University Press of America
Pages: 186
Trim: 6½ x 9½
978-0-7618-6349-6 • Hardback • April 2014 • $77.00 • (£59.00)
978-0-7618-6350-2 • eBook • April 2014 • $73.00 • (£56.00)
Dieter Birnbacher is a professor of philosophy at the University of Düsseldorf, Germany; president of the Central Ethics Commission of the Bundesärztekammer (German Medical Association); and a member of Leopoldina, German National Academy of Sciences.
Preface
1. Natural and Artificial: Introductory Distinctions
1.1 Naturalness and Artificiality as Points of Orientation
1.2 Genetic and Qualitative Naturalness
1.3 Dimensions of Naturalness in a Genetic Sense
1.4 Dimensions of Naturalness in a Qualitative Sense
2. Naturalness as a Value
2.1 Has Naturalness become Discredited as a Normative Principle?
2.2 The Naturalness Bonus in Everyday Morality
2.3 Naturalness Arguments in Applied Ethics
2.4 “Natural”: Positive Connotations and their Background
2.5 The Structure of Naturalness Arguments
2.6 The Task of the Following Chapters
3. Naturalness as a Norm
3.1 Nature as a Basis for Moral Norms?
3.2 Is the Argument of “Naturalistic Fallacy” valid?
3.3 Different Approaches to Criticizing Ethical Naturalism
3.4 The Projective Character of Normative Images of Nature
3.5 Learning from Nature
3.6 Conclusions
4. Naturalness in the Ethics of Nature: What Type of Nature is Worth Protecting?
4.1 Naturalness and other Values of Nature
4.2 Can the Value of Protection be Applied to its Necessary Conditions?
4.3 Nature as an Anti-World
4.4 The Conservation of Naturalness in the Genetic Sense: Originality
4.5 Faking Nature
4.6 Naturalness in a Qualitative Sense—an Aesthetic or also an Ethical Principle?
4.7 Does the Recognition of the Value of Naturalness Demand a Non-Anthropocentric Ethic?
4.8 Conclusions
5. To What Extent should we be Allowed to Alter our Individual Natural Contingency?
5.1 The Religious and other Reasons for the Sacrosanctity of Given Nature
5.2 Natural and Artificial: Boundary Issues
5.3 Which Alterations resulting from Intervention are Ethically Problematic?
5.4 Naturalness in Dealing with Ourselves—An Independent Value?
5.5 The “Naturalization” of Human Dignity
5.6 Conclusions
6. Naturalness Arguments in Reproductive Medicine
6.1 Gradations of Artificiality
6.2 What Role do Naturalness Arguments Play in Reproductive Medicine?
6.3 Naturalness Preferences versus Naturalness Principles
6.4 Sex Selection as a Test Case of Biopolitics
6.5 Principles of Naturalness in the Debate on Reproductive Cloning
6.6 The Dignity of the Species and Naturalness
6.7 Conclusions
7. Naturalness as a Boundary to Transforming Human Nature
7.1 The Idea of a Species Ethics
7.2 What does “Human Nature” mean?
7.3 “Posthumanism”?
7.4 The Openness of Human Nature
7.5 Images of Humanity as Intrinsic Values?
7.6 Conclusions
Bibliography
Index of Names
Dieter Birnbacher's survey of arguments about the concept of "naturalness" originally appeared in Germany in 2006, and its publication, now in English, is a welcome addition to the literature.... I recommend this book to anyone working in the field of environmental philosophy.... There is much to learn from Birnbacher.
— Environmental Ethics