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Some points to consider

Some points to consider. Thomas Potthast Interdepartmental Centre for Ethics in the Sciences and Humanities (IZEW) Eberhard Karls Universität Tübingen Workshop “Seeking an Agenda: Environmental and technology ethics – Relevant research themes ASFPG Hamburg, 27.-29. June 2005.

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Some points to consider

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  1. Some points to consider Thomas Potthast Interdepartmental Centre for Ethics in the Sciences and Humanities (IZEW) Eberhard Karls Universität Tübingen Workshop “Seeking an Agenda: Environmental and technology ethics – Relevant research themes ASFPG Hamburg, 27.-29. June 2005

  2. The Tübingen Program of “Ethik in den Wissenschaften” and some problems • Precautionary Science and/vs Relativism • Epistemic-Moral Hybrids • Inclusive Environmental Ethics

  3. The Tübingen Program of “Ethik in den Wissenschaften” • ‘Ethik in den Wissenschaften’ relating to Sciences and Humanities! However: Focus on biomedical and environmental sciences for contingent reasons • Discussing ethical issues of science and technology already in the process of research, not only when it comes to “application” • Discussion among scientists and ethicists on scientific and ethical and political issues of the problem(s): Interdepartmental and interdisciplinary • Ethicist are not the born experts for moral decisions

  4. The Tübingen Program of “Ethik in den Wissenschaften” and some problems • Driven by priority of sciences/ technology, not by societal problems - “GMOs are the answer but what was the question?” (Christine von Weizsäcker) • Not possible asking the tough questions: Legitimacy of whole fields of research (Agro-GM, Theology?) • Priorities: First getting the facts straight (who decides?), then doing an evaluation (by whom?) • Explication of implicit values within science and technology • Interdisciplinarity between participants and/or within one researcher? => both needed

  5. Precautionary Sciences and/vs Relativism • Precautionary Principle as ethical, political and legal principle, more than just heuristic of fear (Jonas) • Multitudes of “uncertainties”, multitude of sciences shaping background information of PP => New post-normal Expertocracy? • How to deal with it in world not only of scientific uncertainty but of plural moral norms • just returning to general prudence and thereby • loosing societal perspective of good life and justice issues?

  6. Ambivalent structure of environmental and technology ethics (and bioethics) • Combining empirical scientific and moral Aspects – as both causeandresolution/ remedy of a problem: • New and old moral questions facing new technologies/scientific practices (GMO, …) • Scientific theories as background of moral judgements and ethical theories (ecological non-equilibria; behavioural ecology; climate models, …)

  7. Epistemic-moral Hybrids Specific Conjunction of: • Scientific Concepts/Theories • Scientific Practices • Ethically normative Judgements • Ethical Implications/Norms for Action

  8. Epistemic-moral Hybrids • „Hybrid“ presupposes (analytically, ex post) separable „original” tokens • Not necessarily in the form of Is-ought or Naturalistic Fallacy • Not often in the form of hypothetical sentences: „If E and N are given, then M should be done“ as „mixed judgements” • Often only implicit and application oriented

  9. Epistemic-moral Hybrids Agenda: • Explication of the implicit • Transformation of fallacious judgements into hypothetical „If E and N are given, then M should be done“ • Analysing and critically evaluating different ethos (ethoi?) and normative powers of the context(s)

  10. Environmental Values: a conceptual mess • Inherent Value = Selbstwert = Member of moral community: => Value lies within the object (other terms: intrinsic value, Eigenwert) • Intrinsic Value = (anthroporelational Value) Eigenwert:=> externally designated (by humans) (other terms: extrinsic value, inherent value)

  11. Environmental Values: False alternatives • Either Physiocentric or • Anthropocentric Valueas a false alternative • Interaction between humans and nature as a value-generating process inclusing both (cf. Friedrich Engels: Dialectic of Nature)

  12. Environmental Ethics: Beyond Axiology • Value Theories pushing both deontological and virtue ethics approaches on the side • Deontological ethics: Precautionary principle, environmental justice issues etc. • Virtue Ethics: getting beyond only external obligations, recognizing good life and environment

  13. 2 Zur Natur der UngewissheitAllgemein • Abwesenheit der Möglichkeit „sicheren Wissens“ im Sinne eines eindeutigen Für-wahr-Haltens • Bezug auf - Vergangenes (Kausalerklärungen) - Aktuelles (Geltung und Gültigkeit) - Zukünftiges (Prognosen) • Jeder Wahrscheinlichkeitswert p < 1

  14. 2 Zur Natur der Ungewissheit Ebenen der Ungewissheit • Ontologische Ebene: Kein Prozess in der Welt ist vollständig gewiss= determiniert, Zukunft ist immer (auch) ungewiss • Epistemologische Ebene: Wissen kann – im Gegensatz zu Glaubenssätzen – prinzipiell nicht gewiss sein, Erkenntnis ist fallibel (Popper) bzw. historisch situiert (Adorno, Kuhn) • Stochastische bzw. individuelle Ebene: Selbst bei sicherem statistischem Wissen ist das Einzelereignis ungewiss, z.B. radioaktiver Zerfall

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