出版社:Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas
摘要:As a result of a paper published in the sixties, Christianity has been frequently accused of being behind earth’s environmental degradation, on the grounds that it has given humans the religious support to adopt a dominant role over the rest of Creation. This paper explores some of the answers to those criticisms, both from a historical and theological point of view. In the second part, the paper explores to what extent the environmental degradation supposedly caused by Christianity has affected those countries with mostly Christian populations, comparing them with those with other religious traditions. Several indicators of environmental health and ecosystem conservation are used for the comparisons. A high correlation between per capita income and environmental performance for the Christian and Buddhist countries was observed, while poor trends were observed for Hindu and Islamic countries. Comparing representative countries of both large and medium population size, the Christian countries outperform others in most indicators. Even though it cannot be concluded that Christianity, in fact, encourages environmental conservation, the results from our analysis at least provide grounds to reject the opposite hypothesis, as Christian countries do not have significantly lower environmental indicators than those representing other major religions.