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A Field Philosopher's Guide to Fracking: How One Texas Town Stood Up to Big Oil and Gas

 

By Liveright
A Field Philosopher's Guide to Fracking: How One Texas Town Stood Up to Big Oil and Gas
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$16.63
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Last Seen $16.63   Last Seen $7.00   Last Seen $6.65  
Highest $22.24 Dec 28, '15   Highest $13.50 Jan 24, '16   Highest $16.55 Dec 17, '15  
Lowest $16.63 Mar 27, '16   Lowest $3.74 Dec 12, '15   Lowest $2.53 Nov 25, '15  
Average $20.46   Average $12.41   Average $11.09  
Added Nov 18, 2015   Added Nov 18, 2015   Added Nov 18, 2015  
                 
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30 day average: 233,777 | 90 day average: 199,833

 

Product Description
From the front lines of the fracking debate, a field philosopher explores one of our most divisive technologies.When philosophy professor Adam Briggle moved to Denton, Texas, he had never heard of fracking. Only five years later he would successfully lead a citizens' initiative to ban hydraulic fracturing in Dentonthe first Texas town to challenge the oil and gas industry. On his journey to learn about fracking and its effects, he leaped from the ivory tower into the fray.In beautifully narrated chapters, Briggle brings us to town hall debates and neighborhood meetings where citizens wrestle with issues few fully understand. Is fracking safe? How does it affect the local economy? Why are bakeries prohibited in neighborhoods while gas wells are permitted next to playgrounds? In his quest for answers Briggle meets people like Cathy McMullen. Her neighbors cows asphyxiated after drinking fracking fluids, and her orchard was razed to make way for a pipeline. Cathy did not consent to drilling, but those who profited lived far out of harms way.Briggle's first instinct was to think about frackingdeeply. Drawing on philosophers from Socrates to Kant, but also on conversations with engineers, legislators, and industry representatives, he develops a simple theory to evaluate fracking: we should give those at risk to harm a stake in the decisions we make, and we should monitor for and correct any problems that arise. Finding this regulatory process short-circuited, with government and industry alike turning a blind eye to symptoms like earthquakes and nosebleeds, Briggle decides to take action.Though our field philosopher is initially out of his elementjoining fierce activists like "Texas Sharon," once called the "worst enemy" of the oil and gas industryhis story culminates in an underdog victory for Denton, now nationally recognized as a beacon for citizens' rights at the epicenter of the fracking revolution. 16 illustrations

 

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