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         Environmental Ethics:     more books (100)
  1. Environmental Science: A Global Concern by William P Cunningham, Mary Ann Cunningham, et all 2001-12-28
  2. An Invitation to Environmental Sociology (Sociology for a New Century Series) by Michael Mayerfeld Bell, 2004-06-10
  3. Earth Community, Earth Ethics (Ecology & Justice) by Larry L. Rasmussen, 1998-01
  4. Introduction to Environmental Engineering by P. Aarne Vesilind, Susan M. Morgan, 2003-04-23
  5. Ethics and Sustainability: Sustainable Development and the Moral Life by Lisa H. Newton, 2002-04-19
  6. Environmental Justice: Creating Equality, Reclaiming Democracy (Environmental Ethics and Science Policy Series) by Kristin Shrader-Frechette, 2005-11-03
  7. Environmental Ethics by Michael Boylan, 2000-12-05
  8. Taking Action, Saving Lives: Our Duties to Protect Environmental and Public Health (Environmental Ethics and Science Policy) by Kristin Shrader-Frechette, 2007-10-19
  9. Environmental Ethics In Buddhism: A Virtues Approach (Routledge Critical Studies in Buddhism) by Sahni & Ram, 2007-09-25
  10. Environmental Ethics and International Policy
  11. Environmental Ethics: An Overview for the Twenty-First Century by Robin Attfield, 2003-11-14
  12. Earth Ethics: Introductory Readings on Animal Rights, and Environmental Ethics (2nd Edition) by James P. Sterba, 1999-09-15
  13. Ecological Ethics and the Human Soul: Aquinas, Whitehead, and the Metaphysics of Value by Francisco J. Benzoni, 2008-01-15
  14. Environmental Ethics (Contemporary Ethical Issues) by Clare Palmer, 1997-11

41. Online Ethics Center: Environmental Ethics And Sustainable Development
environmental ethics and Sustainable Development. Essays on environmental ethics and Sustainable Development. Maintained by others, will open a new browser.
http://onlineethics.org/environment/
onlineethics.org The Online Ethics Center for Science and Engineering
Environmental Ethics and Sustainable Development
Notice: This section is currently under construction. Please bear with us as it undergoes reorganization and expansion. This section contains cases, essays, codes of ethics, and links about the issues facing engineers and scientists in relation to the environment and sustainable development. The materials themselves vary in their emphasis, some applying specifically to the work of scientists, while others are slanted toward the particular concerns of engineers whose work bears on environmental and sustainable development issues.
Rachel Carson's Silent Spring: A Brief History of Ecology as a Subversive Subject
This essay by Gary Kroll discusses Carson's environmental philosophy and asks the question, what are the "foundations" of Rachel Carson's environmental ethics? Kroll examines how Carson justified her three main evaluative premises (or her two controversial ones, concern for human health presumably needing no justification).
Rachel Carson's Environmental Ethics
This essay by Philip Cafaro discusses several respects in which Rachel Carson's life and work might point the way forward for environmental ethics. First, Carson's frequent criticisms of human attempts to dominate nature suggest important parallels with contemporary ecofeminism. Second, Carson's philosophy of "reverence for life" seems to support the whole spectrum of environmental activism.

42. Online Ethics Center: Environmental Ethics And Sustainable Development: Bibliogr
A bibliography of sources about environmental ethics and sustainable development. Bibliography environmental ethics and Sustainable Development.
http://onlineethics.org/environment/envsdbib.html
onlineethics.org The Online Ethics Center for Science and Engineering
Bibliography: Environmental Ethics and Sustainable Development
Anderson, Ray C. 1998. Mid-Course Correction (Toward a Sustainable Enterprise: The Interface Model.) Atlanta: The Peregrinzilla Press.
Sustainable development, engineering ethics, ethics and economics, design and the environment.
Anastas, Paul T. and John C. Warner. 1998. Green Chemistry: Theory and Practice. Oxford University Press.
Chemical (environmental issues), environmental engineering, active learning.
Beder, S. 1994. The role of technology in sustainable development. IEEE Technology and Society
Sustainable development, technology development, engineering ethics, global.
Carroll, W.J. 1995. Environmental challenge for engineers. Journal of Professional Issues in Engineering Education and Practice.
Sustainable development, environmental engineering, design and the environment.
Carroll, W.J. 1993. World Engineering Partnership for Sustainable Development. Journal of Professional Issues in Engineering Education and Practice
Sustainable development, global, environmental engineering, education.

