Hourdequin / Shahar | What Should Individuals Do about Climate Change? | Buch | 978-0-367-70455-1 | sack.de

Buch, Englisch, 222 Seiten, Format (B × H): 145 mm x 222 mm, Gewicht: 416 g

Reihe: Little Debates about Big Questions

Hourdequin / Shahar

What Should Individuals Do about Climate Change?

A Debate
1. Auflage 2025
ISBN: 978-0-367-70455-1
Verlag: Routledge

A Debate

Buch, Englisch, 222 Seiten, Format (B × H): 145 mm x 222 mm, Gewicht: 416 g

Reihe: Little Debates about Big Questions

ISBN: 978-0-367-70455-1
Verlag: Routledge


Climate change is a pressing problem. Does each of us have a moral responsibility to help tackle it? In this volume, Marion Hourdequin and Dan Shahar debate the timely issue of individual behavior and climate change, examining what it takes to live morally in a warming world.

Hourdequin argues there are important reasons for people to translate their concerns about climate change into actions in their personal lives. This includes attending to the many ways a single individual can help catalyze systemic change through choices about voting and political participation, food and clothing, energy use, travel, and so on. Shahar disagrees because he endorses moral specialization and division of labor in a world filled with many problems. He argues we should not expect everyone to take action on every serious issue: rather, it is acceptable and even desirable for people to focus on certain issues and decline to act on others – including climate change. The two authors take turns responding to each other and then defending their ultimate conclusions. This volume is sure to draw attention to the question of “individual choice” in climate change debates and to help clarify some of the best thinking on this issue.

Key Features:

- Refocuses attention from big-picture debates over the actions of nations and corporations to more tractable questions about individual choices

- Examines whether there are good reasons to structure our daily lives to reduce our impacts on the climate

- Explores whether it would be best if individuals became “moral specialists” by focusing on a small number of problems while declining to act on many others

- Is highly accessible, with clear language and an easy-to-follow format

- Provides a glossary of key terms that are bolded in the main text

- Includes section summaries that give an overview of the main arguments and a comprehensive bibliography for further reading

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Zielgruppe


Undergraduate Advanced and Undergraduate Core

Weitere Infos & Material


Opening Statements  1. Opening Statement: Why Individual Emissions Matter - Marion Hourdequin 2. Opening Statement: Facing our Limits – Dan C. Shahar  Replies  3. Reply to Shahar: The Pervasiveness of Climate Change Provides Reasons and Opportunities to Act – Marion Hourdequin 4. Reply to Hourdequin: Defending Specialization and Division of Moral Labor – Dan C. Shahar  Concluding Statements  5. Closing Statement: Individual Actions Matter for Climate Change – Marion Hourdequin 6. Closing Statement: Embracing Diversity among Altruists – Dan C. Shahar


Marion Hourdequin is a Professor of Philosophy at Colorado College whose work focuses on environmental philosophy, climate ethics, and relational ethics. She is the author of Environmental Ethics: From Theory to Practice (2nd edition, 2024) and co-editor, with David Havlick, of Restoring Layered Landscapes (2016). She served as President of the International Society for Environmental Ethics from 2022 to 2024, and she is an Associate Editor for the journal Environmental Ethics.

Dan C. Shahar is MBA Program Director and a Teaching Assistant Professor at West Virginia University. His research explores the moral and political dimensions of humanity's relationship with the natural world. He is the author of Why It's OK to Eat Meat (Routledge, 2021), co-editor (with David Schmidtz) of Environmental Ethics: What Really Matters, What Really Works (3rd edition, 2018), and author of over a dozen journal articles and book chapters.

Allen Thompson is Associate Professor of Ethics and Environmental Philosophy at Oregon State University.



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