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Important Questions In Environmental Ethics

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Title: Important Questions In Environmental Ethics


1
Important Questions In Environmental Ethics
  • important types of
  • environmental ethics

2
The roots of environmental degradation
  • What are they?

3
Agriculture displaced sustainable foraging
lifeways, beginning 10,000 years
agoAgricultures destroyed ecosystems and the
foraging societies that had co-evolved with
themPaul Shephard
4
Western Monotheistic Religion?
  • Critics cite 4 anti-nature tendencies in western
    religions

5
1) Domination of Nature
  • Genesis God commands humans to "fill the earth
    and subdue it and have dominion over the fish of
    the sea and over the birds of the air and over
    every living thing...
  • After the great flood God says to Noah the
    animals will dread and fear you, and I will give
    you dominion over "everything that creeps on the
    ground, and over all the fish of the sea."

6
2) Rejection of animism and pantheism
  • Animists believe that every part of the
    environment, living and non-living, has
    consciousness or spirit. Therefore, all beings
    deserve reverence.
  • Pantheists identify deities with natural objects
    and processes. Therefore nature is sacred or
    holy and people should have reverence for it

7
3) Wilderness is cursed Pastoral, agricultural,
and City landscapes are Holy, Promised Lands
4) The sacred is beyond the world - earth is
devalued in favor of heavenly hopes
8
Christians Jews respond
  • Our traditions promote a care-giving stewardship
    not domination of nature. (Noah story)
  • Some admit the general destructive tendency, but
    say
  • Minority "traditions within the wider tradition"
    are nature-beneficent.
  • Both traditions are currently mutating into forms
    increasingly concerned with the environment

9
Western Philosophy -another culprit?
  • Critics blame its dualism, viewing humans as
    separate from and superior to nature

10
Rene Descartes is often blamed
  • Rene Descartes (1596-1650) believed that animals
    have no minds and cannot suffer
  • Humans have minds and souls, they are different
    from animals
  • His famous dictum -- I think, therefore I am --
    suggested to him that thought reveals not only
    existence, but also human superiority
  • So for Descartes, HUMANS are separate from nature
    and superior to it.
  • And the natural world became an objectified
    "thing."
  • Some critics say this objectification of nature
    is a key to science and progress

11
Francis Bacon is also blamed
  • Francis Bacon (1561-1626) was the father of the
    Scientific method.
  • Critics say he promoted a view of nature as a
    machine.
  • See, e.g., New Atlantis "a mechanistic
    utopia"--1624
  • Many passages reveal that he thought nature was
    like women and slaves They should be bound into
    the service of men
  • Many scholars think such thinking shaped the
    anti-nature views of Judaism and Christianity,
    and thus warped human-nature relations in the
    west

12
Proffered roots of ecological deterioration
industrial civilization technology
patriarchy hierarchy overpopulation
13
More purported roots of ecological
deterioration consumerism socialism/capitalis
m Agricultures Pastoralism
14
Two main types of Environmental Ethics
  • Individualistic
  • Holistic

15
Both holistic and individualistic environmental
ethics address --
  • Whose interests count?
  • Whose interests must we consider?

16
I.e. Who has standing? Human Individuals?
  • Anthropocentrism The environment is valuable to
    the extent is useful or necessary for human well
    being
  • Usually "rationality" or some "intellectual"
    criterion is critical in the West for moral
    standing
  • E.g. Kant Descartes only humans have
    "consciousness"
  • William Blacksone all have a right to a liveable
    environment (EE, 105)
  • Kantian, deontological defense of human rights.
  • Not much new here in the overall approach

17
Who has standing?
Sentient animals?
  • Sentient animals are those who can experience
    pleasure and/or pain
  • Jeremy Bentham an early utilitarian theorist,
    provided a basis for extending moral standing
    beyond humans
  • Peter Singer's "Animal Liberation" theory
    provides a utilitarian argument pro-Animal
    Liberation

18
Who has Standing?Entities with Interests
  • Living entities that have "interests" -- a good
    that can be harmed -- have moral standing
  • Christopher Stone Individual natural objects,
    including trees, can have standing
  • Conservator/trustee notion analogous to mentally
    deficient humans
  • Tom Regan Animals who are "subjects of a life"
    have a "right" to that life.

