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Human Values and Environmental Problems. I=PAT Activity. We will getting into 5 groups. In your assigned group, estimate how much of your assigned resource you use in a day. Think Broadly and brainstorm as many things as possible. List these on your easel paper. Share out and evaluate.
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I=PAT Activity • We will getting into 5 groups. • In your assigned group, estimate how much of your assigned resource you use in a day. Think Broadly and brainstorm as many things as possible. • List these on your easel paper.
Share out and evaluate • Each group will share the types of items that they used in a day. • Now, let’s imagine this scenario: Our Population stabilizes at twice the current size (14 billion), all people will seek Affluence, so what types of technologies will be required to keep the Impacts? Think creatively.
I=PAT Review Question: • How has technology changed to reduce our impact on the environment? • Give two examples of technological improvements that has helped to reduce or maintain our impact, despite our growing population and affluence.
Question of the Day: • What are “commons”? • What is the “Tragedy of the Commons” as described by the book? • How could we work to decrease our consumption?
The Global Commons The Tragedy of the Commons (1968 essay) • Garrett Hardin • Our inability to solve environmental problems stems from the conflict between short-term individual welfare and long-term environmental sustainability • Used Medieval shared pastureland (the commons) as example.
Human Use of the Earth • Sustainability • The ability to meet humanity’s current needs without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their needs • Sustainable Development • Economic growth that meets the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their needs • Must meet the needs of the poor • Can only occur within the limits of the environment • Cannot sustain everyone at the levels of consumption of the US, Europe, and Japan.
The London Olympics-Sustainability • http://www.london2012.com/videos/video=the-olympic-park-with-kevin-mccloud.html
Human Use of the Earth • Consumption overpopulation: • People use more than their share of resources • Affluent lifestyle • Leads to pollution and degradation • Sustainable Consumption: • People use their share of resources to meets their needs • Must improve the quality of life for the poor • Minimizes the use of resources • Voluntary Simplicity
Let’s Brainstorm Ideas that you already do to reduce consumption
Human Use of the Earth • Voluntary Simplicity • Requires behavioral change: purchasing less • Accumulation of goods does not equal happiness • Values and character define a person, not what they own • E.g., car-sharing, using public transportation, etc. • Not popular with politicians and consumers
Global Climate Change • What is sustainable development? • What is sustainable consumption? How is it linked to a reduction in world poverty? • How is voluntary simplicity an example of sustainable consumption?
Human Values and Environmental Problems • Ethics: branch of philosophy that deals with human values • Environmental Ethics: considers the moral basis of environmental responsibility • Considers the rights of people living today AND of future generations • Critical because our actions today affect the environment in the future
Human Values and Environmental Problems • Worldviews: • personal perspectives, based on values • Help us make sense of the world • What is right and wrong • Lead to behaviors and lifestyles • May or may not be compatible with environmental sustainability
Human Values and Environmental Problems • Environmental Worldview: • How the environment works • Our place in the environment • Right and wrong environmental behaviors • Two extremes; • Western Worldview • Deep Ecology Worldview
Human Values and Environmental Problems • Western Worldview: • Expansionist, human-centered • Frontier attitude; conquer and exploit nature • Human superiority over nature • Unrestricted use of natural resources • Unrestricted economic growth • Anthropocentric perspective
Human Values and Environmental Problems • Deep Ecology: • 1970s: Arne Naess, Bill Devall, George Sessions • Based on harmony with nature • Spiritual respect for life • Humans and other species have equal worth • Requires radical shift in modern thinking • Appreciating quality of life, rather than a high standard of living • Biocentric perspective
Activity:Who is the environmentalist? • Consider the character descriptions on the next slides. Which of these individuals, if any, is an environmentalist? Why? • What does this imply about environmentalism?
Environmental Ethics • Field of ethics that considers the moral basis of environmental responsibility • Western Worldview • Human superiority and dominance over nature • Deep Ecology Worldview • All species have an equal worth to humans • Most people’s ethics fall somewhere in between
Global Climate Change • What is environmental ethics? • What assumptions are made in the deep ecology worldview?