State University of New York, Stony Brook. Charles Whitmer Wright completed a Ph.D. thesis: Toward an Environmentally Responsive Ethics of Communication (Frankfurt School of Social Theory, Jurgen Habermas, Germany), in 1996, in philosophy. First generation members of the Frankfurt School of social theory--Max Horkheimer, Theodor Adorno and Herbert Marcuse-- anticipated the need for theoretical reflection concerning the causes of environmental degradation, but their philosophical approach was burdened with serious conceptual difficulties. Jurgen Habermas's reconstruction promises to resolve many of these difficulties. Yet his linguistic and pragmatic approach seems to entail an anthropocentrism that prevents an adequate environmental ethic. This thesis outlines the obstacles facing environmental thinkers in Habermas's conception of practical reason and in his conception of modernity. But his theoretical approach can be reconciled with the aims of environmental ethics and philosophy. A place for a moral dimension to human interaction with the natural world can be secured. The advisor was Kenneth Baynes.
State University of New York, Stony Brook. Robert Kirkman completed
a Ph.D. thesis, Environmentalism Without Illusions: Rethinking the Roles
of Philosophy and Ecology, 1995. Environmental thinkers make broad factual
and normative claims that are usually based on a profound misunderstanding of
the scope and limits of human knowledge. The most telling symptom of this problem
is the deep ambivalence of environmental thinkers toward the sciences. Speculative
nature philosophy must always fall short of the mark; the world is far too complex
and detailed to be fully comprehended by reason. An alternative is a model of
scientific inquiry as a process by which metaphors are refined by an open- ended
process of testing and criticism. Scientific knowledge is always tentative and
somewhat ambiguous. An emphasis on scientific knowledge, properly understood,
results in a radical revision of the meaning and the prospects of environmental
thought. The advisors were Anthony Weston, Mary C. Rawlinson, and Edward S.
Casey. Kirkman taught at the Department of Philosophy, University of New Hampshire,
Durham, and is now with the Learning Communities Program, SUNY Stony Brook.
State University of New York, Stony Brook. David Mark Macauley completed a Ph.D. thesis, Be-wildering Order: Toward an Ecology of the Elements in Ancient Greek Philosophy and Beyond, 1998. The present environmental crisis is, in part, a crisis of our historical relation to the four classical elements: earth, air, fire and water, in ancient Greek cosmology and philosophy. A typology of the elements, their role in framing a physical and metaphysical order. Debates related to the social construction of nature, hylozoism and the significance of the elements for understanding philosophical language, Greek culture, and the environment. Particular attention to Empedocles' Peri Phuseus and Katharmoi--and their subsequent place and displacement in the thought of Plato's Timaeus and Aristotle's De Caelo, De Anima, De Generatione et Corruptione and Physics. Relevance for our conceptions of pollution, democracy, evolutionary theory, philosophy of nature and place. An "ecology of the elements" using Martin Heidegger, Maurice Merleau-Ponty, Gaston Bachelard and Henry David Thoreau. The role of dwelling, walking, the body and an ontological poetics of revery. The advisor was Edward S. Casey.
State University of New York, Stony Brook. Irene Klaver completed a Ph.D. thesis, 1996, Indeterminacy in Place. A Heraclitian mode of being and thinking is preserved in Plato's notion of space. Oppositions are dealt with as mutually constitutive instead of mutually exclusive. This absence of dualistic thinking is related to the way that space is designated as an indeterminate, feminine, and material realm. There are consequences for concepts of intentionality, agency, responsibility, subjectivity, and community. Environmental ethics needs to be predicated upon the necessity to give place indeterminacy and upon a notion of place that is fundamentally indeterminate. This leads to a pragmatic environmental policy that takes specific places seriously. The advisors were Edward S. Casey, Mary Rawlinson, Anthony Weston, and Peter Manchester. Klaver, who is Dutch, afterward taught at Montana State University, Billings. She did further teaching and research at the Universities of Amsterdam and Leiden, and is now Assistant Professor of Philosophy, University of North Texas.