43. Environmental Ethics Syllabus Project
environmental ethics Syllabus Project. Robert Hood, Editor ISSN1564001. Information about courses in environmental philosophy and environmental ethics.
http://appliedphilosophy.mtsu.edu/syllabusproject/
Applied Philosophy
Environmental Ethics Syllabus Project
Robert Hood , Editor
ISSN:1564-001
Information about courses in environmental philosophy and environmental ethics
International Society for Environmental Ethics
International Association for Environmental Philosophy
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44. Environmental Ethics And Conservation - Suite101.com
environmental ethics and Conservation Note This topic has been archived and is available for Adoption! Contact Member Sevices for more information.
http://www.suite101.com/welcome.cfm/environmental_ethics
Topics
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Search The Web Member Central Join Our Community! Login What's New Become a SuiteU Affiliate ... MemberUpdate Suite University About Suite University Suite University News Visit the University Course Listing ... FREE Demo Course New Topics SpiritWell Travel Book Reviews Agora News Foraging Wild Foods ... More... Suite Events Teacher Appreciation Event 2004 Family Focus 2004 In Tune With Johann Sebastian Bach More about Suite101 About Suite101.com Advertise With Suite For more information - Select a related topic - Aquatic Animals Arctic Wildlife Backyard Birdwatching Alm Birding Ecology Living With Nature Living with Wildlife Lizards, Turtles and Snak Massachusetts Natural His Microbiology Natural Horsemanship Paleontology Science of the Sky Snails and Shells Water for Life Wild Cats Wildlife Wildlife News and Humor
- Select a related course - Ecological Gardening: Org Environmental affairs - G Environmental Health Issu Inspecting For Wildlife D Our National Wildlife Tre Trap-Neuter-Return: Manag Visit Environment Detailed Topic List Home Social sciences ... Other social problems and services (Society) Environmental Ethics and Conservation Note: This topic has been archived and is available for Adoption!

45. Environmental Ethics
www.environmentalethics.ca is under development. Please check back later for updates. Enter a domain name and click on the search button. www.
http://www.environmentalethics.ca/
www.environmentalethics.ca
is under development. Please check back later for updates.
Enter a domain name and click on the "search" button. www. .ca .us .biz .info .com .net .org .cn
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46. Environmental Ethics: Values In And Duties To The Natural World
environmental ethics stretches classical ethics to a breaking point.All ethics seeks an appropriate respect for life. environmental ethics requires risk.
http://www.ecospherics.net/pages/RolstonEnvEth.html
Environmental Ethics: Values in and Duties to the Natural World by Holmes Rolston, III
Published in: The Broken Circle: Ecology, Economics, Ethics . F. Herbert Bormann and Stephen R. Kellert, Eds. Yale University Press, New Haven 1991. ISBN 0-300-04976-5 Environmental ethics stretches classical ethics to a breaking point. All ethics seeks an appropriate respect for life. But we do not just need a humanist ethic applied to the environment, analogously to the ways we have needed one for business, law, medicine, technology, international development, or nuclear disarmament. Respect for life demands an ethic concerned about human welfare, like the others and now concerning the environment. But environmental ethics in a deeper sense stands on a frontier, as radically theoretical as it is applied. Alone, it asks whether there can be nonhuman objects of duty. Neither theory nor practice elsewhere needs values outside of human subjects, but environmental ethics must be more biologically objectivenonanthropocentric. It challenges the separation of science and ethics, trying to reform a science that finds nature value free and an ethics that assumes that only humans count morally. Environmental ethics seeks to escape relativism in ethics, to discover a way past culturally based ethics. However much our world views, ethics included, are embedded in our cultural heritages, and thereby theory-laden and value-laden, all of us know that a natural world exists apart from human cultures. Humans interact with nature. Environmental ethics is the only ethics that breaks out of culture. It has to evaluate nature, both the nature that mixes with culture and wild nature, and to judge duty thereby. After environmental ethics, you will no longer be the humanist you once were.

