Cover of Environmental Ethics
Already a subscriber? - Login here
Not yet a subscriber? - Subscribe here

Browse by:



Displaying: 21-40 of 52 documents


features
21. Environmental Ethics: Volume > 32 > Issue: 3
Paul Ott Value as Practice and the Practice of Value: Dewey’s Value Theory for Environmental Ethics
abstract | view |  rights & permissions | cited by
John Dewey’s theory of value provides a strong alternative to traditional intrinsic value theory that can better address the need for a wide distribution of environmental values. Grounded in his theories of experience and inquiry, Dewey understands values as concrete practices acquired through the interaction of the human organism with its surroundings. Dividing value into acts of immediate valuation and acts of evaluation, Dewey shows that all values start out as desires and through reflective criticism eventuate in value practices. Value inquiry is the practice of responding to problems in the world for which our established value practices are unable to respond adequately. This model of value is shown to be a much needed improvement over intrinsic value theory insofar as it is inclusive of human desire, limiting the capacity to value to human beings, avoids much of the metaphysical and ethical conflict in the biocentrism/ecocentrism debate, as well as rejects the artificial distinction between instrumental and intrinsic value. The case for Dewey’s theory of value is further strengthened by how closely Aldo Leopold’s experience-based practice of value in A Sand County Almanac parallels Dewey’s theory of value, especially with respect to the importance of desire, science, and education.
22. Environmental Ethics: Volume > 32 > Issue: 3
Chaone Mallory What is Ecofeminist Political Philosophy? Gender, Nature, and the Political
abstract | view |  rights & permissions | cited by
Ecofeminist political philosophy is an area of intellectual inquiry that examines the political status of that which we call “nature” using the insights, theoretical tools, and ethical commitments of ecological feminisms and other liberatory theories such as critical race theory, queer theory, postcolonial theory, environmental philosophy, and feminism. Ecofeminist political philosophy is concerned with questions regarding the possibilities opened by the recognition of agency and subjectivity for the more-than-human world; and it asks how we can respond politically to the more-than-human world on mutual, dialogical terms. Such philosophy insists that a gendered and liberatory analysis is needed to adequately address the environmental dilemma of how to include nonhuman nature as co-interlocutor in the green public sphere. It also asks critical questions of “traditional” philosophies that exclude the more-than-human world from ethico-political consideration. These themes run throughout the work of three contemporary environmental feminist theorists who compellingly examine the entanglements between concepts and categories of gender, nature, and the political: specifically, the work of ecofeminist philosopher Val Plumwood, radical democratic theorist Catriona Sandilands, and feminist phenomenologist and philosopher of place Bonnie Mann. Karen Warren’s quilt metaphor shows how such ecofeminist political philosophy fits into the larger tapestry of ecofeminism.
book reviews
23. Environmental Ethics: Volume > 32 > Issue: 3
Seamus Carey Before the Voice of Reason: Echoes of Responsibility in Merleau-Ponty’s Ecology and Levinas’s Ethics
view |  rights & permissions | cited by
24. Environmental Ethics: Volume > 32 > Issue: 3
Wendy Lynne Lee Environmentalism in Popular Culture
view |  rights & permissions | cited by
25. Environmental Ethics: Volume > 32 > Issue: 3
Joseph Christian Greer Can Life Prevail? A Radical Approach to the Environmental Crisis
view |  rights & permissions | cited by
26. Environmental Ethics: Volume > 32 > Issue: 3
Philip Cafaro Conservation Refugees: The Hundred-Year Conflict Between Global Conservation and Native Peoples
view |  rights & permissions | cited by
27. Environmental Ethics: Volume > 32 > Issue: 2
News And Notes
view |  rights & permissions | cited by
features
28. Environmental Ethics: Volume > 32 > Issue: 2
Ned Hettinger Animal Beauty, Ethics, and Environmental Preservation
abstract | view |  rights & permissions | cited by
Animal beauty provides a significant aesthetic reason for protecting nature. Worries about aesthetic discrimination and the ugliness of predation might make one think otherwise. Although it has been argued that aesthetic merit is a trivial and morally objectionable basis for action, beauty is an important value and a legitimate basis for differential treatment, especially in the case of animals. While the suffering and death of animals due to predation are important disvalues that must be recognized, predation’s tragic beauty has positive aesthetic value that can be appropriately aesthetically appreciated.
29. Environmental Ethics: Volume > 32 > Issue: 2
John Basl Restitutive Restoration: New Motivations for Ecological Restoration
abstract | view |  rights & permissions | cited by
