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    Environmental ethics requires attributing moral concern t... — Carmelics
    Home/Environmental Ethics
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    Challenges→Utilitarian ethics cannot straightforwardly serve as an adequate environmental ethic.

    Environmental ethics requires attributing moral concern to non-sentient natural objects and processes.

    Environmental Ethics
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    Environmental Ethics

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    Non-sentient objects such as plant species, rivers, mountains, and landscapes ha...Practices like whale-hunting or killing elephants for ivory, which cause non-hum...Utilitarian ethics attributes intrinsic value only to the experience of pleasure...Utilitarian ethics cannot straightforwardly serve as an adequate environmental e...

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    Virtue ethics need not be unavoidably anthropocentric and can support ...85%Utilitarian ethics is limited to attributing intrinsic value to pleasu...80%Utilitarian ethics cannot straightforwardly serve as an adequate envir...79%Utilitarian ethics evaluates actions based on the balance of pleasure ...77%

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    As the utilitarian focus is the balance of pleasure and pain as such, the question of to whom a pleasure or pain belongs is irrelevant to the calculation and assessment of the rightness or wrongness of actions. Hence, the eighteenth century utilitarian Jeremy Bentham (1789), and later Peter Singer (1993), have argued that the interests of all the sentient beings (i.e., beings who are capable of experiencing pleasure or pain)—including non-human ones—affected by an action should be taken equally

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