Title: Human interests, intrinsic value and radical questioning:
1Human interests, intrinsic value and radical
questioning
- Three necessary aspects of environmental ethics
as international action? - Johan Hattingh
2Overview
- Environmental ethics
- Practical enterprise
- Theoretical enterprise
- Three snapshots of environmental ethics as
international action - Interpretation of these snapshots
- Human interests
- Intrinsic value
- Radical questioning
3Snapshot 1 Kyoto Protocol
- 16 February 2005 activated
- Binds industrialized countries
- Cut 6 key greenhouse gasses
- 5 below 1990 levels
- Commitment period 2008 2012
- 128 signatories
- Mechanisms to assist other countries
4Main aim of Kyoto Protocol
- To stem global warming by reducing greenhouse-gas
emissions in the most cost effective manner,
while addressing issues of environmental
integrity and equity.
5Main instruments
- Emissions trading
- Free market in Carbon Reduction Credits.
- Credits earned by meeting reduction targets.
- Surplus credits can be sold
- The Clean Development Mechanism (CDM)
- Joint Implementation (JI)
6Snapshot 2 World Summit on Sustainable
Development
- Johannesburg, 2002 WSSD
- Assessment of implementation of Agenda 21
- Ten years after Rio de Janeiro (1992) the
diagnosis is still pessimistic
7Global state of the environment
- The global environment continues to suffer. Loss
of biodiversity continues, fish stocks continue
to be depleted, desertification claims more and
more fertile land, the adverse effects of climate
change are already evident, natural disasters are
more frequent and more devastating and developing
countries more vulnerable, and air, water and
marine pollution continue to rob millions of a
decent life
8Other concerns of Johannesburg
- Growing gap between rich and poor
- Distribution and equity issues
- Justice and equity environmental issues
- Causes
- Unsustainable production and consumption
- A new commitment to sustainable development was
adopted
9Sustainable development
- is development that meets the needs of present
generations without compromizing future
generations to meet their needs - Two important provisos
- The needs of the poor are central
- Only constraint on sustainable development is the
state of technology and social organization in
society
10Snapshot 3 Millenium Development Goals
- Protecting our common environment
- Peace, security and disarmament
- Development and poverty eradication
- Human rights, democracy and good governance
- Protecting the vulnerable
- Meeting special needs of Africa
- Strengthening the United Nations
11Key values driving MDGs
- Respect for nature
- Freedom
- Equality
- Solidarity
- Tolerance
- Shared responsibility
12New ethics of conservation and stewardship
- Implementing Kyoto Protocol
- Protection of all types of forests
- Implementation of the Convention on Biological
Diversity, combat desertification - Sustainable water use
- Reduce number and effects of natural and manmade
disasters - Free access to info on human genome
13Normative basis of practical environmental ethics
- Ethics entails distinctions
- Right vs wrong
- Good vs bad
- What deserves respect vs what not
14Right vs wrong
- Duties of nations, corporations, professionals
and individuals - To fight climate change
- To reduce greenhouse emissions
- To pursue sustainable development
- To eradicate poverty
- To ensure justice and equity
- To improve the lives of people
15Good vs bad
- What we embrace as the good life
- Dignity and justice for all
- Peace and prosperity
- Freedom from terror, diseases and manmade
disasters - Prerequisites for such a life
- Access to clean water
- Access to information
- Technology transfer between nations
16What deserves respect what not
- What we can identify with as human beings accept
as source of our being - Caring for life
- Our own lives
- The lives of other humans
- The lives of non-humans
- The vulnerable and the poor
- The victims of our own unwise decisions
- Thinking and cautionary approach
17Quality of our justifications
- Kyoto Protocol
- Preventing harm to people living now and in the
future - Johannesburg Summit on Sust. Dev.
- Justice, human dignity, social development,
caring about future generations - Millennium Development Goals
- Cooperation to achieve freedom, equality,
solidarity to improve the lives of people
18Three positions in environmental ethics
- Human centered
- Anthropocentric
- Nature centered
- Ecocentric
- Radical positions
- Root causes of environmental problems
- Transformative agenda
19The anthropocentric position
- Conserve nature for the sake of humans
- Enlightened self-interest
- Nature is valued instrumentally
- Nature is a means to human ends
- Nature is nothing but a resource
- Consumptive use of nature?
