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PHIL42130: ENVIRONMENTAL PHILOSOPHY

It is possible that changes to modules or programmes might need to be made during the academic year, in response to the impact of Covid-19 and/or any further changes in public health advice.

Type Open
Level 4
Credits 30
Availability Available in 2023/24
Module Cap None.
Location Durham
Department Philosophy

Prerequisites

  • Undergraduate training in philosophy or, at the discretion of the module leader, other relevant evidence.

Corequisites

  • None

Excluded Combinations of Modules

  • None

Aims

  • To help students to:
  • identify key philosophical questions raised by environmental issues
  • understand and critically assess the ways others have addressed those questions
  • understand and critically assess the answers others have provided
  • formulate, communicate and defend their own answers to the relevant questions

Content

  • The modules seven seminars will address some of the following questions:
  • 1. What are the proper aims of environmental philosophy?
  • 2. Do we have direct moral duties to any nonhuman sentient beings?
  • 3. Are biocentrists right to claim that we can have such duties to non-sentient organisms such as plants?
  • 4. Are we morally obliged to preserve endangered species? If so, why?
  • 5. What moral duties, if any, can we have to ecosystems and other environmental wholes? What sorts of values can such wholes have?
  • 6. What, if anything, can environmental ethicists learn from the tradition of virtue ethics?
  • 7. Is ecologism a viable political ideology?
  • 8. What philosophical issues are raised by environmental science?
  • 9. What is wilderness? What moral and political questions are raised by claims that it ought to be preserved?
  • 10. What can be said for or against the use of phenomenological approaches in environmental philosophy?
  • 11. What does it mean to say that something is natural? Is naturalness, in any of its various senses, a value-adding property?
  • 12. What epistemic and moral issues are raised by anthropogenic climate change?

Learning Outcomes

Subject-specific Knowledge:

  • By the end of the module students should be familiar with:
  • key philosophical questions raised by environmental issues
  • the ways others have addressed those questions and the answers they have provided

Subject-specific Skills:

  • By the end of the module students should be able to:
  • Identify key philosophical questions raised by environmental issues
  • Critically assess the ways others have addressed those questions and the answers they have provided
  • Formulate, communicate and defend their own answers to those questions

Key Skills:

  • By the end of the module students should be able to:
  • Clearly articulate and defend their views, both orally and on paper
  • Manage their time effectively
  • Use their own initiative to choose an essay topic
  • Exercise self-discipline, responsibility and autonomy in writing an essay

Modes of Teaching, Learning and Assessment and how these contribute to the learning outcomes of the module

  • This module will be taught in 7 two-hour seminars. In addition to this, each student will be entitled to 2 hours supervision on the topic of their summative essay. This supervision will involve discussion of the chosen essay topic, guidance on relevant literature, development of an essay plan, and feedback on essay drafts.
  • Each seminar will include a short introduction to the topic by the seminar leader, one or more student presentations, and a structured discussion guided by the seminar leader.
  • To assess the skills listed above, students will be required to write a summative essay.

Teaching Methods and Learning Hours

ActivityNumberFrequencyDurationTotalMonitored
Tutorials up to 2flexible1 hour2 
Seminars 7fortnightly2 hours14 
Preparation and Reading Time284 
Total300 

Summative Assessment

Component: Essay Component Weighting: 100%
ElementLength / DurationElement WeightingResit Opportunity
Essay5,000 words100 

Formative Assessment

An essay of 2,000 words

More information

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