Causal History, Environmental Art, and Biotechnologically Assisted Restoration
Derek Turner
Abstract
Eric Katz’s insight about the relationship between causal history and value only generates a principled critique of de-extinction when conjoined with the diminishment claim, or the claim that human involvement in something’s causal history diminishes its value. The diminishment claim is a form of negative anthropocentrism. In addition to thinking about de-extinction as a form of ecological restoration, we could think of it as a form of environmental artwork. This reframing highlights the implausibility of the diminishment claim.
Topics & Concepts
AnthropocentrismCognitive reframingValue (mathematics)EpistemologyExtinction (optical mineralogy)PhilosophyEnvironmental ethicsPsychologyAestheticsSocial psychologyComputer scienceBiologyMachine learningPaleontologyEnvironmental Philosophy and EthicsGeographies of human-animal interactionsReligion, Ecology, and Ethics