47. CAE: Resources
Hierarchical listing of environmental ethics resources available online.
http://www.ethics.ubc.ca/resources/environmental/
The Applied Ethics Resources section is now hosted on EthicsWeb.ca . Please update your bookmarks. If you are not automatically redirected in a few seconds , please click here This page last reviewed
June 17, 2003

48. Wilderness Environmental Ethics & Responsible Ecotourism
Wilderness environmental ethics Responsible Ecotourism. by Cliff Speer Environmental Quiz Test your knowledge of backcountry and environmental ethics
http://www.lights.com/waterways/survival/ethics.htm
You have entered the Canoe Saskatchewan suite

Responsible Ecotourism
by Cliff Speer Environmental Quiz - Test your knowledge of backcountry and environmental ethics
Freedom and Responsibility
Freedom is the essence of wilderness canoeing . Freedom to escape everyday routine and stress. Freedom to be restored by unsullied Nature. Freedom to explore new frontiers, within and without. This is the lure of wilderness canoeing... But wait, there must be a catch. Ah, yes. No doubt you've heard it before: "With much freedom comes much responsibility." It is an axiom, as inescapable in the natural world as it is in other worlds. But the truth of it has taken a while to sink into the collective consciousness. Once upon a time, hardy adventurers marched into the bush to tame the wilderness. Nature's rules were ignored. The human species had dominion; Nature was subject. Freedom meant doing anything you pleased. Responsibility to protect the Earth and preserve its goodness was unheard of in most camps.
Treading Softly and Being Respectful
We have now entered a new era.

49. Harvard Seminar On Environmental Values - The Climate Talks Project
The environmental ethics and Public Policy Program of the Harvard Divinity School focuses on the explicit and implicit values which inform policy decisions made by individuals, nongovernmental groups, corporations and governments affecting all aspects of the environment.
http://ecoethics.net/hsev/NewScience/index.htm

50. Environmental Ethics Quiz
Wilderness environmental ethics A Quiz the Questions. Test your knowledge of backcountry and environmental ethics. The following
http://www.lights.com/waterways/survival/question.htm
Wilderness Environmental Ethics
A Quiz - the Questions
Test your knowledge of backcountry and environmental ethics. The following quiz has been developed by Cliff Speer of CanoeSki Discovery Company, Saskatoon and Peter Goode of Stanley Consulting Group Ltd., Saskatoon, based on concepts from Cliff Jacobson's Canoeing and Camping, Beyond the Basics , and is used with permission of the publisher, I.C.S. Books, Inc. You are welcome to use the quiz for non-profit, educational purposes, provided you acknowledge the authors as indicated. Please let us know how you plan to use the quiz.
1. (Select the false statement) To follow the ethical principle of minimum impact camping a responsible canoeist will:
a. Bathe and wash clothes and dishes in the waterway using only "biodegradable" soap.
b. Use a free-standing tent.
c. Use existing campsites and firepits.
d. Build small cooking fires using only dead wood.
e. Carry spare garbage bags to pack out non-burnable litter left by thoughtless campers.
2. To keep water from entering your tent in a heavy rain, dig a shallow trench around it so the run-off will drain harmlessly away.
a. True

51. Life Studies Network (philosophy Of Life, Death, Desire, Bioethics, Nature, Disa
Japanese bioethicist's views on life and death issues, and environmental ethics.
http://www.lifestudies.org/
Table of Contents
About This Site
What is Life Studies
Profile