19
Problems with individualistic approaches
  • (3) Feinberg, Regan and Singer base standing on
    human traits having interests, capacity to
    suffer, beings subjects-of-a-life"
  • I.e. only if animals are like us in some
    important way will we grant them standing
  • (1) Animal Liberation How can you measure
    pleasure/suffering
  • a perennial problem with utilitarianism
  • (2) Animal Rights boundary of moral
    considerability is very restrictive
  • and many plants and animals left out.

20
Problems with individualistic approaches
  • (5) Individualistic approaches provide no basis
    for prioritizing concern for endangered species
  • (4) How can we determine what the "interests" of
    a living thing are?
  • How should we decide who should be the trustee
    for non-rational, morally considerable entities?

21
Holistic Approaches -- the basic idea
  • The whole is greater (and more valuable) than the
    constitutive parts

22
3 Holistic Approaches
  • Biocentrism
  • life-centered ethics
  • Ecocentrism
  • ecosystem-centered ethics
  • Deep Ecology
  • identification and kinship ethics

23
Biocentrism life centered ethics
  • Paul Taylor's Respect for Nature (1986)
  • Living things have a good of their own, a will to
    live, and end of their own. Thus they have
    inherent worth
  • With this perspective comes morally responsible
    behavior toward nature. Also
  • (1) humans are member of earth's life community
  • (2) all species part of interdependent ecological
    system
  • (3) all life pursues own good in own ways
  • (4) Humans not inherently superior (all life has
    moral standing)
  • Precursors include Albert Schweitzer's "reverence
    for life" ethics and Aristotles Virtue Ethics
    stressing character traits awe, the inherent
    worth of each life

24
Biocentrism - key problem
  • Still pre-ecological
  • not really focused on ecosystems, but on
    individual life forms.

25
Ecocentrism ecosystem centered ethics
  • Aldo Leopolds watershed Land Ethic, 1949
    "All
    ethics rest upon a single premise that the
    individual is a member of a community of
    interdependent parts.
  • Leopold argued that ethics involves self-imposed
    limitations on freedom of action and is derived
    from the above recognition
  • Precursors
  • Baruch Spinoza
  • Henry David Thoreau
  • John Muir

26
Leopolds ecosystem-centered ethics
  • A land-use decision "is right when it tends to
    preserve the biotic community. It is wrong when
    it tends otherwise."
  • Leopold spoke of the land as an organism, as
    alive.
  • "the complexity of the land organism" is the
    outstanding 20th century discovery."
  • This is a mystical revelation that sounds like
    pantheism and anticipates James Lovelocks Gaia
    hypothesis
  • The Land Ethic "changes the role of Homo Sapiens
    from conqueror of the land-community to plain
    member and citizen of it. It implies respect for
    his fellow-members, and also respect for the
    land- community as such."

27
Lovelocks holistic planetary Gaia theory
  • Arguing the earth is a self-regulating living
    system that maintains the conditions for the
    perpetuation of life, James Lovelock advanced the
    Gaia Hypothesis.
  • Although not intended as an ethics, a
    biosphere-centered (large-ecocentric) ethics has
    been deduced from it, claiming
  • People ought not degrade this wonderful system in
    such a way that it can not function to keep its
    systems within the various delicate margins
    necessary for life

28
Deep EcologyBasic ideas
  • All life systems are sacred and valuable -- apart
    from their usefulness to human beings
  • All life evolved in the same way and thus, all
    are kin, with kinship obligations
  • All species should be allowed to flourish and
    fulfill their evolutionary destinies

29
Deep EcologyThe problem solution
  • Anthropocentrism (and reformist approaches)
    destroy nature
  • A transformation of consciousness is needed,
    replacing anthropocentrism with a broader sense
    of the self
  • identity should be grounded nature
  • When we understand that we are part of nature,
    eco-defense, as self-defense, will follow

30
Holistic Approaches -- Key criticism
  • Individuals get hurt when you ignore them in
    favor of wholes
  • This is the key criticism of all ends-focused
    theories
  • In environmental ethics, the common charge is of
    "eco-fascism"!

31
Ethics and Environmental Ethics The Gradual
Extension of Moral Concern
32
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The Earth Charter(as global example)
www.earthcharter.org
35
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36
Earth Charter
  • Describe the Earth Charter process (history),
    central principles, and strategic vision, and say
    something about how this effort reflects some of
    the concerns and perspectives to which you are
    being introduced in this class, and would be
    opposed by other points of view
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