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Clare Palmer

Clare Palmer (born 1967) is a British philosopher, theologian and scholar of environmental and religious studies. She is known for her work on environmental and animal ethics. She was appointed as a professor in the Department of Philosophy at Texas A&M University in 2010. She had previously held academic appointments at the Universities of Greenwich, Stirling, and Lancaster in the United Kingdom, and Washington University in St. Louis in the United States, among others.

Clare Palmer
Born1967 (age 56–57)
NationalityBritish
Alma materUniversity of Oxford
Notable workEnvironmental Ethics and Process Thinking (1998)
Animal Ethics in Context (2010)
InstitutionsTexas A&M University
Main interests
Environmental ethics
Animal ethics

She has published three sole-authored books: Environmental Ethics (ABC-CLIO, 1997), Environmental Ethics and Process Thinking (Oxford University Press, 1998) and Animal Ethics in Context (Columbia University Press, 2010). She has also published two co-authored books and has edited (or co-edited) seven collections or anthologies. She is a former editor of the religious studies journal Worldviews: Environment, Culture, Religion, and a former president of the International Society for Environmental Ethics.

In Environmental Ethics and Process Thinking, which was based on her doctoral research, Palmer explores the possibility of a process philosophy-inspired account of environmental ethics, focussing on the work of Alfred North Whitehead and Charles Hartshorne. She ultimately concludes that a process ethic is not a desirable approach to environmental questions, in disagreement with some environmentalist thinkers. In Animal Ethics in Context, Palmer asks about responsibilities to aid animals, in contrast to the typical focus in animal ethics on not harming animals. She defends a contextual, relational ethic according to which humans will typically have duties to assist only domestic, and not wild, animals in need. However, humans will often be permitted to assist wild animals, and may be obligated to do so if there is a particular (causal) relationship between humans and the animals' plight.

Career edit

 
The Queen's College, Oxford (pictured 2012) where Palmer read for her doctorate.

Palmer read for a BA (Hons) in theology at Trinity College, Oxford, graduating in 1988, before reading for a doctorate in philosophy at the same university. From 1988 to 1991, she was based at Wolfson College, before becoming a Holwell Senior Scholar at The Queen's College.[1] In 1992, having previously published book reviews, Palmer published her first research publication,[1] "Stewardship: A Case Study in Environmental Ethics", in the edited collection The Earth Beneath: A Critical Guide to Green Theology, published by SPCK. She was also, along with Ian Ball, Margaret Goodall, and John Reader, a co-editor of the volume.[2] She graduated from Oxford in 1993 with a doctorate from The Queen's College;[3] her thesis focussed on process philosophy and environmental ethics.[4] She worked as a research fellow in philosophy at the University of Glasgow from 1992 to 1993, before becoming a lecturer in environmental studies at the University of Greenwich. She worked at Greenwich from 1993 until 1997, after which she spent a year as a research fellow at the University of Western Australia.[1] In 1997, she published her first[1] book: Environmental Ethics was published with ABC-CLIO.[5] Additionally, the first issue of Worldviews: Environment, Culture, Religion (later renamed Worldviews: Global Religions, Culture, and Ecology), a peer reviewed academic journal in religious studies, was published. Palmer was the founding editor,[6] and she remained editor until 2007.[1]

Palmer returned to working in the UK in 1998, becoming a lecturer in religious studies at the University of Stirling.[1] That same year, she published Environmental Ethics and Process Thinking with the Clarendon Press imprint of Oxford University Press.[7] This was based ultimately on her doctoral dissertation.[4] The book was reviewed by William J. Garland in Ethics,[8] Richard J. Matthew in Environment,[9] and Stephen R. L. Clark in Studies in Christian Ethics,[10] Timothy Sprigge in Environmental Ethics,[11] and Randall C. Morris in The Journal of Theological Studies.[4] It was also the subject of a "forum" in the journal Process Studies. Introduced by David Ray Griffin, the forum's editor,[12] it featured a "Palmer on Whithead: A Critical Evaluation" by John B. Cobb[13] and "Clare Palmer's Environmental Ethics and Process Thinking: A Hartshornean Response" by Timothy Menta,[14] as well as a reply by Palmer herself.[15] The next year, Cobb published "Another Response to Clare Palmer" in the same journal.[16]