University of Kansas. Brian Clyde Black completed a Ph.D. thesis in environmental history: Petrolia: The Landscape of Pennsylvania's Oil Boom, 1859-1873, completed in 1996. The tapping of the first commercial oil well in 1859 and the ensuing boom in western Pennsylvania was a revolution in land use--an ecological revolution--that rationalized a method of exploiting the environment and developing resources that was unprecedented. This was a watershed in American attitudes toward future modes of industrial development. The early oil industry helped to shape the ethics with which the broader culture defined acceptable use of natural resources. Americans were given a commodity of such significance that it overwhelmed the meaning of a place and made it worth sacrificing. The advisor was Donald Worster.Catholic University of America, Washington. Theodore W. Nunez completed
a Ph.D. thesis, spring 1999, Holmes Rolston, Bernard Lonergan, and the Foundations
of Environmental Ethics. The ecophilosophy of Holmes Rolston in dialogue
with the thought of Canadian Jesuit philosopher Bernard Lonergan in an attempt
to clarify and develop the foundations of a contemporary environmental ethic.
Part I. An interpretive analysis of Rolston's
major writings. His meta-ethical positions in the areas of epistemology, metaphysics,
axiology, and philosophical anthropology. Rolston's interpretive natural history
and its relation to his theology of nature. Rolston defends a critical-realist
epistemology as the meta-ethical basis for a science-based, ecocentric ethic.
His most important epistemological claim is that human beings are capable of
worldview-formation, moral oversight, and planetary altruism.
Part II. Aspects of Lonergan's philosophy
relevant to environmental ethics: cognitional theory, transcendental method,
and critical-realist epistemology. Cognitive and moral objectivity is the fruit
of authentic subjectivity. Lonergan's theory of emergent probability and the
related notions of development and finality. Lonergan's dialectic of progress,
decline, and redemption in history and society. Lonergan's view of the humanity-nature
relationship clarified and developed by drawing on Robert Doran's related notions
of an ecological differentiation of consciousness, an integral dialectic of
culture, and psychic conversion.
Part III. In a mutually critical dialogue
between Rolston and Lonergan on foundational issues in environmental ethics,
each thinker complements and corrects the other in several ways. (1) Critical
realism offers the most adequate epistemological grounding for environmental
ethics. (2) Meeting the eco-social crisis requires a new, nonanthropocentric
ethic that is scientifically informed and religiously based (a theocentric ethic).
(3) It is both necessary and possible for a new environmental ethic to integrate
a nonanthropocentric theory of values in nature with a humanistic value theory.
(4) A new ethic must include, as a central component, a character ethic informed
by an evolutionary epic and a normative vision of sensitive earth residence.
A summary, with commentary, appears as "Rolston,
Lonergan, and the Intrinsic Value of Nature, Journal of Religious Ethics
27 (no. 1, Spring 1999):105-128. Nunez is taught ethics, including environmental
ethics, at Villanova University, and is now at Middlebury College, VT.
Duke University. Paul Joseph Medeiros completed a Ph.D. thesis, Juxtaposing
Aldo Leopold and Martin Heidegger: Interpretation, Time, and the Environment,
May, 2000. The concepts of authentic time, inauthentic time, and everyday time,
articulated by Martin Heidegger in the 1924 lecture "The Concept of Time" and
in Being and Time, are used to disclose American environmentalism as a tradition
calling for a temporal modification of everyday life through engaged contact
with the wild. The essays of conservationist Aldo Leopold, forerunner of contemporary
environmental ethics, are chosen as representative of a tradition that includes
Emerson, Thoreau, and Muir. The three main themes intrinsic to Leopold's essays--that
our historical roots in the wild yield cultural values, that the whole of nature
can be perceived as a community, and that we ought to respect and care for the
land (the famous "land ethic")--are interpreted in terms of Heidegger's concepts
of the authentic past, present, and future, respectively.
Issues of interpretation, specifically the
linguistic and metaphysical obstacles to our understanding of Heidegger and
the problem of a philosophical representation appropriate to Leopold and the
American environmental tradition in general, are a major concern of the dissertation.
These problems are unraveled by virtue of the dissertation's hermeneutical structure:
Part I presents the evolution of the three themes in Leopold's essays leading
up to their explicit formulation in A Sand County Almanac, Part II is a tripartite
analysis of Heidegger's translated works from the 1966 Der Spiegel interview
back to "The Concept of Time" guided by Leopold's themes, and Part III reinterprets
Leopold's environmental philosophy, including the land ethic, in light of the
results of Part II i.e., Heidegger's phenomenological conception of past, present,
and future. The dissertation concludes that the possibility of authentically
interpreting both Leopold and Heidegger in this circular manner is grounded
in their common heritage in German Romanticism. Principal advisors were Alasdair
MacIntyre and Gregory Cooper. Medeiros is teaching environmental ethics at Oregon
State University, Corvallis.