- Non-consumptive use of nature?
203 snapshots anthropocentric
- Kyoto Protocol, WSSD, MDGs
- Overcome harm to humans
- Promote human interests
- Enlightened self-interest
- We care for nature for the sake of humankind
- Best place to start to engage governments,
multinational corporations - What is good for nature is good for humans
21Is this good enough?
- Ecocentrists argue
- Instrumental values are not strong enough to
protect nature from humans - In trade-offs humans will always win
- We need a stronger position
- That change our attitude towards nature
- That can stop us when we want to go too far
22Intrinsic value
- Whole or parts of nature has intrinsic value
- Value in and of itself
- Regardless of value to humans
- Entities with intrinsic value should be
- Treated with respect
- Cannot do with them what we want
- Moral duty to protect that intrinsic valueif
not to promote it
233 snapshots and intrinsic value
- Kyoto Protocol, WSSD and MDGs
- Move us away from a cynical and ruthless
exploitation of nature - Take a few necessary first steps
- But only ensure a weak protection of nature, and
weak sustainability - We have to move on and find stronger measures to
protect and promote intrinsic value
24Radical environmental ethics
- Try to understand root causes of our
environmental problems and overcome them by
transforming society - Root causes are found in
- Structure of worlds economy
- Distribution of political and economic power
between and within countries
25Radical questioning
- Focus on social and cognitive structures
informing organization of the world - Political economy of decision-making
- Dominant conceptions of self and self-realization
- Narrow egotistical self of consumer society
- A logic of dualistic, hierarchical thinking that
justify exploitation of nature, women and darker
races
26The value of radical questioning
- Is total transformation not going too far?
- Is the momentum of global consumerism not too
strong? - But
- Are we happy with the images of self and
self-realization that we see all around us? - Do we recognize ourselves in the mirrors held up
to us by our cities, our shopping malls, our TV
ads, our glossy magazines and fashion?
27Radical questioning starts
- When we start to feel uncomfortable with living
in the world we see around us - When we do not recognize ourselves in it seeing
no future for our children in it - Wondering whether what we do is meaningful or not
- When we realize that we are faced today with a
crisis of character and culture
28So, why this deep interpretation
- To underline that our environmental predicament
is more than - A crisis of survival
- A crisis of justice and human dignity
- To underline that our environmental problems
challenge us to ask serious questions about who
we are and how we realize ourselves in this world
on this earth
29- To underline that the Kyoto Protocol, Sustainable
development and the MDGs are but first, initial
steps that need to be followed up by stronger
measures of protection, and that we have to take
a harder look at ourselves and how we produce and
consume in order to realize ourselves in this
world
30- To underline that if we think that we have done
enough by putting in place measures like the
Kyoto Protocol, sustainable development and noble
development goals, and not also question the
root causes of global climate change,
unsustainable development, and increasing poverty
and human indignity in the world, we seriously
fool ourselves
31Conclusion 1
- To address environmental issues without humans
benefiting from it would be futile - Measures like the Kyoto Protocol, sustainable
development, MDGs should - Never increase world poverty
- Never entrench current patterns of injustice and
inequity in the world
32Conclusion 2
- We need more than instrumental values to protect
nature - Acknowledging intrinsic value, the value of
entities for their own sake, regardless of their
use value to us, is an effort to change our
attitude towards nature by thinking about it
differently
33Conclusion 3
- The state of the world today, of which the
environmental crisis is but one symptom,
confronts us with - A crisis of identity, of character and culture
- Radical questions about who we are, what we
define as meaningful, and how we realize
ourselves in this world have to be asked
34A last unconcluding word
- Human interests, intrinsic value and radical
questioning are all necessary to look at our
environmental crisis - Each make a valid contribution to our
understanding of our environmental crisis, what
it means, and how to start thinking about
overcoming it - We need all three we cannot ignore any
35- This is what I would like you to take to heart
today - Speaking from my heart
- And what I believe is at the heart of
environmental ethics today, as a theoretical
enterprise, as well as in the format of practical
international action