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181. Environmental Ethics: Volume > 20 > Issue: 4
Anna Peterson Good Natured: The Origin of Right and Wrong in Humans and Other Animals
182. Environmental Ethics: Volume > 20 > Issue: 4
After Twenty Years
183. Environmental Ethics: Volume > 20 > Issue: 4
INDEX FOR 1998
184. Environmental Ethics: Volume > 20 > Issue: 4
REFEREES 1998
185. Environmental Ethics: Volume > 20 > Issue: 4
Sandra B. Rosenthal, Rogene A. Buchhholz Bridging Environmental and Business Ethics: A Pragmatic Framework
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In the last few years, some attempts have been made to overcome the disparity between environmental ethics and business ethics. However, as the situation now stands the various positions in business ethics have not incorporated any well-developed theoretical foundation for environmental issues, and conversely, environmental ethics is failing to capture an audience that could profit greatly from utilizing its theoretical insights and research. In this paper, we attempt to provide a unified conceptual framework for business ethics and environmental ethics that can further the dialogue that has recently begun, perhaps bringing it to a deeper theoretical level.
186. Environmental Ethics: Volume > 20 > Issue: 4
Roy W. Perrett Indigenous Rights and Environmental Justice
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The modern environmental movement has a tradition of respect for indigenous cultures and many environmentalists believe that there are important ecological lessons to be learned from studying the traditional life styles of indigenous peoples. More recently, however, some environmentalists have become more sceptical. This scepticism has been sharpened by current concerns with the cause of indigenous rights. Indigenous peoples have repeatedly insisted on their rights to pursue traditional practices or to develop their lands, even when the exercise of these rights has implications in conflict with environmentalist values. These conflicts highlight some important questions in environmental ethics, particularly about the degree to which global environmental justice should be constrained by therecognition of indigenous rights. I explore some of these issues and argue for the relevance of the “capability approach” to environmental justice.
187. Environmental Ethics: Volume > 20 > Issue: 4
TWENTY-YEAR INDEX (1979–1998)
188. Environmental Ethics: Volume > 20 > Issue: 4
Timothy Casey Interpretations on Behalf of Place: Environmental Displacements and Alternative Responses
189. Environmental Ethics: Volume > 20 > Issue: 4
Christopher J. Preston Epistemology and Intrinsic Values: Norton and Callicott’s Critiques of Rolston
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Debates over the existence of intrinsic value have long been central to professional environmental ethics. Holmes Rolston, III’s version of intrinsic value is, perhaps, the most well known. Recently, powerful critiques leveled by Bryan G. Norton and J. Baird Callicott have suggested that there is an epistemological problem with Rolston’s account. In this paper, I argue first that the debates over intrinsic value are as pertinent now as they have ever been. I then explain the objections that Norton and Callicott have raised against Rolston’s position. In the main body of the paper, I attempt to show that Rolston’s position can accommodate these objections. In this defense of Rolston’s position, I have two goals: first, to show that the notion of non-subjective intrinsic value in nature is coherent, and second, to illuminate the places where further philosophical work on intrinsic value remains to be done
190. Environmental Ethics: Volume > 20 > Issue: 4
NEWS AND NOTES
191. Environmental Ethics: Volume > 21 > Issue: 2
Max Oelschlaeger On the Conflation of Humans and Nature
192. Environmental Ethics: Volume > 21 > Issue: 2
Wayne Ouderkirk Can Nature be Evil?: Rolston, Disvalue, and Theodicy
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Holmes Rolston, III’s analysis of disvalue in nature is the sole explicit and sustained discussion of the negative side of nature by an environmental philosopher. Given Rolston’s theological background, perhaps it is not surprising that his analysis has strong analogues with traditional theodicies, which attempt to account for evil in a world created by a good God. In this paper, I explore those analogues and use them to help evaluate Rolston’s account. Ultimately, I find it more satisfactory than traditional theodicy in its own context, but I also raise two problems: a weighting and a counseling problem. First, once Rolston acknowledges the reality and role of disvalue in nature, he discounts its significance too greatly. Second, his account is less useful in helping those who have been harmed by the destructive activity of nature. I claim that we can usefully regard Rolston’s analysis as a deconstruction of the anthropocentric, non-ecological view of nature. Finally, I argue that the two problems and a related issue, the objectivity/subjectivity of values, point in the direction of a pragmatist account of value in nature.
