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Topic 9.2Philosophy HL32 flashcards

Philosophy and the environment

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Card 1 of 329.2.1
9.2.1
Question

Do we OWE nature anything — what's the question?

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All Flashcards in Topic 9.2

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9.2.18 cards

Card 1concept
Question

Do we OWE nature anything — what's the question?

Answer

Whether protecting nature is a real moral duty (obligation), not just a preference we choose when convenient.

Card 2concept
Question

The three pictures of our relationship to nature?

Answer

Stewardship (nature in our care), dependence (we're part of nature), domination (nature is ours to use).

Card 3definition
Question

Stewardship?

Answer

We're caretakers of nature — responsible for looking after it and handing it on in good shape.

Card 4definition
Question

Dependence?

Answer

We're part of nature, not above it — harming the web of life harms us too.

Card 5definition
Question

Domination?

Answer

Nature exists for humans, to be mastered and used; on its own it gives us little duty.

Card 6definition
Question

Anthropocentrism?

Answer

The view that only human beings matter morally — any duty about nature is really a duty to people.

Card 7example
Question

How can anthropocentrism be 'green'?

Answer

A wrecked planet is a disaster for humans, so it still fights hard to protect nature — but only for our sake.

Card 8concept
Question

The real dividing line in this micro?

Answer

Not 'do we protect nature?' but 'do we owe anything to nature ITSELF?'

9.2.28 cards

Card 9definition
Question

Instrumental (extrinsic) value?

Answer

Being valuable for what it does for us — take away the use and the value goes.

Card 10definition
Question

Intrinsic value?

Answer

Being valuable in itself, for its own sake — worth something even if no one ever uses it.

Card 11concept
Question

Deep ecology (Naess)?

Answer

The view that all living things have worth in themselves, so humans are one strand of the web, not its owner.

Card 12comparison
Question

Naess: shallow vs deep environmentalism?

Answer

Shallow = protect nature so WE stay healthy; deep = the living world matters for its own sake.

Card 13concept
Question

Naess's 'self-realisation'?

Answer

Widening your sense of self to include the living world, so protecting nature becomes self-care, not sacrifice.

Card 14concept
Question

Social ecology (Bookchin)?

Answer

The view that abuse of nature grows out of humans dominating other humans — heal unjust society and our bond with nature heals too.

Card 15comparison
Question

Deep vs social ecology?

Answer

Deep ecology: the crisis is a wrong view of value. Social ecology: the crisis is unjust human power. Both want to save the planet.

Card 16concept
Question

The fault line of this micro?

Answer

Whether nature has value IN ITSELF, or only value for us — the debate the whole topic turns on.

9.2.38 cards

Card 17concept
Question

The Tao (Lao Tzu) on nature?

Answer

There's a natural 'Way' things follow; wisdom is wu wei — working with nature's grain, not forcing it.

Card 18definition
Question

Wu wei?

Answer

'Effortless action' — acting with nature's flow like a swimmer going with the current, not thrashing against it.

Card 19definition
Question

Ahimsa (Thiruvalluvar)?

Answer

The principle of non-harm to all living things — cause no needless harm, as a daily personal discipline.

Card 20concept
Question

Nasr on the crisis?

Answer

It's really a spiritual crisis: we stripped nature of sacred meaning and made it 'mere stuff', then wrecked it.

Card 21comparison
Question

Moral status vs legal standing?

Answer

Moral status = counting morally in its own right; legal standing = the right to be defended in a court of law.

Card 22example
Question

'Rights of nature' laws?

Answer

Some legal systems give rivers/forests standing so a guardian can sue on their behalf — treating them like persons with interests, not mere property.

Card 23comparison
Question

How do harmony traditions differ from deep ecology?

Answer

Deep ecology ARGUES nature has intrinsic value; the harmony traditions ASSUME it and ask how to live well with nature.

Card 24concept
Question

The shared instinct of these traditions?

Answer

Move WITH life, harm nothing needlessly — respond to nature with harmony, not mastery.

9.2.48 cards

Card 25concept
Question

What does philosophy add that science can't?

Answer

Science gives the facts; philosophy asks why they matter and what we owe — the values underneath.

Card 26concept
Question

How does philosophy 'reframe' the crisis?

Answer

It turns 'a technical problem to fix' into a question about what matters, who counts, and what we're trying to save.

Card 27concept
Question

Why isn't 'just act on the science' enough?

Answer

Acting always hides a choice about what to save and who counts — skipping philosophy hides the values, it doesn't remove them.

Card 28concept
Question

The three limits of philosophy here?

Answer

Urgency (no time to settle deep questions), motivation (knowing right ≠ doing it), power (decisions follow power, not arguments).

Card 29concept
Question

Philosophy's role in one phrase?

Answer

Necessary but not sufficient — it aims the action and sets the destination, but can't do the acting itself.

Card 30process
Question

How does 9.2.4 tie the topic together?

Answer

Every earlier question (owe nature? · value in itself? · harmony?) was philosophy reframing the crisis into a question about what matters.

Card 31definition
Question

What is a Paper-3 'Evaluate' essay?

Answer

An HL extension [25] task: judge a claim explicitly, weighing views for and against, and tie each step back to the claim.

Card 32process
Question

The top-band move on 'can philosophy help?'

Answer

Hold BOTH halves at once — value AND urgency — instead of picking 'philosophy saves us' or 'philosophy is useless'.

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IB Philosophy HL Topic 9.2 Flashcards | Philosophy and the environment | Aimnova | Aimnova