Special Reports

on Brain Death
on WTC Attack
on World Bioethics
Essays and Papers

idea of life, nature
culture, feminism
disability Books painless civilization feminism, disability brain death, religion Links Readers' Opinions Mailing List Message Board ... Associate Sites French Japanese SiteMap Send email to Webmaster International Network for Life Studies Director: Masahiro Morioka List of link banners Since Dec.3,1999 Life studies: This website contains: Free Online Literature, Open Access Resources, Electronic Text Archives Additional keywords: people health dictionary books news white pages parent author love education pregnancy kids famous quotes science abortion backgrounds note fruitful animism customs general academic asian dying descartes doubt evil incident christian buddhism psychology influence medicine personal modern policy postmodern fear shinto minds definition environment phenomenon folklore argument thought violence Last Updated: May.16

52. Environmental Ethics
environmental ethics. Modern Pantheism as an Approach to environmental ethics. and works, all of which establish an enlightened theory for environmental ethics.
http://www.pantheist.net/society/modern_pantheism_approach.html
We seek renewed reverence for the biosphere as the ultimate context for human existence.
Environmental Ethics
Modern Pantheism as an Approach to Environmental Ethics
by Harold W. Wood, Jr.*
ABSTRACT:
While philosophers debate the precise articulation of philosophical theory to achieve a desirable change in environmental attitudes, they may be neglecting the fountainhead of social change. Insofar as ordinary people am concerned, it is religion which is the greatest factor in determining morality. In order to achieve an enlightened environmental ethics, we need what can only be termed a "religious experience. " While not denying the efficacy of other religious persuasions, I explore the contribution of an informed modern Pantheism to environmental ethics. The conceptual division of the holy and the world is rectified by pantheism. As a form of "nature mysticism." pantheism promotes a theological basis for achieving oneness with God through knowledge, devotion. and works, all of which establish an enlightened theory for environmental ethics. A modern pantheism bears investigation by those advocating new ethical approaches toward the environment. "This doctrine of pantheism is more than a mere theory. It has tremendous practical and ethical implications." - Henry Thomas and Dane Lee Thomas

53. Common Declaration On Environmental Ethics
COMMON DECLARATION ON environmental ethics. COMMON DECLARATION OF JOHN PAUL II AND THE ECUMENICAL PATRIARCH HIS HOLINESS BARTHOLOMEW I. Monday, 10 June 2002.
http://www.vatican.va/holy_father/john_paul_ii/speeches/2002/june/documents/hf_j
COMMON DECLARATION ON ENVIRONMENTAL ETHICS COMMON DECLARATION OF JOHN PAUL II
AND THE ECUMENICAL PATRIARCH
HIS HOLINESS BARTHOLOMEW I
Monday, 10 June 2002 We are gathered here today in the spirit of peace for the good of all human beings and for the care of creation. At this moment in history, at the beginning of the third millennium, we are saddened to see the daily suffering of a great number of people from violence, starvation, poverty and disease. We are also concerned about the negative consequences for humanity and for all creation resulting from the degradation of some basic natural resources such as water, air and land, brought about by an economic and technological progress which does not recognize and take into account its limits. Almighty God envisioned a world of beauty and harmony, and He created it, making every part an expression of His freedom, wisdom and love (cf. Gen At the centre of the whole of creation, He placed us, human beings, with our inalienable human dignity. Although we share many features with the rest of the living beings, Almighty God went further with us and gave us an immortal soul, the source of self-awareness and freedom, endowments that make us in His image and likeness (cf. Gen 1:26-31;2:7). Marked with that resemblance, we have been placed by God in the world in order to cooperate with Him in realizing more and more fully the divine purpose for creation.

