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Displaying: 21-40 of 49 documents


book reviews
21. Environmental Ethics: Volume > 24 > Issue: 3
Ariel Salleh Ecofeminist Philosophy: A Western Perspective on What It Is and Why It Matters
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22. Environmental Ethics: Volume > 24 > Issue: 3
Nancy Coppola And No Birds Sing: Rhetorical Analyses of Rachel Carson’s Silent Spring
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23. Environmental Ethics: Volume > 24 > Issue: 3
Catriona Sandilands Undomesticated Ground: Recasting Nature as Feminist Space
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comment
24. Environmental Ethics: Volume > 24 > Issue: 3
Ian S. Bay A Response to Steven Vogel’s “The End of Nature”
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news and notes
25. Environmental Ethics: Volume > 24 > Issue: 2
NEWS AND NOTES
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features
26. Environmental Ethics: Volume > 24 > Issue: 2
Holmes Rolston, III Environmental Ethics in Antartica
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The concerns of environmental ethics on other continents fail in Antarctica, which is without sustainable development, or ecosystems for a “land ethic,” or even familiar terrestrial fauna and flora. An Antarctic regime, developing politically, has been developing an ethics, underrunning the politics, remarkably exemplified in the Madrid Protocol, protecting “the intrinsic value of Antarctica.” Without inhabitants, claims of sovereignty are problematic. Antarctica is a continent for scientists and, more recently, tourists. Both focus on wild nature. Life is driven to extremes; these extremes can intensify an ethic. Antarctica ascommon heritage transforms into wilderness, sanctuary, wonderland. An appropriate ethics for the seventh continent differs radically from that for the other six.
27. Environmental Ethics: Volume > 24 > Issue: 2
Mikael Stenmark The Relevance of Environmental Ethical Theories for Policy Making
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I address the issue of whether differences in ethical theory have any relevance for the practical issues of environmental management and policy making. Norton’s answer, expressed as a convergence hypothesis, is that environmentalists are evolving toward a consensus in policy even though they remain divided regarding basic values. I suggest that there are good reasons for rejecting Norton’s position.I elaborate on these reasons, first, by distinguishing between different forms of anthropocentrism and nonanthropocentrism, second, by contrasting the different goals that anthropocentrists, biocentrists, and ecocentrists set up for environmental policy making, and, lastly, by identifying three important policy areas (population growth, wilderness preservation, and wildlife management) where differences in basic values generate divergent policies.
28. Environmental Ethics: Volume > 24 > Issue: 2
Vrinda Dalmiya Cows and Others: Toward Constructing Ecofeminist Selves
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I examine the kind of alliances and ironic crossing of borders that constitute an ecofeminist subjectivity by appeal to a postcolonial literary imagination and ahistorical philosophical argumentation. I link the theoretical insights of a modern short story “Bestiality” with a concept of “congenital debt” found in the ancient Vedic corpus to suggest a notion of ecological selfhood that transforms into the idea of a “gift community” to encompass nonhumans as well as people on the fringes of society, but without the usual problems associated with such a two-pronged extensionism.
discussion papers
29. Environmental Ethics: Volume > 24 > Issue: 2
Steve Vanderheiden Rousseau, Cronon, and the Wilderness Idea
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William Cronon has recently argued that the current debate concerning justifications for protecting wilderness relies upon conceptions of natural value premised upon a nature/society dualism that originated in older nature writing but which still animates contemporary thinking. This dualism, he argues, prevents adequate realization of the human and social places in nature, and is ultimately counterproductiveto the task of articulating the proper relationship between humans and the natural world. While the origin of one of these conceptions of natural value (the frontier) can be traced back to Rousseau, I argue that Rousseau’s writings reveal a far more complex and nuanced treatment of the value of nature in and for society (and the persons that compose it) than has thus far been acknowledged. Moreover, by unpacking several arguments made by Rousseau on behalf of the stewardship and accessibility of natural areas, one can not only gain a more accurate view of Rousseau’s environmental thought than is ordinarily recognized by authors who focus on his primitivism and anti-modern critique, but also some insights that may help bridge the nature/society dualism plaguing contemporary environmental ethics and noted by Cronon.
