundation
Marc Bekoff is a leading voice in the effort to ignite a rewilding social movement grounded in love, compassion, and the recognition that we are inhabitants of a magnificent planet that is calling us home.”
Eileen Crist, coeditor of Keeping the Wild: Against the Domestication of Earth
Rewilding is a trendy term for the revival of an ancient concept: showing respect for the natural world, including the other animals sharing it. Bekoff ... reminds us that in a sense we remain great apes and cannot operate outside nature and emphasizes that while humanity may be the dominant species, it is not the most important ecologically. ... Verdict: Bekoff's perspective is far from the North American norm, but his arguments are strong. Readers may find themselves agreeing with some of the author's points and may even do some soul searching about our treatment of animals.”
Library Journal
In this wise and passionate book, Marc Bekoff brings a lifetime of scientific research and deep personal reflection to bear on our deepening environmental crisis. In his characteristically insightful and engaging style, Bekoff advocates for compassion as the basis of new understandings of ourselves and prompts us to reimagine the kinds of relationships that we might yet have with the rest of our living world. Rewilding Our Hearts is a tragically honest and yet powerfully uplifting response to the challenges of our time.”
Thom van Dooren, environmental philosopher, University of New South Wales, Australia, and author of Flight Ways: Life and Loss at the Edge of Extinction
As one has come to expect from Marc Bekoff, this is a wonderful book of scientific stories about animal minds, consciousness, and emotion. But Rewilding Our Hearts goes beyond this, showing how wildness in nature, animals, and our hearts are interconnected and mutually reinforcing. This book will bring a new audience to Bekoff’s work.”
Dale Jamieson, director of the Animal Studies Initiative and professor of environmental studies and philosophy, New York University
This is a book to make us all think. Drawing as only he can from a wide range of scientific research and personal experience, Marc Bekoff argues that we need to rethink our relationship to animals. Rewilding Our Hearts asks humans to give up a little control, act with a little humility, and recognize the connections we have to the rest of nature. Bekoff’s examples and illustrations remind us that sharing our planet with other species is a source of resilience as well as delight and that caring for the natural world is essential for human well-being.”
Susan Clayton, PhD, Whitmore-Williams Professor of Psychology and chair of environmental studies at the College of Wooster
Sadly, most of our relations with other animals are dominionistic transactions between masters and slaves. In Rewilding Our Hearts Marc Bekoff argues persuasively that such top-down interactions are bad for creatures, bad for nature, and bad for humans. The key, Bekoff asserts, is to rewild ourselves and to respect the individuality of other beings and their homes. When we are unkind to individual creatures, we demean them and hobble our own moral development. Being the most powerful creature, he concludes, does not give us the license to ruin a spectacularly beautiful planet, its wondrous webs of nature, and its magnificent nonhuman residents. Who could disagree with that?”
Michael Soulé, research professor emeritus in environmental studies, University of California, Santa Cruz, and coeditor of Conservation Biology: An Evolutionary-Ecological Perspective
Rewilding Our Hearts is about healing healing our self-destructive attitudes toward the Earth by adopting a more compassionate and ethical treatment of animals....Read Rewilding Our Hearts and you will whoop, smile, and definitely gain a new respect for all life, including your fellow travelers on the planet.”
George Wuerthner, ecological projects director, Foundation for Deep Ecology
Marc Bekoff has been a great pioneer in the scientific study of animal emotion. Now, in Rewilding Our Hearts, Bekoff beautifully and simply articulates a philosophical attitude to guide us in the restoration of nature, which has suffered so terribly from human assaults upon it. What’s more, Bekoff shows how a new attitude toward nature can help us develop compassion and humility in our own lives. Bekoff’s message offers hope for genuine healing, of both our natural environment and ourselves.”
William Crain, professor of psychology, City College of New York, and author of The Emotional Lives of Animals and Children: Insights from a Farm Sanctuary
Marc Bekoff writes about how to harness compassion in a frantic world full of concrete and steel, neon and commerce; a world in which nature is crumbling around us. Finding this book is like finding a pot of glue with which we can fill the hole in our hearts and the ozone.”
Ingrid E. Newkirk, president of People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA)
Calling for a reawakened caring for nature and animals that is both passionate and informed, Rewilding Our Hearts provides the healthy challenge we need in today’s critical and confusing times. And Marc Bekoff mountain man and noted academic is the right man for this job. A lively, inspiring, and unsettling book that helps us reconnect with our inner wisdom and remember the deeper truths about our shared life on this fragile Earth.”
