GC41H-07
Coupled Ethical-Epistemic Analysis of Climate Change
Thursday, 17 December 2015: 09:30
3001 (Moscone West)
Martin Vezer, Pennsylvania State University Main Campus, University Park, PA, United States
Abstract:
Are there inherent limitations to what we can know about how the climate will change in the years ahead? How can we use what is known about the future climate in a way that promotes ethical decision-making? These questions call for urgent attention because important policy decisions need to be made in order to prepare for climate change in North America and around the world. While the science of climate change is central to this line of inquiry, the fields of epistemology, moral, political and environmental philosophy may provide insights on how these issues should be addressed. Detailing the relationship between evidential and ethical dimensions of climate change, this research aims to improve our understanding of the interconnections among several lines of inquiry and to develop solutions to problems of decision-making under conditions of scientific uncertainty.