•  88
    Doing, Allowing, and Precaution
    Environmental Ethics 29 (4): 339-358. 2007.
    Many environmental policies seem to rest on an implicit distinction between doing and allowing. For example, it is generally thought worse to drive a speciesto extinction than to fail to save a species that is declining through no fault of our own, and worse to pollute the air with chemicals that trigger asthma attacks thanto fail to remove naturally occurring allergens such as pollen and mold. The distinction between doing and allowing seems to underlie certain versions of the precautionary pri…Read more
  •  19
    Gillian Barker. Beyond Biofatalism: Human Nature for An Evolving World (review)
    Environmental Philosophy 14 (1): 143-146. 2017.
  •  20
    Revising Responsibility in a Proposal for Greenhouse Development Rights
    Ethics, Place and Environment 12 (3): 291-295. 2009.
    The Greenhouse Development Rights developed by Paul Baer, Sivan Kartha, Tom Athanasiou, and Eric Kemp-Benedict are grounded in two fundamental ethical considerations: caus...
  •  53
    Ecological Restoration in Context: Ethics and the Naturalization of Former Military Lands
    with David G. Havlick
    Ethics, Policy and Environment 14 (1): 69-89. 2011.
    The philosophy of ecological restoration has focused primarily on three issues: the question of what to restore, whether and why restoration “fakes” nature, and how restoration shapes human-nature relationships. Using “M2W conversion sites” – former military lands recently redesignated as U.S. national wildlife refuges – as a case study, we examine how the restoration of these lands challenges existing philosophical frameworks for restoration. We argue that a contextual, case-based analysis best…Read more
  •  117
    Can unilateral action be an effective response to global climate change? Baylor Johnson worries that a focus on unilateral action by individuals will detract from efforts to secure collective agreements to address the problem. Although Johnson and I agree that individuals have some obligation to reduce their personal emissions, we differ in the degree to which we see personal reductions as effective in spurring broader change. I argue that 'unilateral reductions' can have communicative value and…Read more
  •  27
    Reclaiming the Mundane: Comments on Albert Borgmann’s Real American Ethics
    Journal of Agricultural and Environmental Ethics 21 (1): 65-73. 2008.
    Like much of his work, Albert Borgmann’s Real American Ethics defies easy categorization. Neither analytic nor Continental in style, it bridges these traditions while remaining firmly connected to the issues and concerns facing real people in contemporary life. In particular, the book is of deep relevance to the development of an ethics that attends to the material conditions of human existence. In its attention to the physical, social, and technological dimensions of moral life, the book emphas…Read more
  •  172
    Empathy, Shared Intentionality, and Motivation by Moral Reasons
    Ethical Theory and Moral Practice 15 (3). 2012.
    Internalists about reasons generally insist that if a putative reason, R, is to count as a genuine normative reason for a particular agent to do something, then R must make a rational connection to some desire or interest of the agent in question. If internalism is true, but moral reasons purport to apply to agents independently of the particular desires, interests, and commitments they have, then we may be forced to conclude that moral reasons are incoherent. Richard Joyce (2001) develops an ar…Read more
  •  296
    Both Walter Sinnott-Armstrong and Baylor Johnson hold that under current circumstances, individuals lack obligations to reduce their personal contributions to greenhouse gas emissions. Johnson argues that climate change has the structure of a tragedy of the commons, and that there is no unilateral obligation to reduce emissions in a commons. Against Johnson, I articulate two rationales for an individual obligation to reduce one's greenhouse gas emissions. I first discuss moral integrity, which r…Read more
  •  21
    Practical wisdom in environmental education
    with David Havlick
    Ethics, Place and Environment 8 (3). 2005.
    To create an ecologically literate, motivated, and engaged citizenry, environmental education must help students develop practical wisdom. We discuss three elements of teaching central to this task: first, greater emphasis on contextualized knowledge, grounded in particular places and cases; second, multi-modal learning that engages students as whole persons both cognitively and affectively; and third, stronger connections between knowing and doing, or between knowledge and responsibility. We il…Read more