Victoria, British Columbia, Canada
  •  2
    GW Leibniz, New Essays on Human Understanding Reviewed by
    Philosophy in Review 17 (6): 424-427. 1997.
  •  54
    The Case for Environmental Morality
    Environmental Ethics 25 (1): 5-24. 2003.
    Present environmental degradation has led some to argue that only an appeal to selfishness will “save the environment,” allegedly because appeals to “morality” necessarily are ineffective, while others have suggested that we need a “new, environmental ethic.” If we are interested in countering the degradation of the natural environment, we need to reconsider actual morality, how it is developed, and how it may take into account human activities affecting the natural world. Ultimately, we need to…Read more
  •  14
    Biodiversity and Democracy (review)
    Environmental Ethics 24 (2): 217-218. 2002.
  •  7
    Reply to Roth
    International Philosophical Quarterly 29 (4): 463-467. 1989.
  •  29
    Nature, Culture, and Natural Heritage: Toward a Culture of Nature
    Environmental Ethics 27 (4): 339-354. 2005.
    Nature and culture are usually treated as opposites. Nature, on this conception, is on the wane as a result of culture. A fresh analysis of the relation between these two terms in the light of the notion of “cultural landscapes” is needed. This account allows for nature to be understood as an important, distinctive category, even while granting the constitutive role of the culturally structured gaze. Culture and nature need not be conceived in opposition to each other, for it makes sense to spea…Read more
  •  53
    The Natural Contract in the Anthropocene
    with Bertrand Guillaume
    Environmental Ethics 38 (2): 209-227. 2016.
  •  23
    Culture and Climate Change
    Proceedings of the Xxii World Congress of Philosophy 23 45-52. 2008.
    Physical science is coming to an increasingly clear understanding of natural environmental changes, their causes and their effects on the landscape. Human beings have lived through significant climate variability in historical periods, and through repeated periods of relatively sudden climate change, as well asmultiple other drastic natural events in prehistory. In this paper I propose that we should take into account the cultural dimension when considering adaptation to drastic natural events, …Read more
  •  17
    Symbolically Laden Sites in the Landscape and Climate Change
    Ethics, Policy and Environment 17 (3): 355-369. 2014.
    Attention is drawn to the threat posed by climate change to symbolically laden places, landscapes and landmarks, and suggested that, insofar as some of those sites are treated as sacred by certain populations, their disturbance may be especially problematic. Special consideration is given to the significance glacial retreat for local, nearby populations, and its importance from the point of view of climate justice and ethics is discussed. The potential value of iconic sites from the perspective …Read more
  • Allen Carlson, Aesthetics and the Environment (review)
    Philosophy in Review 20 324-326. 2000.
  •  205
    Rock art aesthetics: Trace on rock, mark of spirit, window on land
    Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 57 (4): 451-458. 1999.