Title: Environmental Ethics
1Environmental Ethics
2Views of Nature
- Problems of managing interactions between people
and their environment has been transformed by
unprecedented increases in the rate, scale, and
complexity of the interactions. - Many people believe we have entered an era
characterized by global change stemming from
human-environment interdependence. - Example Stone age vs modern technology
3Environmental Ethics
- Ethics
- Seeks to define fundamentally what is right and
what is wrong, regardless of cultural
differences. - Morals
- Reflect predominant feelings of a culture about
ethical issues. - Examples War, Abortion, animal or human
sacrifice
4Environmental Ethics
- applied ethics that examines the moral basis of
environmental responsibility.
Focuses on moral foundation and how far such
responsibility extends.
5Theories of Moral Responsibility Anthropocentric
- Responsibility derived from human interests.
(Human centered) - Only humans are morally significant.
6Theories of Moral Responsibility Biocentric
All life forms have an inherent right to exist.
7Theories of Moral Responsibility Ecocentrism
- Environment deserves direct moral consideration,
not one derived from human interests. (GAIA
hypothesis rev ch 1)
8Ecocentric View
- A thing is right when it tends to preserve the
integrity, stability, and beauty of the biotic
community. It is wrong when it tends
otherwise.We abuse land because we regard it as
a community belonging to us. When we see land as
a community to which we belong, we may begin to
use it with love and respect. - Aldo Leopold
9Naturalist philosophers -Henry David Thoreau
- Walden, writer, recluse, live simply off the
land quotes - Thank God men cannot as yet fly and lay waste the
sky as well as the earth! - Any fool can make a rule, and any fool will mind
it. - Go confidently in the direction of your dreams!
Live the life you've imagined. As you simplify
your life, the laws of the universe will be
simpler. - It is never too late to give up your prejudices.
- My friend is one... who will take me for what I
am. - http//www.nndb.com/people/468/000022402/
10Naturalist philosophers Ralph Waldo Emerson
- Poet, writer, celebrate nature sexuality
- Quotes
- Colleges hate geniuses, just as convents hate
saints. - Do not go where the path may lead, go instead
where there is no path and leave a trail. - Finish each day and be done with it. You have
done what you could. - Give all to love obey thy heart.
- Live in the sunshine, swim the sea, drink the
wild air - http//www.transcendentalists.com/1emerson.html
11Naturalist philosophers John Muir
- naturalist, writer, conservationist, and founder
of the Sierra Club, convinced Roosevelt to set
aside land for national parks - Quotes
- Everybody needs beauty as well as bread, places
to play in and pray in, where nature may heal and
give strength to body and soul. - I only went out for a walk and finally concluded
to stay out till sundown, for going out, I found,
was really going in. - The clearest way into the Universe is through a
forest wilderness. - Tug on anything at all and you'll find it
connected to everything else in the universe. - The gross heathenism of civilization has
generally destroyed nature, and poetry, and all
that is spiritual. - http//www.sierraclub.org/john_muir_exhibit/
12Naturalist philosophers Aldo Leopold
- Father of Ecology, writer, Sand County Almanac,
conservationist - Quotes
- We abuse land because we regard it as a commodity
belonging to us. When we see land as a community
to which we belong, we may begin to use it with
love and respect. - We shall never achieve harmony with land, any
more than we shall achieve absolute justice or
liberty for people. In these higher aspirations,
the important thing is not to achieve but to
strive. - http//www.bigeastern.com/eotp/ep_aldol.htm
13Naturalist Philosophers Rachel Carson
- Chemist, writer, naturalist, convinced JFK to
start the EPA. - Those who dwell among the beauties and mysteries
of the earth are never alone or weary of life. - If I had influence with the good fairy who is
supposed to preside over the christening of all
children, I should ask that her gift to each
child in the world be a sense of wonder so
indestructible that it would last throughout
life - it is the public that is being asked to assume
the risks...the public must decide whether it
wishes to continueon the present road and it can
only do so when in full possession of the
facts..." - http//www.lkwdpl.org/wihohio/cars-rac.htm
14Environmental Attitudes
- Development
- Preservation
- Conservation
- Societal
- Global
- individual
15Environmental Attitudes - Developmental Ethic
- Assumes human race is, and should be, masters of
nature. - All resources exist solely for human benefit.
16Developmental Ethic
- -Based on individualism.
- -Reinforced by work ethic.
- -Humans should always be busy creating change.
- -Bigger, better, and faster represents progress.
17Preservation Ethic
- Nature has intrinsic value apart from human
appropriation. - Seen as a refuge from economic activities, not as
a resource for it. - Reasons range from aesthetic to scientific.
- Humans dependent on environment.
- Preserve nature for future generations.
18Conservation Ethic
- consideration of whole earth.
- Some resource use
- Stresses finding a balance between total
development and absolute preservation. - Rapid, uncontrolled growth is ultimately
self-defeating.
19Societal Environmental Ethics
- Western societies have long acted as if the earth
has - Unlimited reserves of natural resources.
- An unlimited ability to assimilate wastes.
- A limitless ability to accommodate unchecked
growth.
