Abstract

A clinical ethics fit for the Anthropocene—our current geological era in which human activity is the primary determinant of environmental change—needs to incorporate environmental ethics to be fit for clinical practice. Conservationist Aldo Leopold’s essay ‘The Land Ethic’ is probably the most widely-cited source in environmental philosophy; but Leopold’s work, and environmental ethics generally, has made little impression on clinical ethics. The Land Ethic holds that “A thing is right when it tends to preserve the integrity, stability, and beauty of the biotic community. It is wrong when it tends otherwise.” I argue that a Land Ethic helps to re-frame problems in clinical ethics that more common philosophical approaches struggle to handle, and that it can be incorporated into clinical ethics without succumbing to “environmental fascism”. I motivate viewing problems in clinical ethics from the perspective of the ‘integrity of the biotic community’, then illustrate how this perspective can offer guidance where more commonly-invoked theories—such as consequentialism and Kantian-inspired approaches—struggle, using antimicrobial resistance in nosocomial infection as a case study. The Land Ethic equips us to understand human values as arising within and inseparable from a social-ecological context, and by treating communities (both human and biotic) as valuable in themselves rather than just through the aggregate welfare of their individual participants, we can avoid problems with the ‘repugnant conclusion’ and utility monster that plague utilitarian accounts.

Highlights

  • A thing is right when it tends to preserve the integrity, stability, and beauty of the biotic community

  • The Land Ethic departs significantly from dominant theoretical approaches in clinical ethics by moving from an exclusive anthropocentrism focused on the individual, to a holistic, biocentric perspective

  • I seek to illustrate how some of the challenges facing clinical ethics in the Anthropocene—our current geological age defined by human influences on earth systems—necessitate this shift in perspective, using the example of efforts to combat antimicrobial resistance as a case study

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Summary

Introduction

A thing is right when it tends to preserve the integrity, stability, and beauty of the biotic community. Leopold is less trying to derive an ‘is’ from an ‘ought’ than to motivate the reader to see the world in a way that can help to reveal what ‘ought’ to be Callicott parses this in terms of Hume’s own response to the is/ought dichotomy, the Sand County Almanac serving as ‘intuition pump’ to stimulate our moral sentiments in response to the plight of other members of the land community in the same fashion as they already respond to the situation of other humans (Callicott 1989a). If we follow Leopold’s argumentative strategy, acceptance of the axioms of the Land Ethic relies in part on our coming to see the world as he does; the Sand County Almanac is as much a work of moral education as moral philosophy.2 This does not make a Land Ethic any less respectable than other widely-accepted means of resolving foundational issues in clinical ethics. I present further arguments for this perspectival shift below, but first describe in a little more detail what the Land Ethic is

What is a Land Ethic?
The community concept
The ethical sequence
The ecological conscience
Two kinds of bioethics
Anthropocentric arguments
Land Ethics and biomedical ethics
Kantian ethics
Findings
Virtue ethics
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