Main Currents in Western Environmental Thought
Main Currents in Western Environmental Thought provides an inclusive and balanced survey of the major issues debated by Western environmentalists over the last three decades.
Main Currents in Western Environmental Thought provides an inclusive and balanced survey of the major issues debated by Western environmentalists over the last three decades.
Mary Midgley explores if there is a necessary clash between concern for animals and concern for the environment as a whole.
Hub Zwart reflects on the possibility of a moral relationship with animals.
Keekok Lee discusses why posing the question “what is an animal?” is neither irrelevant nor futile.
Clare Palmer discusses the concept of the domesticated animal contract.
Roger Crisp responds to Dale Jamieson’s views on animal liberation as environmental ethic.
H.A.E. Zwart discusses Ibsen’s The Wild Duck as the origin of a new animal science.
In this paper, Derek D. Turner argues that by focusing too narrowly on consequentialist arguments for ecosabotage, environmental philosophers such as Michael Martin (1990) and Thomas Young (2001) have tended to overlook important facts about monkeywrenching.
In this editorial, Isis Brook introduces the complex field of ethical thinking about environments and non-human entities.
In this essay, Freya Mathews argues that the moral point of view involves a feeling for the inner reality of others and explains the consequences of this idea for other-than-human life forms and systems.