Al Gore on Earth Day

SourAl Gore has a short but interesting essay in The Huffington Post. He is, of course, the former Vice-President of the United States, a long-time environmental advocate, and author of the best selling climate change documentary, An Inconvenient Truth (2006).

Entitled Reflections on Earth Day, Gore credits Rachael Carsons investigations of environmental pollution for sparking the modern American environmental movement. Citing her tireless efforts to awaken our ecological consciousness, he urges us to work together for environmental protection. He is particularly focused on the power of ordinary people to improve the lives of themselves and others by taking political action. And he closes by reminding us of our responsibilities for future generations.

Gores mentioning our moral responsibility to future generations is a common enough, but I wish he had shared more on its implications for public policy. Caring about the future of our children and their children after them is a profoundly ethical concern. It demands that we see the ethical implications for tomorrow of our environmental policies today. At the same time, even more difficult questions arise when we consider our responsibilities to other animals and the environment itself.

If you have read Gores other work, such as Earth in the Balance (1992), you will discover his answer to such questions lays in eco-theology. Gore believes we are custodians of Gods earth, a complex and delicate creation that is not only instrumentally valuable as a resource for human ends, but as the direct handiwork of God, intrinsically valuable in and of itself. Gore can sound ambivalent about this at times, talking about dominion and the meaning of life being to glorify the creator. But what that means in practice, as evidenced through his lifes work, is a caring stewardship and reverence for our planet.

I do not share Gores religious beliefs. Even so, I respect the insight that emerges from them, and honour the moral sensibilities from which that insight springs. In the words of a Hebrew prophet, The fathers have eaten sour grapes, and the childrens teeth are set on edge (Ezekiel 18:2). Our actions today will have consequences for many generations to come.

Cheers

Image: Unknown.

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Relauch!

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I am very pleased to announce that Practical Ethics is being relaunched today.

I have taken something of a sabbatical from the blog over the last year. I appreciate those of you who have written me and asked when I would start writing again. It has been some time, but I hope not too long!

I used the blog for teaching purposes for some years, both at Tufts University and Williams College. When I moved to the Marsh Institute of Clark University as a research scientist, I was no longer teaching full time. This was a golden opportunity for me to reconsider the technology and content of the site. So in the late spring of 2011, I announced a hiatus in postings.

I had two goals to achieve during this hiatus. My first was to adopt a more refined design, simplified structure, unified navigation, stronger visual feel, and robust platform for interactive media. To accomplish this, I completely transitioned to a Web 2.0 platform. Practical Ethics is now fully hosted on my own server running WordPress software. The superb Brunelleschi theme by Kit MacAllister provided exactly the design elements I was looking for. The Ethos blog is now gone as a separate entity, and has become the main page of Practical Ethics. The rest of the old website has been pulled into the blog itself, while the galleries have been entirely reset and expanded.

My second goal was refocusing the blogs content. There are countless blogs of opinion, and I wanted something more educational with a critical edge. Picking up on the popularity of the policy oriented posts from the past, I decided to refocus my emphasis on ethics and public policy. Few policy blogs explicitly address the ethical meanings and implications of public policy. Even fewer use the tools of interpretive policy analysis to help tease out the moral values used to create, administer and contest public policy. Yet ethics and interpretive policy analysis are indispensable if we are to fully evaluate the policies that so greatly impact the well being of our individual and collective lives. I believe this focus will provide greater coherence to the blog, while allowing me to make connections between social and environmental ethics.

Overall, I hope you will like the changes to Practical Ethics.

Cheers, Bill

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Hiatus

Hiatus

Well, the spring semester is over, and all grades are filed. It has been a good semester. I am particularly pleased with my student’s final papers. Members of both my interpretive environmental policy course as well as the senior seminar on sustainability have turned in insightful work.

So this blog will be going on hiatus for a year. There are several projects requiring completion that will consume my attention over the next six months. After that, I have a backlog of reading to catch up on.

In my spare time, I will work on a thorough revision of the website. I’m going to begin a process of streamlining the structure and code in advance of moving to a Web 2.0 platform. I have additional thoughts on refocusing the content of the blog, but need to give that a bit of thought first. I hope that taking a bit of time out will help me see the blog and its role with fresh eyes.

I will resume posting sometime in the new year.

Cheers, Bill

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What’s It Worth? The Economic Value of College Majors

Bachelor salaries

The value of a college degree varies by major, field and highest degree earned. There is some interesting data from Georgetown University’s Center on Education and the Workforce, encapsulated in the report What’s It Worth? The Economic Value of College Majors.

Note that this data only represents the value of a bachelors degree alone. Many fields such as ethics and public policy require a masters or doctorate, which is not covered in this data. In addition, the study does not include specific data on majors in interdisciplinary fields like animal studies and environmental studies. And of course, this study says nothing about the personal and political values of less remunerative majors, quality of life, or vast differences of individual economic and social circumstances.

Use this information to help you think about, not make, your choices about a major.

You can read a short overview of the report at the The Chronicle of Higher Education, or download the full report from Georgetown.

Cheers, Bill

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Final Papers

Marking paperA gentle reminder that this is finals week. Good luck with your exams and papers!

Please remember that final papers in all my courses are due on Friday at midnight via email attachment. In the final rush to finish up, don’t forget to consult the Style Guide, and check that your citations and references are in Author-Date format. Recall too the various writing resources listed on this blog, and the library website.

Cheers, Bill

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