Baard, Patrik
- Department of Urban and Rural Development, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences
Research article2019Peer reviewed
Baard, Patrik; Ahteensuu, Marko
During recent years the relevance of environmental ethics to nature conservation has been increasingly questioned. This doubt mainly takes two forms: (1) Conservation biology is regarded as solely a scientific endeavor, and therefore ethics is redundant; (2) It is acknowledged that values are part and parcel of conservation science, practice and policy, but environmental ethics is considered to have little positive contribution to make. We focus on the latter form and argue that it enables only suppressed normative premises omitted from critical scrutiny, and that relying on suppressed premises for making prescriptive conclusions is normatively unreasonable. Furthermore, even if the normative premises were well-founded, the stance has unwelcome implications. We show ways in which environmental ethics provides critical and structured manners of reasoning on normative premises. This invites more collaboration between nature conservation and environmental ethics in the future.
Environmental ethics; Conservation biology; Ethics; Moral philosophy; Nature conservation
Journal for Nature Conservation
2019, Volume: 52, article number: 125737
Publisher: ELSEVIER GMBH
SLU Swedish Biodiversity Centre
Ethics
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jnc.2019.125737
https://res.slu.se/id/publ/102906