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Michael Heim, Electric Language: A Philosophical Study of Word Processing Reviewed by (review)Philosophy in Review 8 (12): 483-486. 1988.
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533Review of Gary L. Comstock, Vexing Nature? On the Ethical Case Against Agricultural Biotechnology (review)Agriculture and Human Values 18 (3): 341-345. 2001.
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95Interests and values in national nutrition policy in the united statesJournal of Agricultural Ethics 1 (4): 241-256. 1988.When scientists consider the interaction of science and value judgments, debates often occur. When public policy grows out of science, disagreements between scientists can become even more spirited. This paper examines the case of nutrition policy in the United States, which has been both at the interface between agriculture and medicine and the object of serious discord concerned with the strength and validity of the scientific evidence and the responsibility for action. The development of indi…Read more
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241Food aid and the famine relief argument (brief return)Journal of Agricultural and Environmental Ethics 23 (3): 209-227. 2010.Recent publications by Pogge ( Global ethics: seminal essays. St. Paul: Paragon House 2008 ) and by Singer ( The life you can save: acting now to end world poverty. New York: Random House 2009 ) have resuscitated a debate over the justifiability of famine relief between Singer and ecologist Garrett Hardin in the 1970s. Yet that debate concluded with a general recognition that (a) general considerations of development ethics presented more compelling ethical problems than famine relief; and (b) s…Read more
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2141The philosophical foundations of riskSouthern Journal of Philosophy 24 (2): 273-286. 1986.Rescher's 1983 study of risk analysis marks an important departure from game theory in that philosophical foundations for risk are neither formal nor implicit, But explicitly defined objective properties. Rescher's claim that these foundations are ontological fails, However. His ontology is internally inconsistent. Furthermore, Risk is always interest relative, Making it impossible to remove epistemological considerations entirely from any account of its foundations.
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147Collective responsibility and professional rolesJournal of Business Ethics 5 (2). 1986.Flores and Johnson (Ethics 93 No. 3 (1983) pp. 537, 545.) offer a solution to the problem of individual and collective responsibility which obscures the fundamental requirement for responsibility ascriptions, namely, moral agency. Close attention to matters of individual and collective agency provides a simple yet defensible criterion for establishing when an individual is and isn't responsible for the untoward consequences of a collective act.
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156The ethics of truth-telling and the problem of riskScience and Engineering Ethics 5 (4): 489-510. 1999.Risk communication poses a challenge to ordinary norms of truth-telling because it can easily mislead. Analyzing this challenge in terms of a systematic divergence between expertise and public attitudes fails to recognize how two specific features of the concept of risk play a role in managing daily affairs. First, evaluating risk always incorporates an estimate of the reliability of information. Since risk communication is an effort at providing information, audiences will naturally and appropr…Read more
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63Borgmann on commodification: A comment on real american ethicsJournal of Agricultural and Environmental Ethics 21 (1): 75-84. 2008.
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Aid and TradeIn Charles V. Blatz (ed.), Ethics and agriculture: an anthology on current issues in world context, University of Idaho Press. pp. 340. 1991.
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96Norton’s Sustainability: Some Comments on Risk and SustainabilityJournal of Agricultural and Environmental Ethics 20 (4): 375-386. 2007.Bryan Norton’s 2005 book Sustainability describes a pragmatic approach to environmental philosophy that stresses philosophy’s role as one of mediating between scientific and ordinary language. But on two topics, Norton’s approach is not pragmatic enough. In the case of his discussion of risk, he accedes to a scientific notion that fails to acknowledge the way that ordinary usage of the word risk involves pragmatic links to human action and moral responsibility. With respect to the word sustainab…Read more
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84From Synthetic Bioethics to One Bioethics: A Reply to CriticsEthics, Policy and Environment 18 (2): 215-224. 2015.Replies to commentaries on my 2012 article ‘Synthetic Biology Needs a Synthetic Bioethics,’ note that I do not, in fact, call for some ‘new’ kind of ethics. The focus then and now is on integrating questions that relate to distributive justice and environmental quality more faithfully into the topics that have come to preoccupy mainstream bioethics as institutionalized in medical schools and medical research institutions
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92Uncertainty Arguments in Environmental IssuesEnvironmental Ethics 8 (1): 59-75. 1986.A large part of environmental policy is based upon scientific studies ofthe likely health, safety, and ecological consequences of human actions and practices. These studies, however, are frequently vulnerable to epistemological and methodological criticisms which challenge their validity. Epistemological criticisms can be used in ethical and political philosophy arguments to challenge the applicability of scientific knowledge to environmental policy, and, in turn, to challenge the democratic bas…Read more
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80The Agrarian Vision: Sustainability and Environmental EthicsUniversity Press of Kentucky. 2010.Agrarian political philosophies since ancient Greece stress the role of agriculture in forming political solidarity and civic virtue. More recent transformations suggest a way to conjoin these elements of what makes a polity politically sustainable with environmental sensitivity and literacy.
