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The Natural and the Artefactual by Keekok Lee, Hardcover | Indigo Chapters
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The Natural and the Artefactual by Keekok Lee, Hardcover | Indigo Chapters
By Keekok Lee
Current price: $197.50


By Keekok Lee
The Natural and the Artefactual by Keekok Lee, Hardcover | Indigo Chapters
Current price: $197.50
Loading Inventory...
Size: 0.86 x 9.24 x 1.25
*Product information may vary - to confirm product availability, pricing, shipping and return information please contact Indigo
In this book, philosopher Keekok Lee challenges one of the central assumptions of contemporary environmentalism: that if we could reduce or eliminate pollution we could 'save' the planet without unduly disrupting our modern, industrialized societies. Lee argues instead that the process of modernization, with its attendant emphasis on technological innovation, has fundamentally transformed 'nature' into just another manmade 'artefact.' Ultimately, what needs to be determined is if nature has value above and beyond human considerations, whether aesthetic, spiritual, or biological. This provocative book attempts to reconfigure environmental ethics, positing the existence of two separate ontological categories-the 'natural' and the 'artefactual.' Natural entities, be they organisms or inert matter, are 'morally considerable' because they possess the ontological value of independence, whereas artefacts are created by humans expressly to serve their own interests and ends. | The Natural and the Artefactual by Keekok Lee, Hardcover | Indigo Chapters
In this book, philosopher Keekok Lee challenges one of the central assumptions of contemporary environmentalism: that if we could reduce or eliminate pollution we could 'save' the planet without unduly disrupting our modern, industrialized societies. Lee argues instead that the process of modernization, with its attendant emphasis on technological innovation, has fundamentally transformed 'nature' into just another manmade 'artefact.' Ultimately, what needs to be determined is if nature has value above and beyond human considerations, whether aesthetic, spiritual, or biological. This provocative book attempts to reconfigure environmental ethics, positing the existence of two separate ontological categories-the 'natural' and the 'artefactual.' Natural entities, be they organisms or inert matter, are 'morally considerable' because they possess the ontological value of independence, whereas artefacts are created by humans expressly to serve their own interests and ends. | The Natural and the Artefactual by Keekok Lee, Hardcover | Indigo Chapters


















