Sunday, June 2, 2019

Pollution and Environment Essay - Man Has No Responsibility to the Envi

Man Has No Responsibility to the Environment Since the 1960s, questions concerning environmental ethics have loomed large in the public awargonness. At the heart of all of these questions is bingle single issue that has caused confusion among many people involved in this controversy. There has been much debate on this issue, but little has been fruitful, and this can in part be blamed on the fact that the debate is of a particularly low quality. Much of it has been of the name-calling, conclusion-with-no-justification-spewing variety. The central problem with the environmental debate is that the debaters booked in attempting to provide solutions to these issues do not agree on the humanitys place in the natural order. Rather than dealing with this core issue, however, the debaters debate only on incidental issues which proceed directly from the central problem. This central question is How shall we concern to, or deal with, the environment? Environmentalists frequently answer tha t we should, in some sense, die hard in harmony with nature, or respect the rights of natural beings, such as trees, birds, mountains, and rivers. In this essay, I present an opposing tie-up I propose that thither are no moral obligations which direct how humans should deal with the environment, because the concept human is an arbitrary class with no real meaning. The problem with this environmentalist viewpoint is that the presupposition that there is some radical difference between humans and different animals is inherent in the position. Environmentalists suppose that there is something that puts us in a allow position compared to the rest of nature. In fact, there is not. Humans have the same drives as other animals. In this respect, a... ...definition of humanity have to do with how humanity should relate to the environment? The answer is that there is no particular set of rules that humanity should follow in relating to the environment. Certainly, there are some things that would be good for humanity, and other things that would be bad, depending upon how you define these concepts of good, bad, and humanity. And certainly, some things would be better for the ecosystem than others, depending upon how you define the good of the ecosystem. But it is impossible to argue that humanity should be responsible for shepherding the ecosystem, or for staying in a certain place in the ecosystem, because there is no natural and proper place for humanity -- humanity is an illusion, an arbitrary group of animals. There are no moral considerations that apply to humanity as a whole.

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