Environmental Ethics
Philosophy 155, Ned Hettinger, Spring 2012

Paper Assignment

Suggestions for Philosophy Paper

Final Exam
Study Questions

Date
Readings for Class
Class Notes
Miscellaneous
 
Final Exam
Study Questions
   
Mon, Apr 23

Justice and Nature’s Future

Jamieson, 196-205 (on “Visions of the future”)

 
Fri, Apr 20

Jamieson, pp. 181-196 (on “Travails of the biosphere” and “Questions of justice”)

 
Wed, Apr 18

Oral Presentations (9) on Environmental Action

            a.   Peter Singer “Ends and Means”
            b.   No Impact Man trailer (optional: Lessons from Low Impact Week)
            c.   "Would You Ever Break The Law in Support of an Environmental Goal?"
            d.  “Wendell Berry Joins Retired Coal Miners and Residents in Kentucky Rising Capitol Sit-in”
            e.    “Environmental Leaders Call for Civil Disobedience to Stop the Keystone XL Pipeline”

Two Additional: FBI targets student/professor thinking about environmental disobedience (and here)

Mon, Apr 16  

Friday, Apr 13

Paper due by 3pm, 14 Glebe inside mailbox

Consumption
Affluenza (video)
Thurs, Apr 12
Change of office hours to 12-3
   
Wed, Apr 11

  Wilderness
Oral Presentation (8) on Wilderness

 a. "Environmentalists in a clash of goals" (wilderness versus green energy)
 b. Timothy Egan, “Searching for Eden; The Definition of Wilderness Is Increasingly Elusive”
c.  Etienne Benson, “Paparazzi in the Woods: Hidden surveillance cameras are making the wilderness less wild”
d.  Gabriel Escobar, “Rain Forest Gift Raises Suspicions”

 
Natural Value
   
Mon,  Apr 9
Jamieson, pp 162-168 (on “Natural values”)
 
Fri, Apr 6:

Oral Presentations (7) on managing nature
            a. Jamieson, pp., 169-171 (on “Sierra Nevada Bighorn Sheep versus mountain lions”)
            b. Marris et al, “Hope in the Age of Man”
            c. Sierra, "To What Extent Should Humans Manage Nature If At All?”
            d. Holmes Rolston, “Managing The Planet”

Apr 2-5: Sustainability Week (flier)
Details about Sustainability Week
McKibben Talk

Free quiz opportunities: Maximum 2

Tuesday 4/3: Between the Harvest Showing and Panel Discussion
in the first floor auditorium of the School of Science and Mathematics Building (SSMB129) from 5:00pm-6:30pm
Wednesday 4/4: Speth Discussion
Discussion and Q&A with Dr. James Gustave Speth in the Stern Center Ballroom from 4pm-5:30pm.
Thursday 4/5: Greenbag Lunch Panel
Panel includes sustainability expert and author Dr. James Gustave Speth, Colonel Mark Mykleby, senior advisor to the Joint Chiefs of Staff, environmental philosopher Dr. J. Baird Callicott, and environmental law and sustainability expert Dr. P. Brian Fisher.  Seating begins in the Stern Center Ballroom at 11:30 am, with the discussion and Q&A taking place from 12:00pm-2:00pm.  Light refreshments will be provided, but all audience members are encouraged to bring their own bagged lunch
6pm Thursday, Bill McKibben Lecture
Sottile Theater

Wed, Apr 4

Oral Presentations (6) on the meaning and value of the natural
            a.   “Do what is natural, you say?” (reading begins on bottom of second page)
            b. “Faux Falls”
            c.  Bill McKibben’s “The End of Nature?” “More on McKibben,” and “Climbers clear trash from Everest” (all in one pdf file)
            d.  “Saving a Drowning Buffalo or Letting Nature Take its Course?”

 

 

Mon, Apr 2 Fri, Mar 30

 

Wed, Mar 28

Jamieson on Valuing Nature
            a. Jamieson, pp. 68-75 ( on “Intrinsic value”)
            b. Jamieson, pp. 153-162 (on “Valuing Reconsidered,” “The Plurality of Values,” and “Aesthetic Values”)

Jamieson on Intrinsic Value

Jamieson on Valuing Nature

 

Ecocentrism

 
Mon, Mar 26
Jamieson, pp. 149-153 (on “Ecocentrism”)
 
Fri, Mar 23

           a. Aldo Leopold, “Preface to Sand County Almanac”
            b.  Aldo Leopold “The Land Ethic”  

Equador Constitution Rights for Nature 2008

Cafaro, Species Rights to Exist

Thur, Mar 22
PAPER PROPOSAL DUE
Paper Assignment
   
Wed, Mar 21

Oral Presentations (5) on holism vs. individualism

            a.  “Delisting of Wolves Raises Hackles”
            b.  “States Seek Ok to Kill Sea Lions”
            c. Keith Kloor, “Conservation’s Ethical Tradeoffs”
            d.         Jamieson, pp. 172-175 (on “Feral goats versus endemic plants”)

