
The Urgency of the Greening of Ethics
Author(s) -
Anna Malavisi
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
australasian journal of logic
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 1448-5052
DOI - 10.26686/ajl.v15i2.4872
Subject(s) - greening , vanguard , salient , environmental ethics , political science , environmental health ethics , field (mathematics) , work (physics) , applied ethics , sociology , law , philosophy , geography , engineering , health care , mechanical engineering , mathematics , archaeology , health policy , pure mathematics
Richard Sylvan, a vanguard in the field of environmental philosophy published a book in 1994 with David Bennett titled The Greening of Ethics. Nearly twenty-five years later, where the environmental situation of our world is even more serious, and where some governments deny the existence and negative effects of human caused climate change, the greening of ethics is even more urgent. In this paper, I revisit Sylvan’s and Bennett’s work arguing that their approach to environmental ethics should be one that is advocated. I consider the most salient features of their approach, how this translates into practice but also offer an analysis as to why some governments have reached an impasse in regard to implementing environmental policies, and why environmental ethics still remains on the margins. In the final section of this paper, I discuss what an effective practice would mean.