Abstract

The scientific community has a sustained history of issuing warnings to society’s leaders and policy-makers. In such cases, scientists take on the task of alerting those in power to issues they may not notice or not wish to see. A distinctive thing about environmental warnings authored by leading scientists is that they are addressed to “humanity.” This paper argues that attempts to “speak truth to humanity”—despite the undoubted quality of the data and analyses—face three sorts of problem. There is firstly the difficulty that humanity is not a unified entity in the way that is often assumed and that, in practice, citizens may not be in a position to act in the way that is presupposed by those who issues the warnings. Secondly, though the declaration of a climate emergency may appear to be a desirable corollary of speaking truth to humanity, there are good reasons from political science to think that such declarations will be made for messier and complex reasons. Finally, even the more technical aspects of the warning documents may contain normative or social scientific components; they are not exclusively technical. Together these points argue for the engagement of humanities and socials sciences scholars in future attempts to offer compressive, integrated warnings to humankind.

Highlights

  • The scientific community has a sustained history of issuing warnings to society’s leaders and to policy makers, whether over diseases and infections, the unintended consequences of nuclear war, inadequately controlled innovations, or environmental harms

  • A distinctive thing about the warnings issued by Kendall (1992) and by Ripple et al (2017) is that they are addressed to “humanity.” This extension of the usual recipient seems to be driven by two considerations: first, that the problem is globally urgent so that action cannot be left to governments alone, and—second—that everyone has a stake and some form of involvement in the phenomena so that each of us can become part of the solution

  • Concluding Discussion In this short paper, the key argument has been that attempts to “speak truth to humanity”—despite the undoubted quality of the analyses and the accuracy of underlying data—have faced three sorts of problem

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Summary

Edinburgh Research Explorer

Citation for published version: Yearley, S 2020, 'Political, ethical, and societal aspects of issuing warnings to humanity', Ecocene: Cappadocia Journal of Environmental Humanities, vol 1, no.

Steven Yearley
The Conception of the Audience
Full Text
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