PHI 3682: Honors Environmental Philosophy
Fall 2004
http://wise.fau.edu/~dwhite/courses/PHI3682f03.htm
See my Web page
for Office Hours and Syllabi: http://wise.fau.edu/~dwhite
(Please note: this syllabus is subject to regular
updates; you should check this online version weekly.)
Course
Description: This course
provides a study of contemporary environmental philosophy, including ethical
and practical issues related to the natural environment. As part of this inquiry the course focuses on
the history of ideas regarding nature, on the relevance of traditional ethical
standpoints to environmental issues, and the significance of both for current
scientific reportage regarding the ecological crisis. We will study
contributions of the European philosophical tradition as well as those of other
world cultures to the ideas of nature, humanity, community, and morality
underlying environmental issues. We will consider ecological ideas from an
interdisciplinary perspective, including the natural and social sciences as
well as the humanities. The contributions of ecological feminism to the study
of gender and the environment will also be our concern. Our discussion will be
both theoretical and practical, encouraging each class participant to explore
options for a viable ecological ethic. Each of you will be responsible for
developing your own point of view based on the study of primary and secondary
sources. Each will participate in class
discussion, write essays and dialogues, cooperate in a group presentation, and
explore the range of sources available in environmental studies. We will pay
special attention to the widening range of electronic media relevant to ecological
issues. Our study will be historical, thematic, multicultural and
interdisciplinary, as the character of environmental thinking requires. This
course has been approved for the Environmental Studies requirement in the HC
Core and for the Environmental Studies concentration.
This course
fulfills the Gordon Rule writing requirement of 6,000 words.
Course
Requirements and Grades:
1) Final
essay written outside of class, each at least 1,300 words in length: 20% of
the final grade.
2) A series of twelve responses
(assigned in class, 350 words apiece, written in and out of class), in essay
form (totaling a minimum of 4,200
words);
= altogether 60% of final grade.
3) A group presentation or project,
including a 500 word outline and
bibliography: 20% of final grade.
4) Regular class attendance and participation
are required; repeated unexcused
absences will result in a reduction of grade.
5) Essays and dialogues written outside of class
will be graded for composition and content; in-class essays will be
graded holistically.
You should purchase
a copy of Muriel Harris, Writer's
FAQ's, A Pocket Handbook, 2/e, 0-13-183125-9, available in the bookstore,
for guidance in writing.
Students enrolled in
this course agree to abide by the Honors College Honor Code. Please review this important document: http://www.fau.edu/divdept/honcol/students/honorcode.html.
Required Texts
and Sources:
1) Schmidtz, David
and Elizabeth Willott, eds., Environmental
Ethics (Oxford UP), abbreviated EE
2) Starke, Linda,
ed., State of the World 2004 (Norton
& World Watch Institute): http://www.worldwatch.org/,
abbreviated SW
3) Worldwatch CD
ROM, in
4)
5) Online sources
(please see syllabus below)
6) Environmental
Ethics. Leading journal in the titular field, available in our library. You
may either read the issues available in the library or, for your convenience,
order them online (one year, 4 issues, is $25.00): http://www.cep.unt.edu/
8) Films:
a) Waters of Destiny (on the
b) Bill Moyers, Earth on Edge. See the
PBS Website for the program: http://www.pbs.org/earthonedge/
c) Butterfly
d) In
Light of Reverence
e) Nova: The Gaia Hypothesis
f) Burke, After the Warming
Links for Further
Reflection:
Millennium Ecosystem
Assessment 2005
1) August
23-27 Response 1
Introductory perspectives: Schmidtz
and Willott, “Why Environmental Ethics?” EE
xi—xxi; Easterbrook, “A Moment on the Earth,” Leopold, “Thinking Like a
Mountain,” White: “The Historical Roots of Our Ecological Crisis”[1]
in EE, ch. 1. Brown, Preface. Film
and discussion: Waters of Destiny
(on the Kissimmee River Project). “State of the World: A Year in Review” SW xxi-xxv. Recommended reading: Manussos Marangudakis: The Medieval Roots of Our
Environmental Crisis,” Environmental Ethics 23 (Fall 2001), on
reserve.
2) Aug. 30-Sept. 3 Response 2
(August 30, drop deadline)
Animal Liberation and the Land
Ethic Singer, All Animals
are Equal,” Leopold, “The Land Ethic,” Rolston III, “Values in and Duties to
the Natural World,” Sagoff, “Animal Liberation and Environmental Ethics,” EE ch. 2. Brian Halweil and Danielle Nierenberg,
“Watching What we Eat,” SW ch. 4.
3) September 6-10 Response 3 (Monday is
Labor Day
Extending the Realm of Rights: Film: Butterfly. “Stone, “Should Trees
Have Standing?”, Feinberg, “The Rights of Animals,” “Attfield, “The Good of
Trees,” Midgley, “Duties Concerning
4) September 13-17 Response 4
Species Equality, Respect for Nature and
Consumer Society: “
5) September 20-24 Responese 5
Environmental Holism:
Film:
Nova: The Gaia Hypothesis. Regan, “How to Worry About Endangered Species”, “Varner,
“Biocentric Individualism,” Devall and Sessions, “Deep Ecology,” Sober,
“Philosophical Problems for Environmentalism”, EE ch. 5; “Boosting Water Productivity,” SW, ch.2;
Recommended
6) Sept. 27- Oct. 1
Response 6
How Wild Does Nature Have to Be?—How are we to interact with ecosystems? Krieger, “What’s Wrong with Plastic
Trees?”, Katz, “The Call of the Wild,” Light, “Ecological Restoration and the
Culture of Nature,” EE ch. 6. “Making
Better Energy Choices,” SW ch.3.
