Environmental Ethics, المجلد 5John Muir Institute for Environmental Studies and University of New Mexico, 1983 |
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الصفحة 54
... consider- ation as such.26 Why can nothing be intrinsically valuable unless it includes some element of satisfaction ? One searches for but finds no argument . Frankena simply says that the thesis " that nothing is intrinsically good ...
... consider- ation as such.26 Why can nothing be intrinsically valuable unless it includes some element of satisfaction ? One searches for but finds no argument . Frankena simply says that the thesis " that nothing is intrinsically good ...
الصفحة 264
... consider all living things to have inherent worth . ( Taylor's biocentric outlook proved helpful in so far as it noted features that were both common to living things and only possessed by living things . ) Factors such as similarities ...
... consider all living things to have inherent worth . ( Taylor's biocentric outlook proved helpful in so far as it noted features that were both common to living things and only possessed by living things . ) Factors such as similarities ...
الصفحة 268
... considering the permissibility of killing animals and plants , it is relevant to consider not simply the relative weights of the supposed rights , but also the relative values of the beings in question . The tree's life may be ...
... considering the permissibility of killing animals and plants , it is relevant to consider not simply the relative weights of the supposed rights , but also the relative values of the beings in question . The tree's life may be ...
المحتوى
NEWS AND NOTES | 2 |
Features SANTA CRUZ | 3 |
Environmental Ethics | 21 |
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عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
action animal rights anthropocentric argue argument attitude behavior biocentric CALIFORNIA/SANTA CRUZ capacity carbon dioxide Christian claim concept concern conscious consider CRUZ The University culture decisions Department of Philosophy discussion duty Earth earthquake prediction ecological economic ecotheology entity environment Environmental Ethics environmentalists example existence experience fact fossil fuels Frankena future Garrett Hardin Heidegger human implications important individual inherent value inherent worth Institute interests intrinsic value issues John justified Kant Kant's land matter means metaethical Monkey Wrench Gang natural environment nature nonhuman nonnatural objects obligation paper person perspective physical plants political possible principle problems program of earthquake quantum quantum mechanics question rational reason Regan requires respect response scientific sense sentient significant social society solar energy species stewardship submicroscopic suggests Taoist tion Tom Regan tradition UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA/SANTA University of Georgia University Press utilitarian York