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Going back at least to the writings of John Stuart Mill and Jean-Jacques Rousseau, people have argued for and against maintaining a state of nature. Is there an inherent virtue in leaving alone a naturally occurring condition, or does the human species thrive when we find ways to improve our circumstances? This volume probes whether "nature" and "the natural" are capable of guiding moral deliberations in policy making. Drawing on philosophy, religion, and political science, this book examines three questions central to debates over the idea of "nature" in human action. Conceptually, it asks what the term means, how it should be considered, and if it is, even in part, a social construct. From a moral perspective, the contributors question if being "natural" is itself of value or if its worth is only as a means to advance other morally acceptable ends. Politically, essays discuss whether appeals to nature can and should affect public policy and, if so, whether they are moral trump cards or should instead be fitted alongside or weighed against other concerns. Achieving consensus on these questions has proven elusive and seems unattainable.This should not, however, be an obstacle to moving the debate forward. By bringing together disparate approaches to addressing these concepts, The Ideal of Nature suggests the possibility of intermediate positions that move beyond the usual full-throated defense and blanket dismissal found in much of the debate. Scholars of bioethics, environmental philosophy, religious studies, sociology, public policy, and political theory will find much merit in this book's lively discussion.
Gregory E. Kaebnick is the editor of Hastings Center Report, a publication of The Hastings Center, and a coeditor of two books, Reprogenetics: Law, Policy, and Ethical Issues and Genetic Ties and the Family: The Impact of Paternity Testing on Parents and Children, both published by Johns Hopkins.
List of Contributors Preface Chapter 1. Disposing Nature or Disposing of It?: Reflections on the Instruction of NatureChapter 2. In Defense of Living Nature: Finding Common Ground in a Medieval TraditionChapter 3. Nature as Absence: The Logic of Nature and Culture in Social Contract TheoryChapter 4. Human Nature without TheoryChapter 5. Preserving the Distinction between Nature and ArtifactChapter 6. Why "Nature" Has No Place in Environmental PhilosophyChapter 7. The Appeal to NatureChapter 8. Thinking Like a Mountain: Nature, Wilderness, and the Virtue of HumilityChapter 9. He Did It on Hot Dogs and Beer: Natural Excellence in Human Athletic AchievementChapter 10. Sport, Simulation, and EPOChapter 11. Commonsense Morality and the Idea of Nature: What We Can Learn from Thinking about "Therapy"Chapter 12. Rawls, Sports, and Liberal LegitimacyIndex
Recommended. Choice The Ideal of Nature is a thought-provoking look at the multifaceted topics of biotechnology and the environment through an array of lenses that leave the reader feeling grounded and inspired to explore greater depths of bioethics while avoiding the pitfalls of becoming immersed in extremes. -- Linda Ocasio Metapsychology