Our environmental wrongdoings result in a moral debt that requires restitution. One component of restitution is reparative and another is remediative. The remediative component requires that we remediate our characters in ways that alter or eliminate the character traits that tend to lead, in their expression, to environmental wrongdoing. Restitutive restoration is a way of engaging in ecological restoration that helps to meet the remediative requirement that accompanies environmental wrongdoing. This account of restoration provides a new motivation and justification for engaging in restorative practices in addition to the standard pragmatist justification and motivations.
discussion papers
30. Environmental Ethics: Volume > 32 > Issue: 2
Shari Collins-Chobanian, Eric Comerford, Chris Kerlin Twenty Million Environmental Refugees and Counting: A Call for Recognition or a New Convention
abstract | view |  rights & permissions | cited by
For over two decades, the debate about whether legally to recognize environmental refugees as refugees has been ongoing. Because their numbers are growing, environmental refugees should be recognized as convention refugees or a new UN convention should be drafted to address their needs. A typology of the environmental refugee should be developed to make the term more concrete and useful.
31. Environmental Ethics: Volume > 32 > Issue: 2
Ian A. Smith The Role of Humility and Intrinsic Goods in Preserving Endangered Species: Why Preserve the Humpback Chub?
abstract | view |  rights & permissions | cited by
Environmental groups have worked tirelessly to save several species of endangered fish along the Colorado River, including the humpback chub (Gila cypha). The humpback chub does not seem to have any significant instrumental goods, but these environmentalists have championed its cause nonetheless. If the humpback chub has no instrumental goods, then appealing to another kind of goods is needed to show that it should be preserved. Some environmental ethicists have suggested appealing to the intrinsic goods of a species (or, alternatively, its intrinsic value or inherent value). Drawing on and going beyond John O’Neill’s work, it can be argued that all currently existing (biological) species have their own goods, or intrinsic goods. In terms of the notion of flourishing, the intrinsic goods of a species consist in its abilities to flourish. These goods can be used to construct a defense of the view that a species, even a species such as the humpback chub, ought to be preserved. One way to construct this defense is to appeal to virtue ethics, specifically the virtue of humility. Exercising the virtue of humility in our relations with species that we human beings have endangered involves preserving them along with preserving their intrinsic goods.
32. Environmental Ethics: Volume > 32 > Issue: 2
Steven Fesmire Ecological Imagination
abstract | view |  rights & permissions | cited by
Environmental thinkers recognize that ecological thinking has a vital role to play in many wise choices and policies; yet, little theoretical attention has been given to developing an adequate philosophical psychology of the imaginative nature of such thinking. Ecological imagination is an outgrowth of our more general deliberative capacity to perceive, in light of possibilities for thinking and acting, the relationships that constitute any object. Such imagination is of a specifically ecological sort when key metaphors, images, symbols, and the like used in the ecologies shape the mental simulations we use to deliberate—i.e., when these interpretive structures shape what John Dewey calls our “dramatic rehearsals.” There is an urgent practical need to cultivate ecological imagination, and an equally practical need to make theoretical sense of the imaginative dimension of ecological reflection.
book reviews
33. Environmental Ethics: Volume > 32 > Issue: 2
Roger Paden Intergenerational Justice: Rights and Responsibilities in an Intergenerational Polity
view |  rights & permissions | cited by
34. Environmental Ethics: Volume > 32 > Issue: 2
Jeanne Hamming Rachel Carson: Legacy and Challenge
view |  rights & permissions | cited by
35. Environmental Ethics: Volume > 32 > Issue: 2
Jerome A. Stone Eco-Theology
view |  rights & permissions | cited by
36. Environmental Ethics: Volume > 32 > Issue: 2
Peter Harries-Jones Understanding Gregory Bateson: Mind, Beauty and the Sacred Earth
view |  rights & permissions | cited by
37. Environmental Ethics: Volume > 32 > Issue: 2
John Nolt Healing Appalachia: Sustainable Living through Appropriate Technologies
view |  rights & permissions | cited by
38. Environmental Ethics: Volume > 32 > Issue: 2
David Schlosberg American Environmental Policy, 1990–2006: Beyond Gridlock
view |  rights & permissions | cited by
39. Environmental Ethics: Volume > 32 > Issue: 2
Frank Schalow Onto-Ethologies: The Animal Environments of Uexküll, Heidegger, Merleau-Ponty, and Deleuze
view |  rights & permissions | cited by
40. Environmental Ethics: Volume > 32 > Issue: 1
News and Notes
view |  rights & permissions | cited by