Spring
2008 Speakers
THE ROLE OF IMAGINATION IN THE APPRECIATION OF NATURAL BEAUTY
AND IN CONNECTING AESTHETIC AND MORAL JUDGMENTS
Ronald Moore, Professor of Philosophy, University of Washington
Modern-day philosophic reflection on natural beauty is dominated
by three dogmas. First, that our appreciation of natural objects must
be guided by categories supplied by natural science. Second, that
aesthetic regard for nature is altogether independent of aesthetic
regard for art. And third, that imagination should play no role in
judgments of natural beauty because it is inherently unbounded and
unreliable. I believe all three dogmas are mistaken. I will argue that
proper appreciation of natural objects often requires departure from
scientific categories, that natural and artistic aesthetics can be
mutually reinforcing, and that imagination supplies important
components in appropriate appreciation of natural beauty. Moreover, I
will argue that imagination's role in natural beauty judgments provides
a key element in the process whereby we become both aesthetic and moral
adults.
*Sponsored by the Philosophy Department
*Co-Sponsored by the Environmental Studies Minor and
the Masters in Environmental Studies Programs
EFFECTING CHANGE: TOOLS FOR MOTIVATING ENVIRONMENTAL AND SOCIAL
PROGRESS
David Lansbury, Conservation Planner, SC Department of Natural
Resources
This seminar will provide students with a fundamental
understanding
of how to begin effecting positive change in their communities
and
the world as a whole. The seminar will begin with a lecture
and
short presentation designed to facilitate an open forum for
discussion among the audience and speaker. This seminar is
intended to foster advocacy and activism among the student body.
Content will focus primarily on environmental issues, but pertains to
social and humanitarian work as well.
*Sponsored by the Environmental Studies Minor
OVERSEAS OPPORTUNITIES IN
ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES
Steve Arnold, The School for Field Studies
MEASURING CLIMATE AND MANAGING
ENERGY
Professor Jeffrey Steinfeld, Department of Chemistry, Massachusetts
Institute of Technology
ONWARD THROUGH THE HAZE: DRAWING A BEAD ON GLOBAL WARMING
Professor Kirk Fuller, Earth System Science Center, University of
Alabama in
Huntsville
Haze particles typically assume the form of micrometer-sized beads
of
hygroscopic material, such as ammonium sulfate. The interaction of
sunlight and
haze is currently the greatest source of uncertainty in the forcing of
climate
change. An overview of radiative forcing will be presented, with a
focus on
scattering and absorption of light by airborne particulate matter, at
the heart
of which lies the theory of electromagnetic scattering by a sphere.
(Here,
analogies will be drawn between solutions of Maxwell's wave equation
and of
Schrödinger's equation for spherically symmetric potentials.) The
Atmospheric
Science Department at the
*Sponsored by the
*Department and co-sponsored by the Environmental
Studies Minor
OBJECTIVITY IN ENVIRONMENTAL
AESTHETICS AND PROTECTION OF THE
ENVIRONMENT
Ned Hettinger, Philosophy Department,
This talk explores the debate about objectivity and relativity in
environmental
aesthetics. It examines arguments for aesthetic relativism in
environmental appreciation, assesses their merits, and explores their
implications
for the attempt to protect the environment on aesthetic grounds
("aesthetic protectionism"). The paper also considers positions
in environmental aesthetics that provide for significant dimensions of
objectivity. My purpose in assessing the debate between
relativity and
objectivity in environmental aesthetics is to determine to what extent
this
debate matters for aesthetic protectionism. Does environmental
aesthetic
relativism really undermine the use of environmental beauty for
environmental
protection? Is the objectivity provided by the objectivists such
that it
will allow aesthetics to play a useful role in environmental
protection? I consider the suggestion that a cognitive view
of
environmental aesthetics is necessary if environmental aesthetics is to
"contribute to preserving sustainable landscapes" and criticize the
claim that the protection of nature will be better served by aesthetic
responses based on knowledge of nature, rather than ignorance about it.
*Sponsored by the College of Charleston
Philosophy Department
*Co-sponsored by the
THE HIDDEN DESTRUCTION OF THE
Dave
It's called "mountaintop removal" mining. In
Fall
2005 Speaker
APPALACHAIN TREASURES
Danny Dolinger, Appalachian Voices Project
Mountain Top Removal (MTR) coal mining involves
blasting
mountain top into rubble and dumping debris into nearby valleys and
streams. MTR destroys the rich culture and heritage of the
THE ANSWER IS BLOWING IN THE WIND:
A WIRLWIND TOUR OF WIND ENERGY
Luke McCormack, Env. Studies Minor,
Details
SEEING THE TREES: HOW THE CITIES BUILT THE FORESTS IN THE NORTHEAST
U.S
Ellen Stroud, Environmental History,
The forests of the northeastern
**Funded by
HUMAN POPULATION: GAINING PEOPLE,
LOSING GROUND
Werner Fornos, 2003 United Nations Population Laureate
Werner Fornos is president of the Population Institute, a
Washington,
DC-based nonprofit organization with members in every
**Sponsored by the
SCIENCE, POLITICS, &
BIODIVERSITY
Ron Pulliam, Regency Professor,
How much do we know about biodiversity and species extinction rates?
Is
there an extinction crisis? This talk considers the controversy that
has
surrounded the Biodiversity Bill, the National Biological Survey, and
the
Endangered Species Act. It attempts to offer a realistic assessment of
the
current situation and provide practical advice for how we might move
towards a
national consensus on biodiversity.
Pulliam was Director of the National Biological Survey during the
Clinton
Administration and Science Advisor to Interior Secretary Bruce Babbitt.
He is a
former President of Ecological Society of America and is currently on
the Board
of Directors of Defenders of Wildlife. Pulliam's research interests
focus on
understanding the factors involved in the maintenance of biological
diversity.
His teaching interests include teaching environmental literacy to
undergraduates and to the general public. For a biography see
http://www.uga.edu/columns/040698/pgone1.html
*Sponsored by the
*Co-sponsored by the College of Charleston Biology
Department and
Masters
Program in Environmental Studies
SOMETHING NEW UNDER THE SUN:
ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE AND THE
INTERNATIONAL
SYSTEM SINCE 1900
John McNeill,
Prof. John McNeill examines the relationship between the
international
system and the mammoth scale and scope of environmental change in
modern times.
The priority commanded by security, especially between 1914 and 1991,
favored
some paths and precluded others, helping to shape human attitudes and
policies
toward the natural environment. From nuclear weapons programs to
population
policies to the Green Revolution in agriculture, environmentally
important
developments bore the imprint of security considerations. Those links
remain
significant today. Professor McNeill
will also be speaking on "Environmental History as a Discipline" to
the Introduction to Environmental Studies Class. John
McNeill studied at
*Sponsored by Environmental Studies Minor
and M.A. programs, History
Department, and Office of International Education and Programs
HOW CRUCIAL IS STORY TELLING TO
ENVIRONMENTAL ETHICS?
Christopher Preston, Philosophy Department and Environmental Studies,
One of the most interesting pieces of writing in the environmental
ethics
literature is a beautiful first person narrative about scaling a rock
face
written by Karen Warren.
Christopher Preston is an environmental philosopher with expertise
in the
philosophy of science and in feminist epistemology. His recent
dissertation was
on "Epistemology and Environment: The Greening of Belief."
*Sponsored by Environmental Studies Minor
*Co-sponsored by the Philosophy and Biology
Departments, the Masters
in
Environmental Studies Program, Women's Studies Department, and