Answered on : 2024-01-24
1. **Intrinsic Value Recognition:** Environmental ethics emphasizes recognizing the intrinsic value of nature, beyond its instrumental value, fostering better relationships with the environment [1].
2. **Interconnectedness:** Ethical principles highlight the interconnected nature of human beings and the environment [2]. This interconnected worldview involves understanding the delicate balance and reciprocal contributions between people and nature [5][8].
3. **Reciprocity and Sustainability:** The ancestral principle of reciprocity between people and nature is crucial, emphasizing give-and-take relationships for sustainability [5][9].
4. **Justice, Solidarity, and Participation:** Basic pairs of principles include justice and sustainability, sufficiency and compassion, solidarity and participation [3].
5. **Climate Change Ethics:** Principles for climate change ethics encompass the interdependence of biological and cultural diversity [7].
These principles collectively form a framework for ethical human-nature relationships, promoting sustainability and acknowledging the intricate web of interconnectedness [10][13].
*References:*
- [1] Environmental Ethics - Types, Importance, Examples
- [2] Environmental Ethics
- [3] A Short Course in Environmental Ethics: Lesson Three
- [5] Reciprocal Contributions between People and Nature
- [7] Ethical principles for climate change: adaptation and
- [8] Ecosystems: The interconnectedness of all living things
- [9] The Delicate Balance of Interdependence: A Reflection on
- [10] 'Societal Relationships with Nature': A framework for
- [13] The Land Ethic | Finding Community with Earth