Will Tuttle, PhD, author of the bestselling book The World Peace Diet, recipient of the Courage of Conscience Award, and cofounder of Circle of Compassion
This book is a reminder that all living things are our family, and we cannot live a spiritually rich and happy life unless we acknowledge and act on our connections. Marc Bekoff suggests compassionate and practical actions, small and large, that we can take to repair our bond with all other species.”
Louise Chawla, professor, environmental design program, University of Colorado, Boulder
About the Author
Product details
- ASIN : B00OHY4ZPQ
- Publisher : New World Library (October 20, 2014)
- Publication date : October 20, 2014
- Language : English
- File size : 3.0 MB
- Text-to-Speech : Enabled
- Screen Reader : Supported
- Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
- X-Ray : Not Enabled
- Word Wise : Enabled
- Print length : 215 pages
- Page numbers source ISBN : 1577319540
- Best Sellers Rank: #1,384,509 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
- #183 in Animal Rights (Kindle Store)
- #737 in Animal Rights (Books)
- #1,331 in Conservation
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Marc Bekoff, author of The Emotional Lives of Animals, is professor emeritus of ecology and evolutionary biology at the University of Colorado, Boulder, and a former Guggenheim fellow. He has published more than a thousand scientific and popular essays and thirty books. He lives in Boulder.
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Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonCustomers say
Customers find the book thought-provoking and insightful, with one mentioning it provides additional reading resources. They appreciate its compassionate approach, with one customer noting that it shows animals have feelings.
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Customers find the book inspiring and thought-provoking, with one customer noting it provides additional resources for future reading.
"...Our Hearts: Building Pathways of Compassion and Coexistence is a thoughtful and wise entreaty for a new ethic to guide our relationship to other..." Read more
"...but a third of the way through he becomes very readable, very thought provoking. Put away your I Phones!" Read more
"...I like the message of being close to nature, to be sensitive and perhaps forgo something we wanted to do or have to help other, animals and the..." Read more
"Interesting subject, but a little too academic for my taste." Read more
Customers appreciate the book's compassionate approach, with one customer noting that it shows animals have feelings.
"...and kindness, he says, will let each of us reclaim our compassionate, empathic, and moral nature...." Read more
"...etc. Shows animals have feelings, family, communication, experience fear and pain, and more...." Read more
"...Warmed this vegan, animal-loving heart." Read more
"...Every page has a message about compassion with sharp insight and an inspirational message...." Read more
Top reviews from the United States
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- Reviewed in the United States on November 1, 2014Rewilding Our Hearts: Building Pathways of Compassion and Coexistence is a thoughtful and wise entreaty for a new ethic to guide our relationship to other animals and natural landscapes. The author, animal activist and professor of ecology and evolutionary biology at the University of Colorado, Marc Bekoff borrows a term from wildlife conservation when he calls for a "rewilding" of our human attitudes. Instead of restoring habitats and creating corridors between wild spaces to help animal populations recover, Bekoff proposes that we need to dissolve the barriers we have erected between ourselves and nature letting the wonder we were born with reinstate itself. Seeding our imagination with stories of kinship and kindness, he says, will let each of us reclaim our compassionate, empathic, and moral nature. Bekoff's appeal is at once his unswerving dedication to the animals he loves and his relentless unmasking of the injustices still being perpetuated in the world--like the emphasis in nature documentaries on sex and violence instead of the friendships and community life of a species. He also acknowledges the complexity of the problems we have created by putting ourselves above nature and the unlikely possibility of a world where everyone can feel or acknowledge our deep connection to other animals. Still, this book is about the present and the future and the importance of a single individual's rewilding of self. Never underestimate the power of one to make a difference.
- Reviewed in the United States on May 7, 2015Stay with it. The first chapters seem fluffy and redundant but a third of the way through he becomes very readable, very thought provoking. Put away your I Phones!
- Reviewed in the United States on November 20, 2017I much admire Bekoff for his many scientific contributions, and championing of animal rights and animal welfare, and this vision of restored wilderness as described in this wonderful book. Nevertheless, it is a vision based on a false, Eurocentric perspective of wilderness in North America -- i.e., North America as it was seen by early immigrants from Europe. A vision which does not realize that the "wilderness" encountered by those immigrants was not fully natural, but heavily modified by Native Americans, which numbered something like 100 million (North, Central and South America) prior to the arrival of Columbus and spread of European diseases which wiped out something like; 95% of Native Americans. What the European immigrants found in North and South America was largely the rewilded ecosystems which developed after Native Americans died off. And they were still heavily influenced by earlier habitat manipulations by Natives. (Read the book 1491 to glimpse this). So the modern attempt to rewild areas of the Amercas are actually attempts to restore ecosystems which were by no means entirely natural. So the whole issue of rewilding and the concepts of wilderness needs to be re-conceived. Read this book with that in mind.