193. Environmental Ethics: Volume > 21 > Issue: 2
Karen J. Warren Environmental Justice: Some Ecofeminist Worries about a Distributive Model
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I argue that the framing of environmental justice issues in terms of distribution is problematic. Using insights about the connections between institutions of human oppression and the domination of the natural environment, as well as insights into nondistributive justice, I argue for a nondistributive model to supplement, complement, and in some cases preempt the distributive model. I conclude with a discussion of eight features of such a nondistributive conception of justice.
194. Environmental Ethics: Volume > 21 > Issue: 2
Martin Drenthen The Paradox of Environmental Ethics: Nietzsche’s View of Nature and the Wild
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In this paper, I offer a systematic inquiry into the significance of Nietzsche’s philosophy to environmental ethics. Nietzsche’s philosophy of nature is, I believe, relevant today because it makes explicit a fundamental ambiguity that is also characteristic of our current understanding of nature. I show how the current debate between traditional environmental ethics and postmodern environmental philosophycan be interpreted as a symptom of this ambiguity. I argue that, in light of Nietzsche’s critique of morality, environmental ethics is a highly paradoxical project. According to Nietzsche, each moral interpretation of nature implies a conceptual seizure of power over nature. On the other hand, Nietzsche argues, the concept of nature is indispensable in ethics because we have to interpret nature in order to have a meaningful relation with reality. I show that awareness of this paradox opens a way for a form of respect for nature as radical otherness.
195. Environmental Ethics: Volume > 21 > Issue: 2
Norbert Elliot Literature, Nature, and Other: Ecofeminist Critiques
196. Environmental Ethics: Volume > 21 > Issue: 2
Jim Cheney, Anthony Weston Environmental Ethics as Environmental Etiquette: Toward an Ethics-Based Epistemology
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An ethics-based epistemology is necessary for environmental philosophy—a sharply different approach from the epistemology-based ethics that the field has inherited, mostly implicitly, from mainstream ethics. In this paper, we try to uncover this inherited epistemology and point toward an alternative. In section two, we outline a general contrast between an ethics-based epistemology and an epistemology-based ethics. In section three, we examine the relationship between ethics and epistemology in an ethics-based epistemology, drawing extensively on examples from indigenous cultures. We briefly explore several striking implications of an ethics-based epistemology in sections four and five.
197. Environmental Ethics: Volume > 21 > Issue: 2
John H. Perkins Nature Wars: People vs. Pests
198. Environmental Ethics: Volume > 21 > Issue: 2
Catriona Sandilands Ecocritique: Contesting the Politics of Nature, Economy, and Culture
199. Environmental Ethics: Volume > 21 > Issue: 2
Anthony J. Stenson, Tim S. Gray An Autonomy-Based Justification for Intellectual Property Rights of Indigenous Communities
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The claim that indigenous communities are entitled to have intellectual property rights (IPRs) to both their plant varieties and their botanical knowledge has been put forward by writers who wish to protect the plant genetic resources of indigenous communities from uncompensated use by biotechnological transnational corporations. We argue that while it is necessary for indigenous communities to have suchrights, the entitlement argument is an unsatisfactory justification for them. A more convincing foundation for indigenous community IPRs is the autonomy theory developed by Will Kymlicka.
200. Environmental Ethics: Volume > 21 > Issue: 2
Steven J. Bissell The Value of Life: Biological Diversity and Human Society