• New York University
    Department of Philosophy
    Animal Studies Initiative, Environmental Studies Program
    Other faculty (Postdoc, Visiting, etc)
  •  20
    Ethics, Public policy, and global warming
    Global Bioethics 5 (1): 31-42. 1992.
  •  64
    Loving Nature
    Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 76 (4): 485-495. 2018.
    Drawing inspiration from Iris Murdoch, I develop a systematic account of love that countenances love beyond persons. I then show how this account applies to nature, and explain why loving nature matters.
  •  148
    Animal Agency
    The Harvard Review of Philosophy 25 111-126. 2018.
    The rise of physicalism and naturalism, the development of cognitive science, and the explosion and popularization of knowledge about animal behavior has brought us to see that most of the properties that were once thought to distinguish humans from other animals are shared with other animals. Many people now see properties that are morally relevant to how it is permissible to treat animals, such as sentience, as widely distributed. Agency, however, is one area in which the retreat from human un…Read more
  •  10
    The Future of Environmental Philosophy
    with Robert Frodeman
    Ethics and the Environment 12 (2): 117-118. 2007.
  •  10
    The Moral Status of Animals (review)
    Noûs 15 (2): 230. 1981.
  •  4
    The Morality of Species (review)
    Hastings Center Report 21 (2): 47. 1991.
  •  7
    A collection of seminal articles in climate ethics and climate justice.
  •  157
    Responsibility and Climate Change
    Global Justice: Theory Practice Rhetoric 8 (2). 2015.
    I begin by providing some background to conceptions of responsibility. I note the extent of disagreement in this area, the diverse and cross-cutting distinctions that are deployed, and the relative neglect of some important problems. These facts make it difficult to attribute responsibility for climate change, but so do some features of climate change itself which I go on to illuminate. Attributions of responsibility are often contested sites because such attributions are fundamentally pragmatic…Read more
  •  11
    Animal rights: a reply to Frey
    with Alonso Church
    Analysis 38 (1): 32-36. 1978.
  •  19
    Carruthers on nonconscious experience
    with Alonso Church
    Analysis 52 (1): 23. 1992.
  •  13
    Rational Egoism and Animal Rights
    Environmental Ethics 3 (2): 167-171. 1981.
    Jan Narveson has suggested that rational egoism might provide a defensible moral perspective that would put animals out of the reach of morality without denying that they are capable of suffering. I argue that rational egoism provides a principled indifference to the fate of animals at high cost: the possibility of principled indifference to the fate of “marginal humans.”
  •  67
    Animal Liberation is an Environmental Ethic
    Environmental Values 7 (1): 41-57. 1998.
    I begin by briefly tracing the history of the split between environmental ethics and animal liberation, go on to sketch a theory of value that I think is implicit in animal liberation, and explain how this theory is consistent with strong environmental commitments. I conclude with some observations about problems that remain
  • The Arbitrariness of Language
    Dissertation, The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. 1976.
  •  45
    Jack, Jill, and Jane in a Perfect Moral Storm
    Philosophy and Public Issues - Filosofia E Questioni Pubbliche 3 (1). 2013.
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  • Some problems and prospects for cognitive ethology
    with M. Bekoff
    Between the Species 8 80-82. 1992.
  •  9
    Hockett on Effective Computability
    with Ralph J. Teutsch
    Foundations of Language 11 (2): 287-293. 1974.
  •  1
    Singer and Pratical Ethics Movement
    In Dale Jamieson (ed.), Singer and His Critics, Wiley-blackwell. pp. 1--17. 1999.
  • Language, Mind and Art (edited book)
    Kluwer Academic Publishers. 1994.
  •  73
    Readings in Animal Cognition (edited book)
    with Marc Bekoff
    MIT Press. 1996.
    This collection of 24 readings is the first comprehensive treatment of important topics by leading figures in the rapidly growing interdisciplinary field of...
  •  5
    Sport Hunting as an Instinct
    with Marc Bekoff
    Environmental Ethics 13 (4): 375-378. 1991.
  •  2
    Ethics and the Environment: An Introduction
    Cambridge University Press. 2008.
    What is the environment, and how does it figure in an ethical life? This book is an introduction to the philosophical issues involved in this important question, focussing primarily on ethics but also encompassing questions in aesthetics and political philosophy. Topics discussed include the environment as an ethical question, human morality, meta-ethics, normative ethics, humans and other animals, the value of nature, and nature's future. The discussion is accessible and richly illustrated with…Read more
  •  18
    Constructing practical ethics
    In Roger Crisp (ed.), The Oxford Handbook of the History of Ethics, Oxford University Press. 2013.
    This chapter sketches a broad history of practical ethics. It identifies five distinguishable styles of work in practical ethics: the Vertical Approach, the Horizontal Approach, Analysis and Intuition, Reasoning From Middle-Level Principles, and the Case Approach. It is argued that practical ethics is today a glorious mess, as evidenced by the different philosophical views implied by the different approaches. Some philosophers also practice more than one of these styles, sometimes in the same pa…Read more
  •  247
    Singer and His Critics (edited book)
    Wiley-Blackwell. 1999.
    This is the first book devoted to the work of Peter Singer, one of the leaders of the practical ethics movement, and one of the most influential philosophers of the twentieth century
  •  3
    Animals’ Rights Considered in Relation to Social Progress (review)
    Philosophical Topics 12 (3): 271-274. 1981.
  •  88
    From the 1992 Rio Earth Summit to the 2009 Copenhagen Climate Conference there was a concerted international effort to stop climate change. This book is about what climate change is, why we failed to stop it, and why it still matters what we do
  •  29
    Whither environmental philosophy?
    Ethics and the Environment 12 (2): 125-127. 2007.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Ethics & the Environment 12.2 (2007) 125-127MuseSearchJournalsThis JournalContents[Access article in PDF]Whither Environmental Philosophy?Dale JamiesonBy most reasonable standards, environmental philosophy has been an enormous success since its beginnings in the 1970s. Courses in the subject are now taught around the world, there are many opportunities for publishing, there are two dedicated graduate programs, and there are even some…Read more