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Fragile Freedoms

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... the value comes from the sand dollar's role in the larger environmental, ... Like sand dollars our activities are possible, gain meaning and value only in ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Fragile Freedoms


1
Fragile Freedoms
  • Bryan G. Norton

2
Different Languages
  • Using the traditional economic language of
    aggregation encourages the view that more is
    better.
  • Using the traditional moral language of rights
    and interests encourages total prohibitation of
    exploitation.
  • To get between the horns of the dilemma one needs
    to take into account the context of human action.

3
Strip Mining
  • Thus the little girls strip mining starfish was
    wrong because it was in an inappropriate context.
    The beach was saved to teach little girls to
    love not exploit nature. By teaching people
    about ecology and history one might be able to
    encourage interest in and appreciation of nature.
    We should put faith in the power of observation
    and experience to transform worldviews (501).

4
Recognizing Context
  • But, Norton doesnt think that he should have
    insisted that the little girl value the sand
    dollars in their own right, he thinks people need
    to recognize that the value comes from the sand
    dollars role in the larger environmental,
    cultural, and historical context.

5
Needing Nickels
  • While the freedom and creativity of sand dollars
    is limited compared to ours, our freedom is also
    limited and fragile. Like sand dollars our
    activities are possible, gain meaning and value
    only in context. The beach provides a context,
    which far outstrips the possibilities of an
    economic context. The family didnt need the
    nickels and should have spent the time exploring
    the larger world.

6
Thinking like a Lagoon
  • One should respect creatures as more than things
    that have purely economic value. One can learn
    to think like a lagoon by recognizing the context
    of and interconnections of living things. This
    doesnt mean that sand dollars have to be seen as
    the sorts of things with rights, the locus of
    value-expression. What the little girl was
    missing was perspective.  

7
Speed of Change
  • Environmental problems are the result of
    interactions between slow changing ecological and
    fast changing economic contexts. One might worry
    that realizing this will entail onerous
    restrictions on personal liberty.

8
Restrictions and Anthropocentrism
  • Norton thinks we need to restrict what humans can
    do, but he doesnt question anthropocentrism
    the idea that all value is perceived from the
    viewpoint of conscious beings. (503)

9
Theology and Religion
  • We are free only in how we react to changing
    contexts. The insight of environmentalists was
    that our freedoms are constrained by our
    environment (not merely other people and possibly
    God). The secrets of our existence lie in
    natures ability to create more life from the
    bodies of the dead. Science and theology have
    merged here. We should look at nature not only
    as an object of exploitation but also of
    contemplation (504).

10
How Bad Will the Restrictions Be?
  • The question of how bad the restrictions on our
    behavior (having adopted an environmental ethic)
    will be does not have a clear answer. It depends
    on how we conceive these restrictions they may
    be opportunities, or simply changes. The number
    of whaling jobs decline as the number of whale
    watchers goes up.

11
  • Fragile freedom may be replaced with secure
    freedoms. Education is something that people
    will pay for. For example bluefish charter
    captains could act as educators and thus help
    justify limiting their catches. We need to
    encourage alternative and adaptive human
    behaviors.

12
  • Humans must understand and value from a
    realistic perspective by recognizing their role
    in the larger ecological context. (505).

13
Ecological Contexts
  • To solve environmental problems we need to look
    at ourselves in our ecological context.
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