"What's In a Name? Pragmatism, Essentialism, and Environmental Ethics"
In this paper Mark A. Michael argues that pragmatists and essentialists are arguing past one another and shows why that is.
In this paper Mark A. Michael argues that pragmatists and essentialists are arguing past one another and shows why that is.
In this paper, Helena Siipi explores some parallels and dissimilarities between aesthetic appreciation that takes as its focus art objects and that which focuses on natural objects.
In this paper, Maria Akerman focusses on the power/knowledge implications of the use of the concept, and I follow the career of the concept of natural capital in ecological economic publications between the years 1988 and 2000.
This essay explores three case studies that illustrate the exemplary use of economic analysis in environmental decision-making.
In his article, Lawrence E. Johnson discusses the moral significance of future generations.
This paper offers a critical examination of efforts to use Heidegger’s thought to illuminate deep ecology.
In this article, Jozef Keulartz, Henny van der Windt, and Jacques Swart examine the role of concepts of nature as communicative devices in public debates and political decision-making.
By investigating landscape change and land reform in Northwest Scotland, this study illustrates how the multifaceted concept of landscape mediates cultural, social and political issues, and is continually evolving in response to aesthetic, ideological and institutional agencies.
This paper discusses the impacts of different formal and informal institutions upon the Regional Forest Programme of Southwest Finland (1997–2001).
This analysis raises questions about the extent to which ecological economics has been able to influence real-world decisions and policy.