- Reviewed in the United States on February 20, 2015Another wonderful book by Dr. Bekoff. I thoroughly enjoyed this book as it is written in a positive and encouraging style, not only with science but also with practical ideas, suggestions, examples and stories. Stories of individuals, including the author, to showcase that we all can do something to help animals, the planet and ourselves by rewilding our hearts and connect, with human or others, and the beautiful planet with inhabit.
I like the message of being close to nature, to be sensitive and perhaps forgo something we wanted to do or have to help other, animals and the planet, in this often individualistic world it reminded me of the quote by Gandhi ""Live simply so that others may simply live."
It also discusses the often avoided topic of overpopulation, a topic that needs all the attention it can get.
Our actions matter and we can decide to make a positive impact, no matter how big or small, it all will contribute to a better world.
An important message in the book is that caring matters and we should not have to apologize for feeling compassion for other creatures and the world we share, which is something I think a lot of us often are confronted with.
The book contains many resources for reference and future reading which is also very valuable!
- Reviewed in the United States on April 30, 2018Interesting subject, but a little too academic for my taste.
- Reviewed in the United States on November 10, 2016Outstanding book. A much needed review and support of the societal shift occuring now & needed to stop the extinction of all the big cats, little cats and wildlife in general. This book will accelerate that shift as many more people read and hopefully we are not beyond the tipping point. It evaluates sport hunting, harmony and all aspects of the issue and give solutions, etc. etc. Shows animals have feelings, family, communication, experience fear and pain, and more. It's made clear we must harmonize with anuimals, not kill, to survive for their sake and ours.
- Reviewed in the United States on June 1, 2016If you want to read a doctorate disertation, this is the book for you, otherwise, you can skip this book. BORING and a waste of time. Only read
a few chapters before I quit, and that was way too much!
- Reviewed in the United States on October 16, 2015Making the world a better place for animals, and therefore ourselves. Warmed this vegan, animal-loving heart.
Top reviews from other countries
- Amazon CustomerReviewed in Canada on July 15, 2020
5.0 out of 5 stars Received
Received
- Christopher AdsheadReviewed in the United Kingdom on March 16, 2016
5.0 out of 5 stars Well-written book
This is a terrific written book. Easy to read. If everyone followed the philosophy of this book the world would be a much better place.
Marc's story in this book about his home in Colorodo that he lived in surrounded by nature is a good story of how peaceful co-existence between humans and animals can be achieved. A lot of people would have taken offence at the conduct of the animals and branded them as 'pests'.
Which leads me onto my next point, Marc Bekoff is too optimistic about human nature. Every since we evolved we have done mostly bad things to each other and animals. War, bullying one another. Think of all the animals that we have made extinct due to our own selfishness and disregard. That isn't going to end anytime soon. It's just not possible for all of us to become 'compassionate'. I wish it could but it just can't.
On the whole, this is a terrific book and I would recommend it to anyone interested in the rewilding movement.
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MaxReviewed in Germany on September 15, 2015
4.0 out of 5 stars Inspirierend und motivierend
M.Bekoff erzählt von seinen Erfahrungen im Natur- und Tierschutz. Er tut das sehr persönlich und mitreissend. Auch wenn der Naturschutz im Vordergrund steht: auch Tierschützer können von seinen Erfahrungen (z.B. bezüglich Burnout-Prophylaxe) profitieren. Ein sehr liebevolles Buch.
Einziger kleine Nachteil: Ich hatte angenommen, dass noch mehr auf das individuelle "Rewilding" (Wiederannähern an die Natur in und um uns) von Menschen eingegangen würde...
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max le parisienReviewed in France on March 1, 2016
1.0 out of 5 stars DETESTE DE NE PAS AVOIR RECU LELIVRE
Commandé en meme temps que RIDING WESTERN je n'ai recu que celui ci dans le colis, comme il est impossible de le prouver ,et que c'est la première fois il est prudent de ne pas commander deux articles pouvant etre envoyé ensemble.
- Anthony SummersonReviewed in the United Kingdom on May 23, 2015
4.0 out of 5 stars Four Stars
At first glance, it meets expectations. I am looking forward to reading it