Palmer remained at Stirling for several years before taking up the post of senior lecturer in philosophy at Lancaster University in 2001. While at Lancaster, she became the vice-president of the International Society for Environmental Ethics (ISEE). In 2005, she moved to Washington University in St. Louis, where she took up the role of associate professor, jointly appointed in departments of philosophy and environmental studies.[1] The same year, the five-volume encyclopaedia Environmental Ethics, co-edited by Palmer and J. Baird Callicott, was published by Routledge,[17] and, in the subsequent year, she was part of "The Animal Studies Group" which published the collection Killing Animals with the University of Illinois Press.[18] While at Washington, she was also the editor of both Teaching Environmental Ethics (Brill, 2007)[19] and Animal Rights (Ashgate Publishing, 2008).[20] In 2007, she was elected president of the ISEE, a position she held until 2010.[1]

In 2010, Palmer was appointed professor in the Department of Philosophy at Texas A&M University.[1] The same year saw the publication of her Animal Ethics in Context with Columbia University Press.[21] Among reviews of this book were pieces by Bernard Rollin in Anthrozoös,[22] Jason Zinser in The Quarterly Review of Biology,[23] J. M. Dieterle in Environmental Ethics,[24] Scott D. Wilson in Ethics[25] and Daniel A. Dombrowski in the Journal of Animal Ethics.[26] She has subsequently published papers on the theme of assisting animals in the wild—ideas discussed in her Animal Ethics in Context[27]—in animal-focussed journals,[28][29] prompting commentary from Joel MacClellan,[30] Gordon Burghart,[31] and Catia Faria.[32]

While at Texas A&M, Palmer co-edited the 2011 Veterinary Science: Humans, Animals and Health with Erica Fudge[33] and the 2014 Linking Ecology and Ethics for a Changing World: Values, Philosophy, and Action with Calliott, Ricardo Rozzi, Steward Pickett, and Juan Armesto.[34] In 2015, Wiley-Blackwell published Palmer's Companion Animal Ethics, co-authored with Peter Sandøe and Sandra Corr,[35] and, in 2023, Wiley published her Wildlife Ethics: The Ethics of Wildlife Management and Conservation, which was co-authored with Bob Fischer, Christian Gamborg, Jordan Hampton, and Sandøe.

Thought edit

Environmental ethics edit

 
The process philosopher John B. Cobb (pictured, 2013) challenges Palmer's interpretation of Alfred North Whitehead's philosophy.

In Environmental Ethics and Process Thinking, Palmer examines whether process philosophy, in particular the philosophies of Alfred North Whitehead and Charles Hartshorne, can provide an appropriate background for engaging in environmental ethics.[8] Process thought, Clark notes, has frequently appealed more to theologically inclined environmental ethicists than classical theism; in particular, the views of Hartshorne and Cobb have been influential.[10]

Palmer first sets forth a process ethic. The ethic she presents is similar to John Stuart Mill's utilitarianism, but while Mill's approach locates value in pleasure, Palmer's process ethic locates value in "richness" of experience. She then compares this ethic to several dominant schools in environmental ethics: "individualist consequentialism" (as championed by Peter Singer, Donald VanDeVeer and Robin Attfield), "individualist deontological environmental ethics" (including the diverse positions presented by Albert Schweitzer, Kenneth Goodpastor, Tom Regan and Paul W. Taylor), "collectivist environmental ethics" (including those thinkers who advocate doing what is best for nature as a whole, such as Aldo Leopold and Callicott in his earlier work) and deep ecology.[8]

Process ethics, Palmer argues, is closer to individualist consequentialism than individualist deontological environmental ethics. In considering collectivist environmental ethics, Palmer asks how process thinkers could approach natural collectives, such as ecosystems. She argues that Whitehead could view them as single entities with a good of their own, while Hartshorne could not. The primary difference between process ethics and collectivist environmental ethics, however, is that the former has a theological basis. The advocates of deep ecology have previously sought support from the views of Whitehead; two affinities are the shared holism and a shared concern with the extension of the self, but Palmer finds that the views of Whitehead and the views of the deep ecology advocate Arne Næss differ in these areas.[8]

The book was not intended to either present or defend any particular position in environmental ethics, but rather to explore what process philosophers could say or have said about environmental issues.[15] There are, for Palmer, two key problems with a process approach to environmental ethics. The first concerns the value of human and nonhuman life; for process thinkers, the latter will always be trumped by the former in terms of value. The second concerns human perspectives; as process philosophy invariably models interpretation of all entities on human experience, it is not well-suited to characterising non-human nature. Palmer thus concludes that process philosophy does not provide a suitable basis for environmental ethics.[8]

The book was hailed as an important addition to the literature in both environmental ethics and process philosophy.[4] Garland offered two challenges to Palmer's claims. First, he challenged her linking of process ethics with individualist consequentialism, arguing that it is instead somewhere between individualist consequentialism and deep ecology. Second, he challenged Palmer's claim that process philosophers will always favour human ends over nonhuman ends.[8] Cobb and Menta, though both welcoming her consideration of process philosophy, challenged Palmer's interpretation of the philosophy of Whitehead and Hartshorne on a number of points.[13][14]

