Holmes Rolston III 1932- / by Jack Weir 2001, 2018
Date
2018, 2001
Authors
Weir, Jack, author
Routledge, publisher
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Abstract
Holmes Rolston is widely recognized as the "father of environmental ethics" as an academic discipline. More so than any other, he has shaped the essential nature, scope and issues of the discipline. The following six principles are basic to his work: 1. The Homologous Principle: Follow Nature; 2. The Value-Capture Principle; 3. The Organic Principle: Respect for Life; 4. The Species Principle: Preserve 'Forms' of Life; 5. The Ecosystemic Principle; 6. The Three 'Environments' Principle: Urban, Rural and Wilderness (or, the Nature-Culture Principle). Rolston has been an invited speaker on all seven continents, gave the Gifford Lectures, University of Edinburgh, 1997-1998, and won the Templeton Prize, 2003, awarded to him by Prince Philip in Buckingham Palace. He does not want Anthropocene humans to live a denatured life on a denatured planet.
Description
Includes bibliographical references.
Rights Access
Subject
science
religion
Rolston, Holmes, 1932-
biography
environmental ethics
species
ecosystems
following nature
Gifford Lectures
Templeton Prize