environmental philosophy περιβαλλοντική φιλοσοφία
ένας ιστότοπος για τη διευκόλυνση όσων ασχολούνται με την περιβαλλοντική φιλοσοφία, την περιβαλλοντική ηθική, την ηθική για τα ζώα και την πολιτική οικολογία
Πέμπτη, 17 Μαΐου 2012
Πέμπτη, 26 Απριλίου 2012
Νέο βιβλίο για την ηθική για τα ζώα-New book: Animal Ethics. Past and Present Perspectives
Animal Ethics. Past and Present Perspectives
Evangelos D. Protopapadakis (Ed.)
ISBN 978-3-8325-2999-4
298 Seiten, Erscheinungsjahr: 2012
Preis: 29.00 Eur
Stichworte/keywords: animal rights, animal liberation, animal wellfare, animal treatment, veganismPhilosophy, as Aristotle said, originates in wonder. And nonhuman animals have long been a source of wonder to humans, especially in regard to the treatment they deserve. The upshot is that Western philosophy has been concerned with the way in which we ought to treat nonhuman animals since its origins with the pre-Socratic philosophers.
Animal ethics is a highly challenging field, as well as one of the liveliest areas of debate in ethics in recent years. Not only has this area issued in a range of attention-grabbing controversies but it has also led to the exploration of novel and imaginative approaches to worn-out issues.
This book is roughly evenly divided between the presentation and discussion of a range of influential past approaches to animal ethics and an equally significant range of contemporary approaches. We need to understand the legacy of the past and the resources that it offers us while also forging new views that are appropriate to our increasingly developed understanding of the nature of nonhuman animals.
Evangelos D. Protopapadakis is Lecturer in Applied Ethics at the National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, Greece.
Contents
Mark J. Rowlands, Virtue Ethics and Animals
Stephen R. L. Clark, The Ethics of Taxonomy: A Neo-Aristotelian Synthesis
Myrto Dragona-Monachou, Is There Room for Moral Consideration of Animals in Stoic Logocentricism?
Georgios Steiris, Isidore's of Seville and Al-Farabi on Animals: Ontology and Ethics
George Arabatzis, Animal Rights in Byzantine Thought
Panagiotis Pantazakos, Plethon's Views on Animals
Gary Steiner, Descartes, Christianity, and Contemporary Speciesism
Filimon Peonidis, Kant's not so Bad Speciesism
Gary Steiner, Animal Rights and the Default of Postmodernism
Peter Singer, All Animals Are Equal
Tom Regan, Empty Cages: Animal Rights and Vivisection
Warwick Fox, Forms of Harm and Our Obligations to Humans and Other Animals
Roger Scruton, Our Love for Animals
Steven Best, Total Liberation and Moral Progress: The Struggle for Human Evolution
Gary L. Francione, The Problems of Animal Welfare and the Importance of Vegan Education
Xavier Labbée, The Legal Status of Animals in French Law: A Paradigm Case
Evangelos D. Protopapadakis, Animal Rights, or Just Human Wrongs?
http://www.logos-verlag.de/cgi-bin/engbuchmid?isbn=2999&lng=deu&id
Τετάρτη, 25 Απριλίου 2012
Συλλογή περιβαλλοντικής ηθικής
Κυκλοφορεί δωρεάν νέα συλλογή περιβαλλοντικής ηθικής
κατεβάστε το
http://www.protopapadakis.gr/Environmental%20Ethics,%20Challenges%20and%20Prospects%20for%20the%2021st%20century.pdf
κατεβάστε το
http://www.protopapadakis.gr/Environmental%20Ethics,%20Challenges%20and%20Prospects%20for%20the%2021st%20century.pdf
Τρίτη, 3 Απριλίου 2012
Animal Welfare: Ethical and Behavioural Questions
Conference at Aarhus University, Denmark
May 14th to 16th 2012
The conference aims to provide a forum for interdisciplinary discourse and information sharing between animal care staff, philosophers, animal scientists, students, and others interested in animal welfare studies.
The conference topics will be thematically wide-ranging and include a variety of species as well as several aspects of human-animal interactions such as zoos, laboratories, agriculture, wild animals and pets.
Speakers:
Professor Bernard Rollin – Colorado State University, USA
Professor Donald M. Broom – University of Cambridge, UK
DVM Aage Kristian Olsen Alstrup PhD – Aarhus University, Denmark
Dr Mickey Gjerris – University of Copenhagen, Denmark
Dr Lene Munksgaard – Aarhus University, Denmark
Dr Jes Harfeld – Aarhus University, Denmark
Dr Judith Benz-Schwarzburg – The University of Tübingen, Germany
Sabrina Brando – AnimalConcepts, The Netherlands
Conference organisers:
The conference is a collaboration between the Dutch animal welfare advisory company AnimalConcepts and the Centre for Bioethics and Nanoethics at Aarhus University, Denmark. The conference is also a partner event of Minding Animals.
http://conferences.au.dk/animalwelfare/
Δευτέρα, 26 Μαρτίου 2012
Eating Tomorrow - rethinking the world food system
1 July - 20 July 2012. Location: ETH Zurich, Switzerland.
Ideas into Action
With the summer school 2012, the ETH Zurich wants to introduce innovative and sustainable approaches to secure our global food supply and find new ways of confronting the mayor challenges associated with food security. For three weeks, the ETH Zurich will create an environment in which interdisciplinary and international teams can work together with industry partners to create solutions for concrete case studies.
