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Humans in Nature

Humans in Nature

The World As We Find It and the World As We Create It

9780199347216
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Description
Contemporary debates over issues as wide-ranging as the protection of wildernesses and endangered species, the spread of genetically modified organisms, the emergence of synthetic biology, and the advance of human enhancement, all of which seem to spin into deeper and more baffling questions with every change in the news cycle, often circle back to the same fundamental question:: should there be limits to the human alteration of the natural world? A growing number of people view the human capacity to alter natural states of affairs - from formerly wild spaces and things around us to crops and livestock to our own human nature - as cause for moral alarm. That reaction raises a number of perplexing philosophical questions, however:: Can we identify natural states of affairs at all? Does the idea of being morally concerned about the human relationship to nature make any sense? Should such a concern influence public policy and politics,or should government stay strenuously neutral on such matters?Through a study of moral debates about the environment, agricultural biotechnology, synthetic biology, and human enhancement, Gregory E. Kaebnick, a research scholar at The Hastings Center and editor of the Hastings Center Report, argues that concerns about the human alteration of nature can be legitimate and serious, but also that they are complex, contestable, and of limited political force.Kaebnick defends attempts to identify natural states of affairs by disentangling the nature/artifact distinction from metaphysical hoariness. Drawing on David Hume, he also defends moral standards for the human relationship to nature, arguing that they, and moral standards generally, should be understood as grounded in what Hume called the passions. Yet what counts as natural can be delineated only roughly, he concludes, and moral standards for interaction with nature are less a matter ofobligation than of ideals. Kaebnick also concludes, drawing on an interpretation of the liberal principle of neutrality, that government may support those standards but must be careful not to enforce them. Thus Kaebnick looks for a middle way on debates that have tended toward polarization.As differences between nature and artifact become steadily less substantial, problems about preservation run to the core of how people can make sense of themselves, of each other, and of our shared world. Kaebnicks solutions are creative and compelling, theoretically elegant and politically practical. Providing distinctive ways forward, when much academic and policy discussion seems exhausted, his book demands wide attention. In return, it inspires hope. - James Nelson, Michigan StateUniversity
Product Details
OUP USA
87255
9780199347216
9780199347216

Data sheet

Publication date
2014
Issue number
1
Cover
hard cover
Pages count
224
Dimensions (mm)
156 x 235
Weight (g)
703
  • Preface; Chapter 1. The Nature of Nature: What to Ask of a Concept; Chapter 2. Perceptions of the Soul: The Nature of Morality; Chapter 3. The Call of the Wild: Ideals and Obligations; Chapter 4. Space for Nature: Intrinsic Moral Values in Public Policy; Chapter 5. Nature Naturalized: Wilderness and Wildlife; Chapter 6. Nature on the Farm: Genetically Modified Plants and Animals; Chapter 7. Nature in the Factory: Synthetic Biology; Chapter 8: Nature in Us: Humanism and Transhumanism; Bibliography;
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