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The climate is changing as an unintended consequence of human
industrialization and consumerism. Recently some scientists and
engineers have suggested climate engineering-technological
solutions that would intentionally change the climate to make it
more hospitable. This approach focuses on large-scale technologies
to alleviate the worst effects of anthropogenic climate change.
This book considers the moral, philosophical, and religious
questions raised by such proposals, bringing Christian theology and
ethics into the conversation about climate engineering for the
first time. The contributors have different views on whether
climate engineering is morally acceptable and on what kinds of
climate engineering are most promising and most dangerous, but all
agree that religion has a vital role to play in the analysis and
decisions called for on this vital issue. Calming the Storm
presents diverse perspectives on some of the most vital questions
raised by climate engineering: Who has the right to make decisions
about such global technological efforts? What have we learned from
the decisions that caused the climate to change that might shed
light on efforts to reverse that change? What frameworks and
metaphors are helpful in thinking about climate engineering, and
which are counterproductive? What religious beliefs, practices, and
rituals can help people to imagine and evaluate the prospect of
engineering the climate?
Bloggers confessing that they waste food, non-governmental
organizations naming corporations selling unsustainably harvested
seafood, and veterans apologizing to Native Americans at the
Standing Rock Sioux Reservation for environmental and social
devastation caused by the United States government all signal the
existence of action-oriented guilt and identity-oriented shame
about participation in environmental degradation. Environmental
Guilt and Shame demonstrates that these moral emotions are common
among environmentally friendly segments of the United States but
have received little attention from environmental ethicists though
they can catalyze or hinder environmental action. Concern about
environmental guilt and shame among "everyday environmentalists"
reveals the practical, emotional, ethical, and existential issues
raised by environmental guilt and shame and ethical insights about
guilt, shame, responsibility, agency, and identity. A typology of
guilt and shame enables the development and evaluation of these
ethical insights. Environmental Guilt and Shame makes three major
claims: first, individuals and collectives, including the diffuse
collectives that cause climate change, can have identity, agency,
and responsibility and thus guilt and shame. Second, some agents,
including collectives, should feel guilt and/or shame for
environmental degradation if they hold environmental values and
think that their actions shape and reveal their identity. Third, a
number of conditions are required to conceptually, existentially,
and practically deal with guilt and shame's effects on agents.
These conditions can be developed and maintained through rituals.
Existing rituals need more development to fully deal with
individual and collective guilt and shame as well as the
anthropogenic environmental degradation that may spark them.
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