"A Semiotic Theory of Theology and Philosophy" deals with the concept of nature from an unusually broad perspective, viewing nature as encompassing every order of the world. It is innovative in method, weaving together different disciplines, methods and attunements, but at the same time rich and imaginative in its poetical style and metaphors. It opens up a new understanding of the depths and vastness of nature, worlds strange, scary but also fascinating. It reflects on the mystery of the sacred in nature and the meaning humans can make of their lives.
In this book Robert Corrington has managed to hold together the vital threads of his earlier books and add new insights as well to his thought of ecstatic naturalism.
Corrington's criticism of ecofeminist theology and philosophy struck me as unfair. It is my guess that ecofeminism and ecstatic naturalism will have an interesting, lively and productive discussion in the future.
I would recommend this important book to anyone interested in the connection between nature and the meaning of life, from a philosophical or a religious standpoint- ecofeminists too.