54. Centre For Agricultural Bio- And Environmental Ethics
Describes all activities, research, opinions etc. of the Centre for Agricultural Bio and environmental ethics (CABME) and its collaborators.
http://www.kuleuven.ac.be/cabme/
Home General Research Agenda ... Search 5th EurSafe Congress The 5th congress of the European Society for Agricultural and Food Ethics (EurSafe2004) will be organised in Leuven by CABME from 2-4 September 2004
Speakers include: Bernard Rollin, Eric Tollens, Gary Comstock, Jules Pretty, Marian Dawkins, and Sigrid Sterckx.
Registration is now possible through the conference website.
New information will be added to the site, so be sure to check back regularly.
EurSafe 2004 - Homepage

Ethics.be Newsletter Ethics.be offers you the possibility to recieve their monthly Newsletter. This Newsletter will contain information, news and the agenda from all the centres that collaborate in Ethics.be.
There is a Newsletter in English and a Nieuwsbrief in Dutch. You can subscribe using the form in the right column.
The future of agriculture here
A working group on animal production in the 21st century (DP21) has drawn up 3 possible scenarios for the evolution on animal production in Belgium. Take a look at the document here . (in Dutch)
Club of Rome Here you can find different documents and presentations of the Club of Rome, e.g. these presented at the Johannesburg Summit. More information on the Club of Rome and the Johannesburg Summit can be found through the

55. Ethical Links Database
environmental ethics, Sites with a are recommended. Business and Sustainable Development A Global Guide, International Society for environmental ethics.
http://www.scu.edu/ethics/links/links.cfm?cat=ENVIRO

56. Revisioning Environmental Ethics
Revisioning environmental ethics. by Daniel A. Kealey So what does this have to do with environmental ethics? Very simply, only an
http://www.towson.edu/~kealey/ree.html
Revisioning Environmental Ethics
by Daniel A. Kealey, Ph.D. Published by State University of New York Press, Albany, 1990. Ordering information is at the end of this page. Do you believe in the evolution of consciousness? If so, then you will enjoy this book which sees that our environmental crisis is an externalization of the crisis in the evolution of our consciousness. Unless we facilitate the growth of our consciousness beyond its present fixation in techno-rationality we will never resolve the ecocidal trajectory of our contemporary relationship with nature. If there is, in fact, an evolution of consciousness, and this evolution develops in stages, then we cannot expect to establish an optimum relationship to nature by relying on immature stages of perceiving nature, stages that have passed from their fructive, efficient engagement with nature into the senescent cycle inwhich, addicted to means that once worked but are no longer attuned to the reality of nature, we futily and desparately try to bend nature to our outworn assumptions. Many philosophers such as Ken Wilber, Sri Aurobindo, Teilhard de Chardin, Jean Gebser and many others have observed that there is an evolution of consciousness going on and that, moreover, it is speeding up. In this book I work primarily with the theory of the evolution of human consciousness developed by Jean Gebser whose main work is

57. Environmental Ethics
environmental ethics. that environmental ethics is much more than the mere extension of general ethical principles and methods to a new applied area.
http://www.uwmanitowoc.uwc.edu/staff/awhite/jim98.htm
Jim Cheney Anthony Weston Environmental Ethics as Environmental Etiquette: Toward an Ethics-Based Epistemology in Environmental Philosophy Abstract: An ethics-based epistemology is necessary for environmental philosophy—a sharply different approach from the epistemology-based ethics the field has inherited, mostly implicitly, from mainstream ethics. In this paper we try to uncover this inherited epistemology and point toward an alternative. Section II outlines a general contrast between an ethics-based epistemology and an epistemology-based ethics. Section III examines the relationship between ethics and epistemology in an ethics-based epistemology, drawing extensively on examples from Indigenous cultures. Several striking implications of an ethics-based epistemology are briefly explored in sections IV and V. I. Introduction E nvironmental philosophers have long suspected that environmental ethics is much more than the mere extension of general ethical principles and methods to a new applied area. Accordingly, environmental philosophers have been especially intrigued by those ways in which environmental philosophy has progressively called into question substantive and methodological assumptions about ethics itself. That ethics is an affair solely of humans, or even just rational or sentient beings; that standard ethical theories can be stretched to retro-fit all new ethical insights; that ethical theories, standard or not, are what we should want at all: each of these assumptions, and more, have been called into question.

