Fr. 130.00

Defending Biodiversity - Environmental Science and Ethics

English · Hardback

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Informationen zum Autor Jonathan A. Newman is Dean of the College of Biological Science at the University of Guelph, Ontario, where he was also the founding Director of the School of Environmental Sciences, and the Chair of the Department of Environmental Biology. He has held previous faculty positions at the University of Oxford and at Southern Illinois University, Carbondale. He has been associated editor for the Journal of Ecology and for the Journal of Animal Ecology, and a member of the editorial boards of the journals Global Change Biology and Behavioral Ecology. He is the lead author for the 2011 book Climate Change Biology and has published more than 100 scientific journal articles on plant-animal-fungal interactions, invasive species, climate change, and the determinants and impacts of biodiversity. He is a member of the Ecological Society of America, the Canadian Society of Ecology and Evolution, and the British Ecological Society. He is a Fellow of the British Royal Society of Biology, and a monthly donor to Greenpeace Canada. He holds B.A. and Ph.D. degrees from the State University of New York, Albany, and a postgraduate diploma in learning and teaching in higher education from the University of Oxford. Klappentext Imagine that you are an environmentalist who passionately believes that it is wrong to drill for oil in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge. How do you convince someone that a decision to drill is wrong? Debates about the environment and how humans ought to treat it have gone on for decades, yet arguments in favor of preserving biodiversity often lack empirical substance or are philosophically naïve, making them far less effective than they could be. This book critically examines arguments that are commonly offered in support of biodiversity conservation. The authors adopt a skeptical viewpoint to thoroughly test the strength of each argument and, by demonstrating how scientific evidence can be integrated with philosophical reasoning, they help environmentalists to better engage with public debate and judiciously inform public policy. This interdisciplinary and accessible book is essential reading for anyone who engages in discussions about the value of biodiversity conservation. Zusammenfassung Environmentalists are called upon to defend their conservation efforts! yet most lack training in the ethical dimensions of conservation biology or are unused to integrating scientific evidence into philosophical reasoning. This book equips environmentalists with the knowledge to strengthen arguments in favor of conserving biodiversity. Inhaltsverzeichnis Preface; Acknowledgements; Part I. Instrumental Value Defenses: 1. Biodiversity and the environmentalist agenda; 2. Ecosystem functioning and stability; 3. The precautionary principle; 4. Agricultural and pharmaceutical benefits; 5. Nature-based tourism and 'transformative value'; 6. How far do instrumental-value defenses get us?; Part II. Intrinsic Value Defenses: 7. Methodology in philosophical ethics; 8. Extensionism in environmental ethics; 9. Ecoholism: do ecological wholes have intrinsic value?; 10. Ecoholism 2: Callicott on the Leopold land ethic; 11. Should biodiversity be conserved for its aesthetic value?; 12. How far do intrinsic value defenses go?; 13. Conclusions and personal reflections; References; Index....

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