 
Mon, Mar 19

Oral Presentations (4)
On ecocentric holism vs. individualism

            a. Roger Caras, “There are Two Ways of Looking at it”
            b.  “Species and Individuals” and “Harming Plentiful Species to Protect Endangered Species”
            c. Bruce Barcott, “Kill the Cat That Kills the Bird?” (Full article here)
            d. “Breeding Endangered Species” and “Sand Diego Zoo on California Condors”

   
 
Biocentrism
   
Fri, Mar 16
Jamieson, pp. 145-149 (on “Biocentrism”)
Wed, Mar 14
Mon, Mar 12
 
Environmental Ethics and Animals 
Fri, Mar 2
Midterm Exam
   
Wed, Feb 29
Mon, Feb 27
No new reading assignment; we will discuss Carl Cohen's paper (see below)
Fri, Feb 24
Jamieson, pp. 131-144 (on “The conscientious omnivore, vegetarians and vegans, and animals and other values”)
Wed, Feb 22

Michael Pollan, An Animal's Place

Mon, Feb 20:
Fri, Feb 17
Jamieson pp. 120-131 (on “Using animals” and “Killing versus causing pain”)
Murray Bookchin on Social Ecology, Biocentrism, Anthropocentrism
Wed, Feb 15

Tom Regan, The Case for Animal Rights

Jamieson, pp. 116-120 (on “Regan’s rights theory”)

 
Mon, Feb 13

 Peter Singer, “All Animals are Equal”

Jamieson, pp. 112-116 (on “Singer’s animal liberation”)

Singer, Equal Consideration for Animals

Jamieson on Singer

Fri, Feb 10

Oral Presentations (3) on other uses of animals

            a. Animal Experimentation: “Animal Research -- LD50" and “Head-Injury Research Using Monkeys” (ignore questions 6 &7)
            b. Hunting: Douglas Chadwick, “The American Hunting Myth”
            c.  Zoos: Marc Bekoff, “Thick skins, tender hearts and broken spirits,” Susan Freinkel, “Why I Still Believe in the Zoo,” and “It’s a Fish-Eat-Fish World”
            d. Pets: “Animal Rights Uncompromised: ‘Pets’”

Wed, Feb 8

  Oral Presentations (2) on using animal for food

            a.“'They Die Piece by Piece'; In Overtaxed Plants, Humane Treatment of Cattle Is Often a Battle Lost” and “Largest Recall of Ground Beef is Ordered”
            b.Selections from Pew Commission report on “Industrial Farm Animal Welfare”
            c. “Pork Producer Says it Plans to Give Pigs More Room,”Burger King Shifts Policy on Animals,” “California voters pass initiative to modernize food animal production”
            d.“Farmers Lean to Truce on Animals’ Close Quarters” and “New organic rules guarantee pasture for grazers”
            e.Sierra, "Can You Eat Meat and Consider Yourself an Environmentalist?"

Downer Cow Video

Animal Studies at New York University

Animal Social Behavior: Orangutan and Hound Dog

Goose/Human friendship

Animals can tell right from wrong

Mon, Feb 6
Jamieson, pp. 102-112 (on “Speciesism”)
 
Fri, Feb 3
Video: “The Witness” (no new reading assignment)
 
Wed, Feb 1

Oral Presentations (1) on Property and Environment

1. “Who Owns the Moon?”
2. “Tragedy of the commons” and “Whales for Sale”
3. "Law is costing landowners," “Woodpecker clouds state forest’s future,” and “Biologists to move endangered birds” all (in one pdf file)
 4. “‘Takings’ and Property Rights” and “Property Rights and ‘Takings’ Legislation”
5. “The Lucas Case: Supreme Court Decisions”

Mon, Jan 30:

Environmental Justice

Peter Wenz, “Just Garbage”

Fri, Jan 27
Anthropocentrism and an Economic Approach to Environment
William Baxter, “The Case for Optimal Pollution”
Moral Standing and Anthropocentrism (notes)
When [man] first said to the sheep, “the pelt which you wear was given to you by nature not for your own use, but for mine” and took it from the sheep to wear it himself, he became aware of a prerogative which . . .he enjoyed over all the animals; and he now no longer regarded them as fellow creatures, but as means and instruments to be used at will for the attainment of whatever ends he pleased." Immanuel Kant
Wed, Jan 25
Jamieson, pp. 14-25 (Economics and religion)

Free quiz opportunity:
Occupy Earth:  Lessons from the Occupy Movement for Individual Environmentalism
Wednesday, January 25th at 12pm in Stern Ballroom

Mon, Jan 23

Religion and Environment
Lynn White, “The Historical Roots of Our Ecologic Crisis”from Science (1967)

Fri, Jan 20

Are Humans Natural?
Moriarty again (see below)

 
Wed, Jan 18

Rudy Mancke on humans part of nature, preserve/conserve and nature's resilience

Paul Kingsnorth, "Confessions of a Recovering Envrionmentalist" Orion magazine

Fri, Jan 13
Anti-environmentalism
Ron Arnold, "Wise Use”
Wed, Jan 11
Dale Jamieson, Ethics and the Environment: An Introduction, pp. 1-13
Jamieson, pp. 1-13


Jamieson
Jamieson webpage

Mon, Jan 9
Introduction
 

Humor: Paper or Plastic?

Humor: The Majestic Plastic Bag

     

 

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