Adventist Peace Radio, Episode 53: Nature Matters—Life in the Anthropocene
Welcome to Adventist Peace Radio, the podcast of the Adventist Peace Fellowship. In this episode, Jeff Boyd interviews Daniel Gonzalez-Socoloske about ecology and creation care. The conversation was recorded in early January 2020 when Jeff was recovering from a bad cold.
Daniel Gonzalez-Socoloske, PhD, is associate professor of biology at Andrews University. Daniel received his PhD in ecology from Duke University in Durham, North Carolina. He specializes in mammal ecology and conservation and is a member of the Society for Marine Mammalogy, the Latin American Society of Aquatic Mammal Specialists, and is a scientific advisor to the Sirenia Specialist Group, a subgroup of the Species Survival Commission of the International Union for Conservation of Nature. He teaches general ecology, biostatistics, animal behavior, and mammalogy. [Bio used with permission from the author, accessed online https://jae.adventist.org/en/2019.81.3.6.]
SHOW NOTES
1) “Why Nature Matters: Seventh-day Adventist Education in the Anthropocene” (Daniel Gonzalez-Socoloske, Journal of Adventist Education, July-September 2019, pp. 28-34).
2) Seventh-day Adventist Statement: Environment
3) Adventist Books on the Environment:
Entrusted: Christians and Environmental Care (Dunbar, Gibson & Rasi, eds., Adventus, 2013)
Planet in Distress: Environmental Deterioration and the Great Controversy (Christiansen, Review & Herald, 2012)
CONCLUSION
Thank you for joining us for this episode of Adventist Peace Radio. If you appreciated this conversation, we hope you’ll share the episode with those who care deeply about the created world, you know, and with those who should care about it more!
SUBSCRIBE: We invite you to subscribe to the podcast on iTunes, Apple Podcasts, Google Play, Stitcher, or Spotify.
DONATE: You can support the podcast by making a financial contribution. We invite you to donate online atAdventistPeace.org/donate.
MUSIC: Our theme music is “Green Fields” by Scott Holmes, and this is available at the Free Music Archive.
DISCLAIMER: The Adventist Peace Fellowship is an independent 501(c)(3) non-profit organization that supports work for peacemaking and social justice building upon the values of the Seventh-day Adventist tradition. We are not part of, affiliated with, or supported by the General Conference of Seventh-day Adventists or any affiliates known as the Seventh-day Adventist Church. Any content, opinions, statements, products or services offered by Adventist Peace Fellowship, are solely those of our organization, and not those of the Seventh-day Adventist Church.