Duke University. Penka Dinkova Kouneva completed a Ph.D, thesis, writing a cantata for soprano and baritone soloists, mixed chorus and chamber orchestra, entitled Where Nature and Soul Meet, completed 1997. The advisor was Stephen Jaffe. The cantata addresses the relationship between humans and nature. The subject was prompted by two concerns: first, that an attitude of condescension, exploitation and senseless destruction of nature will deepen the present ecological crisis; second, that dualisms such as nature/culture, emotion/reason, matter/spirit, body/soul, historically formative in much of Western culture, result in alienation and division, and in turn, reinforce such an attitude. The underlying poetic premise of the cantata is that the human soul can be fully realized only through a new environmental ethics based on integration and partnership with nature. The cantata is an attempt to critique, through music and poetic texts, an alienated world view, and to celebrate in song a new environmental ethic.
University of Western Ontario. Kevin de Laplante completed a Ph.D thesis, Toward a General Philosophy of Ecology, 1998. Department of Philosophy. Examines the role that ecological concepts and theories play in environmental philosophy and defends a conception of ecological science that is broad enough to address the philosophical and scientific concerns of environmental philosophers. These aims are consistent with the dominant tradition in contemporary environmental philosophy, but the argument is highly critical of the way the ecology-environmental philosophy relationship is conceived in contemporary environmental philosophy. Rather than view ecology as a conceptual and scientific resource that is relevant to environmental philosophy only insofar as it provides support for the ethical, social and political aims of environmentalism, deLaplante argues that the core problems of environmental philosophy are essentially problems for a general science and philosophy of ecology. The thesis defends the robustness of a conception of ecology that is sufficiently broad to encompass "ecological psychology", "ecological economics", and "ecological anthropology", as well as traditional ecological science.University of Texas-Austin. Cynthia Ann Botteron completed a Ph.D. thesis in political science, What the Study of Tiger Preservation in India Reveals about Science, Advocacy, and Policy Change, 2000. Investigates the legitimacy of the claim that imperialism was the motive and mode of transferring from one cultural context to another the "wilderness" version of "national parks" as a means of saving species and habitat, specifically with reference to tigers in India. The vast and powerful role played by the coalition of conservation scientists and international environmental organizations in creating and promoting this "ethic" is analyzed as is the impact on the development of science by its close association with environmental advocacy organizations. This "constructed" science was used to delegitimize alternative interpretations of the problem of species decline, habitat degradation, and the role and function of humans in the environment. The advisor was David Braybrooke. Botteron taught political science at Colorado State University, and is now teaching political science at Shippensburg University of Pennsylvania, Shippensburg, PA.
Michigan State University. Adeyinka Christopher Thompson completed a Ph.D. thesis, Ethics in International Politics? The Contradictions and Ethical Implications of Foreign Aid in Africa, 2000. Independence brought, for many African peoples, a return not only to repressive government, but also to economic decline and hardship. Some have blamed the international community--primarily the Western or developed nations. I make an ethical analysis of the relationship between African nations and the developed world--with specific reference to foreign aid. Normative questions are central to international relations; actors in international relations cannot but raise normative questions. There is an obligation for Western developed nations to assist poor under-developed Third world (in particular African) nations. A case study of aid to Somalia. Three key issues facing African nations--(1) what type of democracy is suitable; (b) corruption; and (c) compromising sovereignty by allowing intervention. This complexity reinforces the need for ethics in international politics. Without morality to evaluate our actions we will be unaware of what we are doing. The advisor was Martin Benjamin.
University of Michigan, Ann Arbor. Katie McShane completed a Ph.D. thesis, The Nature of Value: Environmentalist Challenges to Moral Theories, 2002 in the Department of Philosophy. Environmentalists have argued that contemporary ethical theories have overly strict rules about what kinds of things can be intrinsically valuable. These rules make it impossible for many of the things that environmentalists care deeply about to be considered bearers of intrinsic value--things which are not rational, sentient, or in some cases, even alive. In this dissertation I consider possible responses to this environmentalist criticism from within mainstream ethical theories. Using the value of ecosystems as a test case, I analyze what features a thing must have, and why, in order to be a (potential) possessor of intrinsic value on each of three ethical theories: wellbeing-based, Moorean, and rational attitude accounts. Ultimately, I argue that while a place can be made for the intrinsic value of ecosystems on all three theories, rational attitude accounts do the best job of accommodating environmentalist concerns without incurring other significant theoretical costs. McShane is in philosophy at North Carolina State University, but this year a visiting professor at the Center for Ethics and the Professions at the Kennedy School, Harvard University. Her committee was: Elizabeth Anderson (chair), Stephen Darwall, P. J. Ivanhoe, John Vandermeer (Biology).