58. Environmental Ethics: A Directory
environmental ethics A DIRECTORY. A Website of News and Opinion Regarding environmental ethics and Public Policy Ernest Partridge, PhD Designated Gadfly.
http://gadfly.igc.org/ee-list.htm
Environmental Ethics
and Public Policy Ernest Partridge, Ph.D
www.igc.org/gadfly
ENVIRONMENTAL ETHICS: A DIRECTORY
A Service of The Online Gadfly
A Website of News and Opinion Regarding Environmental Ethics and Public Policy
Ernest Partridge, PhD Designated Gadfly
All entries and information below appear with the explicit permission of the individuals listed. The Directory is intended solely as a service to our users and to environmental professionals and scholars. No information received will be divulged by The Gadfly to third parties. However, as is obvious, any and all information in this Directory is available to anyone who accesses it.
Applications will be accepted from individuals who meet at least one of the following three qualifications: (a) Publications in the fields of Environmental Ethics, Environmental Philosophy, or Environmental Policy, or (b) an assignment to teach any of the above subjects in an accredited College or University, or (c) professional experience in environmental policy-analysis or policy-making (either governmental or non-governmental). To apply, please select "Qualifications and Instructions for Applicants."

59. Environmental Ethics And Policy: "The Online Gadfly"
News and Opinion Regarding environmental ethics and Public Policy. Ernest Partridge, Ph.D, LecturerConsultant, Environmental and Applied Ethics. May, 2004.
http://gadfly.igc.org/
News and Opinion Regarding Environmental Ethics and Public Policy
Ernest Partridge, Ph.D, Lecturer-Consultant, Environmental and Applied Ethics
June
The Gadfly Bytes Editorials:
How to Beat a Fixed Election.
Bush v. Kerry: More Than a Dime's Worth of Difference
SHAMELESS LIBERALISM (The Editorial Archives) ON POLITICS: Notes of a Reluctant Radical THE GADFLY PAPERS THE ECOLOGY PROJECT FOR ENVIRONMENTAL EDUCATORS ... NO MO PO MO! (Critiques of Post Modernism NOTES FROM THE BRINK Environmental Ethics: A Directory Potpourri The In-Box ... Editorial Policy

The Online Gadfly is the website of "Gadfly Enterprises," administered by Ernest Partridge (hereafter, "The Gadfly"), a consultant, writer and lecturer in the field of Environmental and Applied Ethics. gadfly@igc.org
This website contains an original monthly essay, an assortment of papers (published and in progress), news and notes, bibliographies and other research tools, and much more, most of these pertaining to issues in environmental ethics, politics and public policy.
The Online Gadfly will also serve as a "gateway" to other web sites, publications, organizations and educational institutions devoted to progressive political ideals and to the study of environmental ethics and policy

60. Harvard Extension School: Environmental Studies
Summer Philosophy Course in Africa Main Pageenvironmental ethics. Take environmental ethics for Philosophy core credit (PHIL 285) or as an Environmental Studies course (ESP 398).
http://www.extension.harvard.edu/2001-02/courses/envr.shtml
Choose a Destination Home About Highlights Message from the Dean Courses Programs Registration Calendar Academic Policy Resources Catalogue Request Help / FAQ Publications
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Also see information about the new Certificate in Environmental Management
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ENVR E-101 Environmental Management I (Syllabus)
John D. Spengler, PhD, Akira Yamaguchi Professor of Environmental Health and Human Habitation, Harvard School of Public Health. George D. Buckley, MS, Director of Philippe Cousteau Foundation; Coordinator of Science, Watertown Schools.
4 units. Noncredit $275, undergraduate credit $525, graduate credit $1,310.
Wednesday, Sept. 12, 7:35-9:35 pm, Harvard Hall, Room 104. Optional sections to be arranged. Fall term
Course also available on the Internet. See

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