Dear all, please be invited to the following two events:
Barbara Muraca: Why protect nature? The multiple values of human-nature
relationships and their relevance for policy
Date: January 25, 2023
Time: 20:00 – 21.30
Location: Zoom
Sign-up: eva.hijlkema(a)univie.ac.at
Barbara Muraca is a Professor of Philosophy at The University of Oregon.
Her research focuses on Environmental and Social Philosophy, Process
Philosophy, and Political Ecology. Prior to working at University of
Oregon she was Assistant Professor of Environmental and Social
Philosophy at Oregon State University and Senior Researcher (Post-Doc)
at the Center for Advanced Studies 'Post-growth Societies' at the
Institute of Sociology of the University of Jena, Germany. From 2014 to
2020 she was co-director of the International Association for
Environmental Philosophy (IAEP). Since Summer 2018 she is a Lead Author
of the IPBES assessment on multiple values of nature (Intergovernmental
Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services).
Abstract:
For decades the question about why nature should be protected has had
two different answers: because nature matters for its own sake
(intrinsic value), independent of how it affects people, or because of
the benefits people derive from interacting with nature (instrumental
value). While the first perspective rejects instrumental justifications
for conservation and considers anthropocentrism as part of the problem,
the second one highlights anthropocentric arguments and employs economic
valuation to assess the importance of ecosystems to people. But does it
have to be one or the other? Recent research suggests a third
possibility: protecting nature because of the meaningful relationships
that connect people to nature, and to each other through nature. These
so-called relational values remain anthropocentric, but are not
instrumental justifications for conservation. Since its development, the
relational value framework has proven relevant for policy and in
valuation studies across disciplines and has been adopted by the
Intergovernmental Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services
(IPBES). The lecture will present the policy relevance of this old
debate in environmental ethics and embed it into the way in which IPBES
operates at the global level.
Student Colloquium on Decision Principles in Ethics
Date: January 26, 2023
Time: 11.30 – 14.45
Location: Hörsaal 3F (NIG)
As a part of the research seminar ‘Decision Principles in Ethics’ the
students will host a colloquium on ethical decision-making and its
shortfalls in real scenarios. Please be invited to join!
Schedule:
11.30 – 12.00 Pauline de Ronde and Julia Leturio: Should medical AI
always be supervised by humans?
12.00 – 12.30 Ida Miczke and Jakob Lissy: How to choose whom to treat:
triage planning during the Covid-19 pandemic
12.30 – 13.00 Ekkehard Tenschert and Felix Servus: How to judge
someone’s estimated developmental capacities?
13.00 – 13.15 Break
13.15 – 13.45 Silvia Schori: An ethical dilemma with child labour in Senegal
13.45 – 14.15 Eduard Mastalski and Egzona Bokshi: The Covid-19 lockdown
through an ethical framework
14.15 – 14.45 Eva Hijlkema: Is there a case for favouring
evidence-backed choices over and above expected value?
--
Eva Hijlkema, BSc
Studienassistenz
Univ.-Prof. Dr. Angela Kallhoff
Universität Wien
Institut für Philosophie
Universitätsstraße 7, 1010 Wien
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