The second edition of Environmental Ethics combines a strong theoretical foundation with applications to some of the most pressing environmental problems. Through a mix of classic and new essays, it discusses applied issues such as pollution, climate change, animal rights, biodiversity, and sustainability. Roughly half of the selections are original essays new to this edition.
* Accessible introduction for beginners, including important established essays and new essays commissioned especially for the volume
* Roughly half of the selections are original essays new to this edition, including an entirely new chapter on Pollution and climate change and a new section on Sustainability
* Includes new material on ethical theory as a grounding for understanding the ethical dimensions of the environment, our interactions with it, and our place in it
* The text incorporates helpful pedagogy, including extensive editorial material, cases, and study questions
* Includes key information on recent developments in the field
* Presents a carefully selected set of readings designed to progressively move the reader to competency in subject comprehension and essay writing
Spis treści
Notes on Contributors x
Preface to the Second Edition xii
Source Credits xiv
Part I Theoretical Background 1
1 Ethical Reasoning 3
Michael Boylan
2 The Self in Context: A Grounding for Environmentalism 14
Michael Boylan
Evaluating a Case Study: Developing a Practical Ethical Viewpoint 25
3 Worldview Arguments for Environmentalism 32
A. The Land Ethic and Deep Ecology 35
The Land Ethic 35
Aldo Leopold
The Shallow and the Deep, Long-Range Ecology Movement: A Summary42
Arne Naess
What Is Social Ecology? 46
Murray Bookchin
B. Eco-Feminism and Social Justice 59
Ecofeminism and Feminist Theory 59
Carolyn Merchant
The Power and the Promise of Ecological Feminism 64
Karen J. Warren
Patently Wrong: The Commercialization of Life Forms 71
Wanda Teays
C. Aesthetics 83
Aesthetics and the Value of Nature 83
Janna Thompson
Worldview and the Value-Duty Link to Environmental Ethics95
Michael Boylan
Evaluating a Case Study: Finding the Conflicts 109
4 Anthropocentric versus Biocentric Justifications 115
A. Anthropocentric Justifications 118
Human Rights and Future Generations 118
Alan Gewirth
Environmental Values, Anthropocentrism and Speciesism 122
Onora O’Neill
B. Biocentric Justifications 135
Environmental Ethics: Values in and Duties to the Natural World135
Holmes Rolston III
Respect for Nature: A Theory of Environmental Ethics 152
Paul W. Taylor
C. Searching the Middle 163
Reconciling Anthropocentric and Nonanthropocentric Environmental Ethics 163
James P. Sterba
On the Reconciliation of Anthropocentric and Nonanthropocentric Environmental Ethics 176
Brian K. Steverson
Reconciliation Reaffirmed: A Reply to Steverson 186
James P. Sterba
Evaluating a Case Study: Assessing Embedded Levels 191
Part II Applied Environmental Problems 199
5 Pollution and Climate Change 201
A. Air and Water Pollution 203
Blue Water 203
Michael Boylan
Polluting and Unpolluting 216
Benjamin Hale
Moral Valuation of Environmental Goods 231
Mark A. Seabright
B. Climate Change 243
Does a Failure in Global Leadership Mean It’s All Over?Climate, Population, and Progress 243
Ruth Irwin
Collective Responsibility and Climate Change 257
Seumas Miller
Evaluating a Case Study: Applying Ethical Issues 268
6 Animal Rights 275
All Animals Are Equal 277
Peter Singer
The Radical Egalitarian Case for Animal Rights 291
Tom Regan
A Critique of Regan’s Animal Rights Theory 300
Mary Anne Warren
Mary Anne Warren and 'Duties to Animals’ 308
Michael Boylan
Against Zoos 313
Dale Jamieson
Evaluating a Case Study: Structuring the Essay 321
7 Sustainability 329
A. Sustainability: What It Is and How It Works 331
Defining Sustainability Ethics 331
Randall Curren
A Perfect Moral Storm: Climate Change, Intergenerational Ethics, and the Problem of Moral Corruption 345
Stephen M. Gardiner
Sustainability and Adaptation: Environmental Values and the Future 358
Bryan G. Norton
B. Sustainability and Development 371
'Sustainable Development’: Is It a Useful Concept?371
Wilfred Beckerman
On Wilfred Beckerman’s Critique of Sustainable Development387
Herman E. Daly
Evaluating a Case Study: Cases on Sustainability 393
Further Reading 394
O autorze
Michael Boylan is Professor and Chair of Philosophy at
Marymount University. He is the author and editor of 26 books,
including his manifesto on social/political philosophy A Just
Society (2004), and on cosmopolitanism Morality and Global
Justice: Justifications and Applications (2011). Boylan was
himself the focus of an edited volume, Morality and Justice:
Reading Boylan’s A Just Society (2009). He has served on
professional and governmental policy committees and was a fellow at
the Center for American Progress and a program presenter at The
Brookings Institution. He has been an invited speaker in nine
countries around the world, including talks in Oxford, Cambridge,
Cologne, Oslo, Dublin, Sydney, and the Sorbonne.