Environmental Ethics

Related Essays

  • Aldo Leopold "Land Ethic" Aldo Leopold's philosophies on land ethic seem to go hand in hand with natural resource management. Natural resource management simply means the way in which our ...
  • Green Economics Green economics is the economics of the real world-the world of work, human needs, the Earth's materials, and how they mesh together most harmoniously. It is prim...
  • Animal Ethics Animal Ethics Animal ethics is concerned with the status of animals, whereas environmental ethics concerns itself with the relationship to the environment. I will...
  • Ecofeminism Ecofeminism is involved with, then distinguish primary ideas and criticisms. Though in theory, ecological feminism has been around for a number of years, it emerg...
  • Does Stakeholder Orientation Matter? The Little empirical work has been done on the effect of stakeholder management on corporate performance. In this study, we contributed to stakeholder theory developm...

Environmental Ethics

Environmental Ethics
Introduction
Environmental ethics is the discipline that studies the moral relationship of human beings to, and also the value and moral status of, the environment and its nonhuman contents. It is the part of environmental philosophy which considers the ethical relationship between human beings and the natural environment. It exerts influence on a large range of disciplines including law, sociology, theology, economics, ecology and geography.
There are many ethical decisions that human beings make with respect to the environment. For example:
• Should we continue to clear cut forests for the sake of human consumption?
• Should we continue to propagate, when our planet is already 2/3 above its maximum carrying capacity?
• Should we continue to make gasoline powered vehicles, depleting fossil fuel resources while the technology exists to create zero-emission vehicles?
• What environmental obligations do we need to keep for future generations?
• Is it right for humans to knowingly cause the extinction of a species for the (perceived or real) convenience of humanity?
Environmental ethics is concerned with the issue of responsible personal conduct with respect to natural landscapes, resources, species, and non-human organisms.
"Moral responsibility" normally implies knowledge, capacity, choice, and value significance. That is to say, if a person is morally responsible to do something, then he (a) knows of this requirement, (b) is capable of performing it, (c) can freely choose whether or not to do it, and (d) the performance thereof affects the welfare and/or liberty of other beings. Because one's response to these requirements reflects upon his value as a person, we say that this response has "moral significance." This analysis of "moral responsibility" might help to explain why "environmental ethics" has only recently attracted the attention and concern of moral philosophers. Quite simply, until recently our effects upon the natural...

View Full Essay

  • Submitted by: koolsanchit
  • Date Submitted: 10/15/2008 08:36 AM
  • Category: Philosophy
  • Words: 4280
  • Pages: 18
  • Views: 1054
  • Popularity Rank: 986

View Full Essay