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| "We are asking the wrong questions" - Prof Stephen Gardiner. |
Stephen Gardiner has
argued that we are asking the wrong questions about geoengineering.
The Professor of Philosophy and Ben Rabinowitz Endowed
Professor of Human Dimensions of the Environment at the University of Washington, Seattle, says the traditional question such as “Are you for it or
agin’ it?” obscures much of what is a stake and trivialises the conversation.
Listening to the more than 45 minute lecture it was
abundantly clear that nothing is ethically clear, in any sense, about
geoengineering.
With Prof Gardiner holding the audience’s hand, we took a
journey down the slippery slope of ethics and morals that must first be addressed
when discussing, and considering, geoengineering.
Prof Gardiner spoke at an event in the Yasuko Hiraoka Myer
Room at The University of Melbourne as a guest of the Melbourne Sustainable Society Institute (MSSI) .
The topic for his lecture was: “If a Climate Emergency is
Possible, is Everything Permitted? Reflections on some ethically slippery
arguments for geoengineering”.
His book, “A perfect moral storm; the ethical tragedy of climate change” ( a favourite of MSSI deputy director, Prof John Wiseman)
provides an accessible view of Prof Gardiner’s values.

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