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Environmental Ethics: From Theory to Practice Marion Hourdequin Companion Website MaterialChapter 3 Companion website by Julia Liao and Marion Hourdequin www.bloomsbury.com/uk/environmental-ethics-9781472510983 © Marion Hourdequin 2014 Environmental Ethics: From Theory to Practice. London: Bloomsbury ENVIRONMENTAL ETHICS: FROM THEORY TO PRACTICE Chapter Outline Chapter 3. Anthropocentrism and its critics: Broadening moral concern Introduction: Intrinsic value and moral standing For further thought Value and the environment: Sentiocentrism, biocentrism, and ecocentrism Valuing animals Peter Singer and Animal liberation Regan and animal rights Palmer’s ethical contextualism Valuing life Valuing ecosystems, species, and biodiversity For further thought Beyond intrinsic value? Relational approaches to ethics Leopold’s relational ethics Deep ecology and the relational self Classical Confucian and Daoist perspectives on the relational self For further thought Conclusion: Care and meaningtoward a relational perspective in environmental ethics Further reading Key points Introduction ● Utilitarianism, Kantian ethics, and Aristotelian virtue ethics have all been criticized as overly anthropocentric. Although anthropocentrism allows that nonhuman entities have value, it treats this value as purely instrumental: that is, nonhuman entities have value only as means to the ends of humans. ● Many environmental philosophers argue that nonhuman organisms and other elements of the natural world also have intrinsic value (value in their own right, or for their own sake). www.bloomsbury.com/uk/environmental-ethics-9781472510983 © Marion Hourdequin 2014 Environmental Ethics: From Theory to Practice. London: Bloomsbury COMPANION WEBSITE MATERIAL—CHAPTER ● Questions of intrinsic value often are tied to questions of moral considerability. The term moral considerability refers to an entitys moral status, to whether it “counts” morally and can be the object of direct duties or obligations. Typically, an entity is considered morally considerable if and only if it bears intrinsic value. ● Just as moral considerability has to do with an entitys moral status, legal considerability has to do with an entitys legal status. ● Moral considerability and legal considerability are distinct concepts, but they are often interrelated. For example, creating new legal structures and granting legal considerability to nonhuman entities may change how people view the moral status of those entities. Conversely, if we grant that animals are morally considerable, we may be prompted to change our laws in light of this moral commitment. Value and the environment: Sentiocentrism, biocentrism, and ecocentrism ● Many philosophers have called attention to the lack of coherent and consistent ethical values in human actions toward animals. Peter Singer and Tom Regan, in particular, have proposed two different ways of addressing this problem. ● Peter Singer argues that just as humans are not assigned different levels of moral considerability based on differences in qualities such as intelligence, differences in intelligence (and similar qualities) should not be used to discount the moral considerability of animals. ● For Singer, it is sentience—the capacity to feel pleasure and pain—that makes a being a bearer of interests, and thereby, morally considerable. Singer argues that the principle of equal consideration of interests applies to all sentient beings. ● Singers utilitarian view allows human and animal interests to be traded off against one another in order to achieve maximum overall utility, as long as the interests of each individual receive the same weight. www.bloomsbury.com/uk/environmental-ethics-9781472510983 © Marion Hourdequin 2014 Environmental Ethics: From Theory to Practice. London: Bloomsbury ENVIRONMENTAL ETHICS: FROM THEORY TO PRACTICE ● Tom Regan rejects the utilitarian view. He argues that individual beings matter for their own sake, not as mere receptacles of utility. According to Regan, all experiencing subjects of a life have inherent moral worth that grounds duties of respect toward them. ● Clare Palmer argues that Singers and Regans arguments are both limited by their focus on animal capacities such as suffering and consciousness. Palmer believes that human obligations to animals should take into account the relationships between humans and animals. Thus, our greater engagement with domestic animals can generate stronger obligations toward them than toward wild animals with which we have limited interaction. ● Other philosophers, like Kenneth Goodpaster, argue that instead of rationality or sentience, the fundamental condition for moral considerability is simply being alive. Developing a related view, Paul Taylor argues for life-centered biocentrism. According to Taylor, humans are just one form of life that depends on many others. Taylors view decenters human importance and suggests that we recognize each living thing as having a good of its own and as deserving of respect. ● Taylors argument for biocentrism is an example of a philosophical position that is grounded not solely in deduction from accepted premises, but instead in arguments for a shift to a new moral outlook. To be convincing, such arguments may ultimately require greater engagement with the natural world and other, nonphilosophical forms of thought and communication. ● In contrast to sentiocentric and biocentric arguments about the moral value of individuals, ecocentrism is concerned with the moral considerability of ecological systems. ● Most ecocentric arguments attempt either to show that ecosystems possess the same features that make individuals morally considerable, or they argue that novel features of ecosystems qualify them as having moral value. ● Harley Cahen argues that ecosystems lack the teleological organization that is required for moral considerability. Interactions within ecosystems may follow structured patterns, but the ecosystem as a whole is not goal directed. www.bloomsbury.com/uk/environmental-ethics-9781472510983 © Marion Hourdequin 2014 Environmental Ethics: From Theory to Practice. London: Bloomsbury
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