Abstract

The Scottish philosopher Alasdair MacIntyre in his groundbreaking analysis of contemporary ethics, After Virtue: A Study of Moral Theory, asserted that modernity was devoid of a unified moral system. This observation has been noted by, among others, the ecophilosopher Arran Gare as a means of dealing with approaches to contemporary crisis. By characterizing debates about the future as reflexively constructed articulations of modernity, this paper briefly considers how such a perspective is useful when attempting to communicate questions of development under contemporary conditions. Using qualitative examples from modern Sweden taken from a larger corpus of research to speculate on the potential for normative conceptual change, it uses the self-styled enlightened polity as a case study to discuss how environmental knowledge is instrumentalized in self-consciously modern contexts. MacIntyre’s insight thus provides a view into the relationship between discourse and practice which recognizes the situated nature of environmental argumentation over uniform green epistemologies.

Highlights

  • Dominic Hinde is a Lecturer in Digital Media and Communication at Queen Margaret University in Edinburgh, Scotland

  • But they tie the Anthropocene to modernity as both an intellectual and material process, and as such allow the Anthropocene and its effects to be viewed within the framework of the reflexive state of contemporary modernity outlined by Ulrich Beck, Wolfgang Bons, and Christoph Lau (2003)

  • Such a view means that the Anthropocene and its material characteristics become a reflexive lived concept and are as such integrated with wider conceptions of modernity and its effects, which is where potential solutions might be found

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Summary

Introduction

Dominic Hinde is a Lecturer in Digital Media and Communication at Queen Margaret University in Edinburgh, Scotland.

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