Recommended: Clare Palmer: “Taming the Wild Profusion of Existing
Things’? A Study of Foucault, Power, and Human/Animal Relationships,” Environmental Ethics 23 (Winter 2001).
7)
October 4-8
Ecofeminism in Theory
and Practice: Response 7
Hessler and Willott, “Feminism and Ecofeminism,”
8)
October 11-15 Response 8
Multicultural
Perspectives: Response 5
Film: In Light of Reverence. Cultural conflict between Native and Euro
9)
October 18-22 Environmentalism,
Multiculturalism, Religion, Tradition: In Light of Reverence, Continued.
Response 9
Recommended:
A confrontation: McPherson et al.,
“Indigenous Worlds and Callicott’s Land Ethic.” Environmental Ethics 22
(Fall 2000); Anthony Weston, “Multicentrism: A Manifesto” EnvironmentalEthics 26 (Spring 2004); Bailey, “Approximate
Optimality of Aboriginal Property Rights,” EE,
ch. 11.
10) October 25-29 Response 9
Rethinking the Good Life: Film: Earth
on Edge. Hill, “Ideals of Human Excellence and
Preserving Natural Environments,” Milbrath, “Redefining the Good Life in a
Sustainable Society,” Sagoff, “Do We Consume Too Much?”, Matthews, “Letting the
World Grow Old”, EE ch. 7. Gary Gardner and Erik Assadourian, “Rethinking
the Good Life,” SW ch. 8. Recommended: Cassandra Y.
Johnson and J. M. Bowker,
African-American Wildland Memories,” Environmental
Ethics 26 (Spring 2004).
11)
November 1-5 Response 10; Film: After the Warming;
Human Population and Environmental
Preservation: Hilary French,
“Linking Globalization, Consumption, and Governance,” SW ch. 7; Feinberg, “Future Generations,” Wolf, “Population,
Development, and the Environment,” Guha: “Radical American Environmentalism and
Wilderness Preservation: A Third World Critique,” Raymond Bonner, “At the Hand
of Man: Peril and Hope for
12) November 8-12—Nov. 11 Veterans Day
Sustainable Use, Institutional Structure, and
Poverty:
Hardin, “The Tragedy of the Commons,” and “Living in a Lifeboat”;
Singer, “Famine, Affluence, and Morality,” Shue, “Global Environment and
International Inequality,” Schmidtz, “Natural Enemies: Anatomy of an
Environmental Conflict,” EE 11-12. Sawin, “Charting a New Energy Future,” SW, ch. 5. Recommended: Robert Kirkman, “Reasons to Dwell on (if Not
Necessarily in) the Suburbs,” Environmental
Ethics 26 (Spring 2004).
13) November 15-19
Group Presentations
Tuesday:
Glenn H—shrinking polar ice mass;
Glenn C and Kathryn—Dolphins
in the
Thursday:
Jessica, Alexis, Schreiber—“Meat”: environmental and ethical issues
Vanishing Resources, Cost-Benefit
Analysis, and Environmental Policy: Response 12
Wolliams, “Designing
Cities as if They Were Ethical Choices,”
Kelman, “Cost-Benefit Analysis: An Ethical Critique,” Leonard and Zeckhauser,
“Cost-Benefit Analysis Defended,” Brennan, “Moral Pluralism and the
Environment”, EE, chs. 13-14. Recommended:
Daniel White, Modernity/Post-Modern
Environmentalism,” The Encyclopedia of Global Environmental Change. Volume 4 (in our library). Stephen Vogel,
“Environmental Philosophy after the End of Nature,” Environmental Ethics
24 (Spring 2002).
14) November 22-26 (Nov. 25-26, Thanksgiving
holidays)
Monday (7:00 PM) : Gabriel,
“Space Junk”;
Katharine,
“Topic?”
Valentine,
“Topic?”
Tuesday: Jared, ,
Nikki: “Polluting the Aquifer”
Atalia, “Topic?”
Environmentalism in
Practice: Recommended
Norton, “The Environmentalists’ Dilemma” and “Fragile
Freedoms,” Rawles, “The Missing Shade of Green,” Light, “Taking Environmental
Ethics Public.” Bookchin, “Social Ecology versus Deep
Ecology,” EE 126-136. Recommended:
Eileen Crist, “Against the Social
Construction of Nature and Wilderness” Environmental
Ethics 26, spring 2004.
Ctheory: http://www.ctheory.net/text_file.asp?pick=123.
15) FINAL ESSAY DUE
November 30—Last Day of Class; Group Presentations
Tuesday: Carmen—“The
Charles, “Topic?”
Dec.
1 Reading Day
16) December 2-9
Exam Period: TBA,
papers returned, grades discussed; presentations during exam period, if
necessary.
[1] Lynn White’s
“Historical Roots of the Ecological Crisis” was originally published in the
journal Science; it may currently locate under the database JSTOR in
FAU’s Electronic Collection. The full
citation is Lynn White, Jr., “The Historical Roots of Our Ecologic
Crisis,” Science, New Series,
Vol. 155, No. 3767. (