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Reinventing Biology: Respect for Life and the Creation of KnowledgeLynda Birke and Ruth Hubbard, eds. Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press, 1995, 291 pp. US$35.00. ISBN 0-253-20981. Indiana University Press, 601 N. Morton St., Bloomington, IN 47404-3797, USA.

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  17 May 2016

Philip L. Bereano*
Affiliation:
University of Washington, USA
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Abstract

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Book Reviews
Copyright
Copyright © Association for Politics and the Life Sciences 

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References

Notes

1. The contemporary anarchist/ecologist writer Murray Bookchin has written extensively on this theme as well. See, for example, Toward An Ecological Society (Montreal: Black Rose Books, 1980).Google Scholar

2. These points are consistent with the thesis recently published by Daniel Jonah Goldhagen in Hitler's Willing Executioners: Ordinary Germans and the Holocaust (Knopf, , 1996), that anti-Semitic ideology had been so pervasive in nineteenth- and early-twentieth-century Germany that ordinary Jews—often referred to as “vermin” and “lice”—could be exterminated with as much moral qualms as squashing a bug under foot.Google Scholar