In Nature's Interests?

Interests, Animal Rights, and Environmental Ethics
ISBN13: 9780195108651ISBN10: 0195108655 Hardback, 166 pages

Also available:

Paperback
Aug 1998,  In Stock

Price:

$110.00 (04)

Description

This book offers a powerful response to what Varner calls the "two dogmas of environmental ethics"--the assumptions that animal rights philosophies and anthropocentric views are each antithetical to sound environmental policy. Allowing that every living organism has interests which ought, other things being equal, to be protected, Varner contends that some interests take priority over others. He defends both a sentientist principle giving priority to the lives of organisms with conscious desires and an anthropocentric principle giving priority to certain very inclusive interests which only humans have. He then shows that these principles not only comport with but provide significant support for environmental goals.

Reviews

"All libraries supporting curricula in environmental ethics should own it....Varner knows his field, including the relevant literature, and argues using logic and the tools of philosophers. He examines opposing views fairly. He also knows his biology well. Well written and mercifully short."--Choice

"The book is a pleasure to read. The author is unduly influenced neither by radical nor conservative environmentalist camps. He has a mind of his own."--Environmental Ethics

Product Details

166 pages; 6-1/8 x 9-1/4; ISBN13: 978-0-19-510865-1ISBN10: 0-19-510865-5

About the Author(s)

Gary E. Varner, Associate Professor of Philosophy, Texas A & M University

Add to Cart button
Add to Cart button

Consider these titles...

Personhood, Ethics, and Animal Cognition

$74.00 Hardback May 2012
A new philosophical defense of Hare's two-level utilitarianism and its metaethical foundation (universal prescriptivism), and it significantly expands Hare's account of how "intuitive level rules" function in moral thinking, based on recent empirical research.

A Perfect Moral Storm

$35.00 Hardback Apr 2011
Philosopher Stephen Gardiner illuminates our dangerous inaction toward global warming by placing the crisis in an entirely new light, considering it as an ethical failure

Ecological Thinking

$40.00 Paperback Mar 2006
Discusses a wide range of literature in philosophy, social science, and ethico-political thought.