The Bearers of Value in Environmental Ethics / Kate McShane -- Can Biocentric Consequentialism Meet Pluralist Challenges? / Robin Attfield -- System Consequentialism / Avram Hiller -- Indirect, Multidimensional Consequentialism / Alan Carter -- Why Leave Nature Alone? / Ben Bradley -- On Some Limitations of Consequentialism in the Sphere of Environmental Ethics / Alan Holland -- Evaluative Uncertainty, Environmental Ethics, and Consequentialism / Krister Bykvist -- Future Generations and Resource Shares / Allen Habib -- Can We Remediate Wrongs? / Benjamin Hale -- Moral Bookkeeping, Consequentialism, and Carbon Offsets / Julia Driver -- John Stuart Mill's Green Liberalism and Ecofeminism / Wendy Donner.
Summary:
"This volume works to connect issues in environmental ethics with the best work in contemporary normative theory. Environmental issues challenge contemporary ethical theorists to account for topics that traditional ethical theories do not address to any significant extent. This book articulates and evaluates consequentialist responses to that challenge. Contributors provide a thorough and well-rounded analysis of the benefits and limitations of the consequentialist perspective in addressing environmental issues. In particular, the contributors use consequentialist theory to address central questions in environmental ethics, such as questions about what kinds of things have value; about decision-making in light of the long-term, intergenerational nature of environmental issues; and about the role that a state's being natural should play in ethical deliberation."--Publisher's Web site.
This resource is supported by the Institute of Museum and Library Services under the provisions of the Library Services and Technology Act as administered by State Library of Iowa.