30. Environmental Ethics: Volume > 24 > Issue: 2
Hugh P. McDonald Dewey’s Naturalism
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In the recent literature of environmental ethics, certain criticisms of pragmatism in general and Dewey in particular have been made, specifically, that certain features of pragmatism make it unsuitable as an environmental ethic. Eric Katz asserts that pragmatism is an inherently anthropocentric and subjective philosophy. Bob Pepperman Taylor argues that Dewey’s naturalism in particular is anthropocentric in that it concentrates on human nature. I challenge both of these views in the context of Dewey’s naturalism. I discuss his naturalism, his critique of subjectivity, his naturalization of intrinsic value, and his holistic treatment of justification.
book reviews
31. Environmental Ethics: Volume > 24 > Issue: 2
Kurt Jax Naturschutzethik: Eine Einführung für die Praxis
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32. Environmental Ethics: Volume > 24 > Issue: 2
Seamus Carey A Spirituality of Resistance
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33. Environmental Ethics: Volume > 24 > Issue: 2
Thomas Heyd Biodiversity and Democracy: Rethinking Society and Nature
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34. Environmental Ethics: Volume > 24 > Issue: 2
Ralph R. Acampora Electric Animal: Toward a Rhetoric of Wildlife
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35. Environmental Ethics: Volume > 24 > Issue: 2
Pam Ryan Environmentalism for the Millennium
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36. Environmental Ethics: Volume > 24 > Issue: 2
Jeanne Kay Guelke Judaism, Environmentalism and the Environment: Mapping and Analysis
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news and notes
37. Environmental Ethics: Volume > 24 > Issue: 1
NEWS AND NOTES
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features
38. Environmental Ethics: Volume > 24 > Issue: 1
Irene Klaver, Jozef Keulartz, Henk van den Belt Born to be Wild
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With the turning of wilderness areas into wildlife parks and the returning of developed areas of land to the forces of nature, intermediate hybrid realms surface in which wild and managed nature become increasingly entangled. A partitioning of environmental philosophy into ecoethics and animal welfare ethics leaves these mixed territories relatively uncharted—the first dealing with wild (animals), the second with the welfare of captive or domestic animals. In this article, we explore an environmental philosophy that considers explicitly these mixed situations. We examine a recent Dutch policy of introducing domesticated and semi-wild large herbivores in newly developed nature areas. Larger issues are at stake, such as the intertwinement of nature and culture, the dynamic character of de-domestication processes, and the relation between concepts of authenticity and the wild. We sketch a pluralistic, dynamic, and pragmatic environmental philosophy that is capable of dealing with the complicated ethicalproblems concerning creatures and land caught between domestication and the wild.
39. Environmental Ethics: Volume > 24 > Issue: 1
Steven Vogel Environmental Philosophy after the End of Nature
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I call for “postnaturalism” in environmental philosophy—for an environmental philosophy that no longer employs the concept nature. First, the term is too ambiguous and philosophically dangerous and, second, McKibben and others who argue that nature has already ended are probably right—except that perhaps nature has always already ended. Poststructuralism, environmental history, and recent science studies all point in the same direction: the world we inhabit is always already one transformed by human practices. Environmental questions are social and political ones, to be answered by us and not by nature. Many will worry that this conclusion leads to environmentally pernicious consequences, and to problems of relativism and idealism, but I argue that it does not. Practices are real, not ideal, and not all practices are equal: those that acknowledge human responsibility for transforming the world are preferable to those that don’t. Environmental harm results when we do not recognize our own responsibility for the world our practices create.
discussion papers
40. Environmental Ethics: Volume > 24 > Issue: 1
Lisa Gerber What is So Bad about Misanthropy?
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This paper is an exploration of the vice of misanthropy particularly as it manifests itself in people who love nature. Misanthropy is a hatred and disgust of humans, particularly of a group of humans. I look to wilderness to illustrate the vice of misanthropy. With regard to wilderness, misanthropy functions in three distinct spheres. First, there is misanthropy in the use of wilderness to flee other people. Second, there is misanthropy in the assumption that humans taint the wilderness. Finally, there is misanthropy in the assumption that humans can only relate to nature in a way that is harmful. In the end, we need to avoid misanthropy and its attendant despair. It is important that we see ourselves, not as a determined mass of people, but rather as individual people who are able to create positive change.