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98Ethics in agricultural researchJournal of Agricultural Ethics 1 (1): 11-20. 1988.Utilitarian ethics provides a model for evaluating moral responsibility in agricultural research decisions according to the balance of costs and benefits accruing to the public at large. Given the traditions and special requirements of agricultural research planning, utilitarian theory is well adapted to serve as a starting point for evaluating these decisions, but utilitarianism has defects that are well documented in the philosophical literature. Criticisms of research decisions in agricultura…Read more
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204The GMO Quandary and What It Means for Social PhilosophySocial Philosophy Today 30 7-27. 2014.Agricultural crops developed using the tools of genetic engineering have become socially institutionalized in three ways that substantially compromise the inherent potential of plant transformation tools. The first is that when farming depends upon debt finance, farmers find themselves in a competitive situation such that efficiency-enhancing technology fuels a trend of bankruptcy and increasing scale of production. As efficiency increasing tools, GMOs are embedded in controversial processes of …Read more
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Convergence in an agrarian keyIn Ben Minteer (ed.), Nature in Common?: Environmental Ethics and the Contested Foundations of Environmental Policy, Temple University Press. 2009.
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107The agricultural ethics of biofuels: climate ethics and mitigation argumentsPoiesis and Praxis 8 (4): 169-189. 2012.An environmental, climate mitigation rationale for research and development on liquid transportation fuels derived from plants emerged among many scientists and engineers during the last decade. However, between 2006 and 2010, this climate ethic for pursuing biofuel became politically entangled and conceptually confused with rationales for encouraging greater use of plant-based ethanol that were both unconnected to climate ethics and potentially in conflict with the value-commitments providing a…Read more
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145Agrarian philosophy and ecological ethicsScience and Engineering Ethics 14 (4): 527-544. 2008.Mainstream environmental ethics grew out of an approach to value that was rooted in a particular conception of rationality and rational choice. As weaknesses in this approach have become more evident, environmental philosophers have experimented with both virtue ethics and with pragmatism as alternative starting points for developing a more truly ecological orientation to environmental philosophy. However, it is possible to see both virtue ethics and pragmatism as emerging from older philosophic…Read more
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206Privacy, secrecy and securityEthics and Information Technology 3 (1): 13-19. 2001.I will argue that one class of issues in computer ethics oftenassociated with privacy and a putative right to privacy isbest-analyzed in terms that make no substantive reference toprivacy at all. These issues concern the way that networkedinformation technology creates new ways in which conventionalrights to personal security can be threatened. However onechooses to analyze rights, rights to secure person and propertywill be among the most basic, the least controversial, and themost universally …Read more
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85Marcel mazoyer and Lawrence roudart, a history of world agriculture from the neolithic age to the current crisis, James H. membrez, trJournal of Agricultural and Environmental Ethics 22 (1): 101-104. 2009.
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177What Happens to Environmental Philosophy in a Wicked World?Journal of Agricultural and Environmental Ethics 25 (4): 485-498. 2012.What is the significance of the wicked problems framework for environmental philosophy? In response to wicked problems, environmental scientists are starting to welcome the participation of social scientists, humanists, and the creative arts. We argue that the need for interdisciplinary approaches to wicked problems opens up a number of tasks that environmental philosophers have every right to undertake. The first task is for philosophers to explore new and promising ways of initiating philosoph…Read more
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175Mark Sagoff 's price, principle, and the environment: Two commentsEthics, Place and Environment 9 (3). 2006.I will discuss two themes that can be found in Mark Sagoff's most recent book, Price, Principle, and the Environment. Built from pieces fashioned in his entertaining and incisive critical es...
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84Food Biotechnology's Challenge to Cultural Integrity and Individual ConsentHastings Center Report 27 (4): 34-39. 1997.Consumer response to genetically altered foods has been mixed in the United States. While transgenic crops have entered the food supply with little comment, other foods, such as the bioengineered tomato, have caused considerable controversy. Objections to genetically engineered food are varied, ranging from the religious to the aesthetic. One need not endorse these concerns to conclude that food biotechnology violates procedural protections of consumer sovereignty and religious liberty. Consumer…Read more
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83The reshaping of conventional farming: A north american perspective (review)Journal of Agricultural and Environmental Ethics 14 (2): 217-229. 2001.Debates over the future of agriculture in North Americaestablish a dialectical opposition between conventional,industrial agriculture and alternative, sustainable agriculture.This opposition has roots that extend back to the 18th century inthe United States, but the debate has taken a number ofsurprising turns in the 20th century. Originally articulated as aphilosophy of the left, industrial agriculture has utilitarianmoral foundations. In the US and Canada, the articulation of analternative to …Read more
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65Carolyn Raffensperger and Joel tickner, eds., Protecting public health and the environment: Implementing the precautionary principle (review)Journal of Agricultural and Environmental Ethics 14 (3): 351-354. 2001.
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44Book Review: Albert Howard Soil and Health + Julie Guthman, Agrarian DreamsJournal of Agricultural and Environmental Ethics 21 (3): 297-301. 2008.
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131Synthetic Biology Needs A Synthetic BioethicsEthics, Policy and Environment 15 (1). 2012.Recent developments in synthetic biology are described and characterized as moving the era of biotechnology into platform technologies. Platform technologies enable rapid and diffuse innovations and simultaneous product development in diffuse markets, often targeting sectors of the economy that have traditionally been thought to have little relationship to one another. In the case of synthetic biology, pharmaceutical and biofuel product development are occurring interactively. But the regulatory…Read more
East Lansing, Michigan, United States of America
Areas of Specialization
| Value Theory |
| Science, Logic, and Mathematics |
| Other Academic Areas |