Service Description
"Fully recognizing that non-human plants, animals and others have their own worlds which are fundamentally different and unknowable to us is to begin to end human exceptionalism and human supremacism," writes James Bridle in their provocative book, "Ways of Being".
In this reflection, Rev. Kim Wilson explores what we can learn from these nonhuman ways of being in order to live more equitably and sustainably with each other and the nonhuman world. Could overcoming our anthropocentrism, in fact, be the key to the Earth's (and our) long-term survival?