Important learning goals are to:
Important learning goals are to:
- understand the global food system, the inter-linkages, complexities, key players and key challenge
- comprehend the social, political and economic aspects of the food system and the major challenges associated
- work out the major environmental drivers behind the global food challenges
- know the social and environmental challenges of food security and potential solutions to ensure it
- to understand the social and environmental impacts of our current global food system
- learn working in interdisciplinary and intercultural teams
- apply creative technologies in solution finding processes
- get hand‘s on experience by applying knowledge in real life case studies
A global Challenge
Food is one of the most basic human needs, but famine is still not a thing of the past. Having said that, we‘re also at a point were more than 1.1 billion people worldwide are overweight. Although quite different in their appearance, they are just the two sides of the same coin, a world food system out of balance. Rising food prices and subsequent riots, environmental pollution and degradation as well as climate change are other consequences. And causes at the same time.
Besides from understanding this complex and intertwined system, the greatest challenges are to make food production sustainable while controlling greenhouse gas emission, conserving dwindling water supplies and decreasing biodiversity. This will require a revolution in the social and natural sciences concerned with food production, as well as a breaking down of barriers between fields. The goal is no longer simply to maximize productivity, but to optimize across a far more complex landscape of production, environmental, and social justice outcomes.
Who Should Apply?
The ETH Sustainability Summer School 2012 will invite 30 Bachelor, Master and PhD students from a wide spread of nationalities and disciplines. The course aims to ensure a well-balanced mixture between science, technology and design. Candidates will be selected from all relevant disciplines (e.g. Agriculture, Food Science, Environmental and Engineering, Architecture, Fine Arts, Management and Social Sciences). Applicants will be evaluated on their academic strength, creativity and technical-related expertise, and their dedication to solving humanity’s grand challenges.
Outline
The participants of the summer school will be composed of 15 students from the ETH Zurich and 15 students from other academic institutions, in addition to faculty members and industry partners coming from various fields of expertise. During the first week, students will receive an introduction to all topics relevant to the world food system and its related fields. This will occur through a series of lectures and workshops conducted by both local and international experts as well as inputs speeches by and discussions with sustainability pioneers. In weeks 2 and 3, students will be split into the three thematic groups to carry out a guided case study from an industry partner, and to gain further input through lectures, workshops and excursions in one of the three topics:
- Urban Farming
- Smallholder Livelihood in Developing Countries
- Food Waste
A Strong Team
Successful projects are the result of dedicated individuals and teams. The ETH Sustainability Summer School Programme will be organised by ETH Sustainability, the central hub for coordinating sustainability activities at ETH Zurich, and the World Food Systems Competence Centre in collaboration with the Department of Environmental Systems Science, the Department Health Sciences and Technology, the Department of Architecture, Eawag, NADEL, the Club of Rome, Exploration Architecture, Federal Office for Agriculture, FiBL, Halba and Helvetas. Input and support for the formulation of individual case studies is provided by selected firms and institutes that occupy a leading role in the field of sustainable development namely the FAO, Syngenta and the Urban Farmers.
Application
The ETH Sustainability Summer School Programme is designed for 30 students from a wide range of backgrounds and fields of study. Applicants must send a one-page CV and one-page letter of motivation stating their interest in one of the aforementioned topics of Urban Farming, Smallholder Livelihood in Developing Countries, or Food Waste (admission will be for one of these three thematic case study tracks and cannot be altered once accepted).
Deadline for application: April 22, 2012
Notification of admission: April 30, 2012
Please send your complete application to mailto:%20catherine.lippuner@sl.ethz.ch
(Please resend your application if you did not receive an acknowledgement of receipt within two days).
Costs
The course fee for the three weeks is CHF500, including accommodation and board during the first week. All students are responsible to find accommodation for weeks 2 and 3 (the organisers can assist in finding suitable accommodation). Students are responsible for organising their own domestic or international travel to Zurich, Switzerland.
Animal Use in Research and the New EU Directive
Challenges and Opportunities for Animal Welfare,
Science, Ethics and Society
14th - 15th June 2012Science, Ethics and Society
Northumbria University, Newcastle-Upon-Tyne
This conference will address the ethical, legal and scientific issues raised by the new EU Directive (2010/63/EU) on the protection of animals used for scientific purposes. This new legislation, which must be implemented in the UK by 2013, has the potential to shape attitudes towards and the use of animals in research. The conference represents an important forum within which the issues raised by the Directive can be interrogated and debated.
The key objectives of the Conference are to:
- Examine the ways in which the legislation is likely to impact mechanisms to support and further impel activities regarding the use of Alternatives (reduction, refine and replacement of animals) in biomedical research and teaching;
- Promote dialogue between lawyers, ethicists, biomedical scientists, social scientists and veterinarians regarding the ethical use of animals, and the extent to which welfare can be further improved;
- Provide a platform for future collaborative and interdisciplinary research in these areas;
- Facilitate opportunities for cross-disciplinary teaching and training.
In addition, we are holding a pre-conference public event on the evening of 13 June, entitled ‘Animal Use in Research: Ethics and Public Opinion’ (led by Dr James Yeates (RSPCA)). The aim of this is to promote greater awareness of the complexity of the ethical issues surrounding the use of animals in research, and to encourage public engagement with and involvement in these matters. All conference attendees are invited to this event, which will provide opportunities for dialogue between academics and wider publics.
http://www.numyspace.co.uk/~unn_mlif1/school_of_law/animal_law/
Κυριακή, 25 Μαρτίου 2012
Η New York Times υπέρ της κρεοφαγίας
Η New York Times κάνει διαγωνισμό για τη συγγραφή σύντομου δοκιμίου υπεράσπισης της κρεοφαγικής διατροφής!
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/03/25/magazine/tell-us-why-its-ethical-to-eat-meat-a-contest.html?_r=3&hp
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/03/25/magazine/tell-us-why-its-ethical-to-eat-meat-a-contest.html?_r=3&hp
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