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Three Questions on Climate Change

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  04 September 2014

Extract

Climate change will have highly significant and largely negative effects on human societies into the foreseeable future, effects that are already generating ethical and policy dilemmas of unprecedented scope, scale, and complexity. One important group of ethical and policy issues raised here concerns what I call environmental values. By this I do not mean the impact that climate change will have on the environment as a valuable human resource, nor am I referring to the changing climate as a threat to humans in terms of floods, storms, and droughts, important as these are. Rather, I am concerned with the way climate change—and the policies that may be adopted to respond to it—threatens both things we value and, potentially, some of our environmental values themselves.

Type
Roundtable: The Facts, Fictions, and Future of Climate Change
Copyright
Copyright © Carnegie Council for Ethics in International Affairs 2014 

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References

NOTES

1 United States Wilderness Act, Pub. L. No. 88–577, 16 U.S.C. 1131–36, 88th Cong., 2nd Session, September 3, 1964, www.wilderness.net/nwps/legisact.

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19 Leiserowitz et al., Climate change in the American mind.

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22 Markowitz and Shariff, “Climate Change and Moral Judgement,” pp. 243–47.

23 Lori Rotenberk, “When It Comes to Climate Change, This Artist Lets the Trees Do the Talking” Grist, December 3, 2013, grist.org/people/when-it-comes-to-climate-change-this-artist-lets-the-trees-do-the-talking/.

24 Jonathan Rowson, A New Agenda on Climate Change, RSA Action and Research Centre, December 2013. Download the report at: www.thersa.org/action-research-centre/learning,-cognition-and-creativity/social-brain/reports/a-new-agenda-on-climate-change.

25 T. J. Kasperbauer makes this argument in “The Implications of Psychological Limitations for the Ethics of Climate Change” (unpublished paper, 2014).