20Societal Environmental Ethics
- Growth, expansion, and domination remain the
central sociocultural objectives of most
advanced societies. - Economic growth and resource exploitation are
attitudes shared by developing societies. - Since the first settlers arrived in North
America, nature has been considered an enemy
which needs to be conquered, or subdued. - Pocohantas video John Smith crew!!
21Corporate Environmental Ethics
Corporations are legal entities designed to
operate at a profit, and are not intrinsically
harmful.
22Corporate Environmental Ethics
23Corporate Environmental Ethics
- Profit margin determines expansion, and more
expansion leads to more production (and more
waste). - More expansion means more power is attained.
- The more power attained, the more influence is
gained over decision makers who can create
conditions favorable for expansion. - Never-ending spiral.
24Corporate Environmental Ethics
- Practicing an environmental ethic should not
interfere with corporate responsibilities. - It makes little sense to preserve the environment
if preservation causes economic collapse. - Nor does it make sense to maintain industrial
productivity at the cost of breathable air, clean
water, wildlife, parks, and wilderness.
25Corporate Environmental Ethics
- Why are corporations becoming green?
- Profitability
- Image consumer driven
- Long term planning finally
- Laws EPA regulations
26Industrial Ecology
- Argues that good ecology is also good economics,
and alternatives exist for corporations to
provide goods and services in ways that do not
destroy the environment. - Accounts for waste a useless or worthless
material. - Waste should be viewed as residue our economy has
not yet learned to use efficiently.
27Environmental Justice
In 1998, the EPA defined environmental justice as
fair treatment, meaning
No group of people, including racial, ethnic, or
socioeconomic groups should bear a
disproportionate share of the negative
environmental consequences resulting from
industrial, municipal, and commercial operations
of the execution of federal, state, local, and
tribal programs and policies.
28Environmental Justice
- In the United States, waste generation is
directly correlated with per capita income, but
few toxic waste sites are located in affluent
suburbs.
29NIMBY Not In My BackYard
30Environmental Justice
- -What should be the basic standard of living for
all humans? - -NIMBY not in my backyard
- landfills, incinerators, prisons, power plants
31Individual Environmental Ethics
- Recognition of individual responsibility must
lead to changes in individual behavior. - Recent opinion polls have indicated Americans
think environmental problems can often have a
quick technological fix. - Many individuals want the environment cleaned up,
but do not want to make the necessary lifestyle
changes.
32Consumption
- Ecologist Paul Ehrlich argues the American
lifestyle is driving the global ecosystem to the
brink of collapse. - Economist Julian Simon argues human ingenuity,
not resources, limits economic growth and
lifestyles.
33Consumption
- Food
- Fertilizers, pesticides, and high-yield crops,
have more than doubled world food production in
the past 40 years. - Third world development
- As more people around the world achieve the
American dream, they will consume more resources,
and generate more pollution.
34Consumption
- Oil
- At current rates of consumption, the worlds
known oil reserves would not last through the
current century. - Experts predict new technologies will avert a
global energy crisis. - Fuel Cells
35Consumption
- Water
- Currently humans use about half the planets
accessible supply of renewable, fresh water. - More than any other resources, water may limit
expansion of consumerism in the next century.
36How big is your footprint?
Earth Day Footprint Quiz
Go to site, take your own quiz after class
37Global Environmental Ethics
- Ecological degradation in any nation inevitably
impinges quality of life in others. - Much of current environmental crisis is rooted in
widening wealth gap between rich and poor
nations. - Rapid industrialization will cause intense
production of pollution, which in turn will lead
to increased localized environmental destruction
and greater poverty.
38Fur seal Case Study
39Fur seal Case Study
- 1. What do you think the future of the seal hunt
should be? Is this a conservation, preservation
or development approach? - 2. Should the seals be spared at the possible
expense of the Aleuts? Why or why not? - 3. What do you think would happen if the seal
population were left alone with no human
intervention? - 4. Do you think there would be any controversy
at all if the mammals in question were not fur
seals but rats? Why? - 5. Compare attitudes using this case study.
- Development Preservation
- Conservation Global
40Waterfowl lead shot Case Study
41Waterfowl lead shot Case Study
- 1. Should hunters be required to use steel shot?
Why or why not? - 2. Why does lead shot cause a problem whereas
steel shot does not? - 3. Why doesnt lead shot just disappear?
- 4. Apply each of the following terms to the
problem - Development Preservation
- Conservation Global
42Environmental Activists
- Greenpeace International
- http//www.greenpeace.org/international/
- ELF
- http//www.earthliberationfront.com/index.htm
- Sierra Club
- http//www.sierraclub.org/
- ALF
- http//www.animalliberationfront.com/
- PETA
- http//www.peta.org/
43Environmental Activists PETA Case Study
- Dead Dog case
- 2 PETA volunteers took dogs from Human Society
killed them - Told ASPCA they would find homes
- Claimed quiet, calm, ethical death for dogs.
- Nation outraged
- Which is worse, gas or lethal injections?
- Moral objections by US?
- Are your pets neutered?
44Review
- Views of Nature
- Environmental Ethics
- Environmental Attitudes
- Societal Environmental Ethics
- Corporate Environmental Ethics
- Global Environmental Ethics
- Individual Environmental Ethics
- Consumption
- Environmental Justice
- Environmental Activism