Towards a multidimensional, environmentalist ethic

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Abstract

There has been a process of moral extensionism within environmental ethics from anthropocentrism, through zoocentrism, to ecocentrism. This article maps key elements of that process, and concludes that each of these ethical positions fails as a fully adequate, environmentalist ethic, and does so because of an implicit assumption that is common within normative theory. This notwithstanding, each position may well contribute a value. The problem that then arises is how to trade off those values against each other when they conflict. The solution here proposed is to employ multidimensional isovalue-contours along with a multidimensional practicability-frontier. This would result in a rich, value-pluralist environmentalist ethic that enjoined different outcomes to those enjoined by purely anthropocentric, zoocentric or ecocentric ethics. © 2011 The White Horse Press.

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APA

Carter, A. (2011). Towards a multidimensional, environmentalist ethic. Environmental Values, 20(3), 347–374. https://doi.org/10.3197/096327111X13077055166027

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