"Does the Spirit Move You? Environmental Spirituality"
Annie L. Booth discusses environmental spirituality.
Annie L. Booth discusses environmental spirituality.
Anthony C., Burton, Susan M. Chilton, and Martin K. Jones explores the psychological foundations of the “Willingness to Pay/Willingness to Accept” discrepancy.
J. Baird Callicott responds to Ben A. Minteer’s representation of his critique of moral pluralism.
Allan Greenbaum discusses environmental thought as cosmological intervention.
Bryan G. Norton proposes the pragmatic conception of truth, anticipated by Henry David Thoreau and developed by C.S. Peirce and subsequent pragmatists, as a useful analogy for characterizing “sustainability.”
Jon Wetlesen addresses the question: Who or what can have a moral status in the sense that we have direct moral duties to them?
In this essay Steward Davidson argues that bioregionalism’s assimilation of aspects of deep ecology, and particularly an emphasis upon cross-species identification, undermines the project in various ways.
This article replies to Alan Holland’s challenge to reconcile belief in non-anthropogenic intrinsic value with the poetry of John Clare and its projection onto nature of human feelings, and thus with projective humanism.
In his paper, Richard Shearman argues that a person living according to moral virtue will recognize that the nonhuman world should be valued and thus protected (at least in part) for its own sake.
Ernest Partridge discusses Alan Carter’s criticism of Thomas Schwartz’s “future persons paradox.”