In addition to writing on process approaches to the environment, Palmer has contributed to Christian environmental ethics more broadly,[36][37][38] urban environmental ethics,[39][40] and scholarship on the environment in the work of English writers.[41][42] Much of her work in environmental ethics has explored questions concerning animals, including the tension between protecting individuals and protecting species.[39][40][43][44]

Animal ethics edit

 
Palmer opens her Animal Ethics in Context by comparing our intuitive response to the suffering in a case of wildebeest drowning during migration (example migration pictured) and a case of horses neglected by their human owners.[45]

Palmer does not explicitly connect Environmental Ethics and Process Thought to Animal Ethics in Context, her second monograph; the latter does, however, address environmental ethics, insofar as it offers an attempt to bridge environmental ethics and animal ethics.[26] In contrast to more typical approaches to animal ethics which focus on the ethics of harming animals, Palmer asks, in Animal Ethics in Context, about the ethics of aiding animals,[25] with a focus on the distinction between wild and domestic animals.[26] She follows mainstream animal ethics approaches in arguing that humans have a prima facie duty not to harm any animal. However, when it comes to aiding animals, she argues that human obligations differ depending on the context.[26]

Palmer begins by defending the claim that animals have moral standing, and then surveys three key approaches to animal ethics; utilitarian approaches, animal rights approaches, and capabilities approaches. All are lacking, she argues, as they are fundamentally capacity-oriented, and thus unable to properly take account of human relationships to animals. However, her approach leans more strongly towards a Regan-inspired rights view. She next identifies different kinds of relations humans may have with animals: affective, contractual and, most significantly, causal.[25]

Palmer identifies the laissez-faire intuition (LFI), which is the intuition that humans do not have an obligation to aid wild animals in need. There are three forms of the LFI:

  1. The strong LFI, according to which humans may not harm or assist wild animals.
  2. The weak LFI, according to which humans may not harm wild animals, but may assist them, despite lacking an obligation to do so.
  3. No-contact LFI, according to which humans may not harm wild animals, but may assist them, and may gain obligations to assist them if humans are responsible for the animals' plight.[25]

Ultimately, Palmer endorses the no-contact version of the LFI. She defends the distinction between doing and allowing harm, and then defends the idea that humans have different positive obligations towards domestic animals and wild animals. At the centre of Palmer's approach is the fact that humans are causally responsible for the hardship faced by some animals, but not the hardship faced by others. She then deploys this philosophy in a number of imagined cases in which humans have varying relations to particular animals in need. She closes the book by considering possible objections, including the idea that her approach would not require someone to save a drowning child at little cost to themselves.[25]

Thus, Palmer argues that humans are not normally required to aid wild animals in need.[27][29] The philosopher Joel MacClellan, a critic of intervention, challenges Palmer on three grounds: first, he says that the difference between our obligations to domestic and wild animals in Palmer's thought experiments could be justified on scientific, rather than moral, grounds; second, he challenges Palmer's characterisation of wildness as a relationship, rather than a capacity, arguing that a description of an animal as wild likely conveys that the animal has certain capacities lacked by domestic animals; and, third, he suggests that just as a utilitarian approach to wild animal suffering may demand too much, Palmer's contextual approach may permit too much, by allowing the policing of nature. The affinities between utilitarian and contextualist approaches, MacClellan argues, come from their shared idea of what is and is not valuable.[30] The pro-intervention philosopher Catia Faria criticises Palmer's argument from the other direction. Faria challenges Palmer's account by pointing to the counter-intuitive conclusions it would reach, Faria claims, in cases of assisting humans with whom an individual does not have significant relationships. Unless Palmer is willing to deny that humans have obligations to help suffering distant humans, Faria argues, the account cannot justify not aiding animals.[32]

In addition to contextual animal ethics and her exploration of animals in environmental ethics, Palmer has written on disenhanced animals (i.e., animals that have been engineered to lose certain capacities)[46][47] and companion animals.[48][49] The latter topic was the focus of her co-authored text Companion Animal Ethics,[35] which explores ethical issues concerning companion animals, including feeding, medical care, euthanasia and others.[50]

Selected bibliography edit

In addition to her books, Palmer has written or co-written over 30 articles in peer-reviewed journals and over 25 articles in scholarly collections, as well as various encyclopaedia articles and book reviews.[1] Editorial duties have included acting as an associate editor for Callicott and Robert Frodeman's two-volume encyclopaedia Environmental Philosophy and Ethics and editing the journal Worldviews. Palmer has served on the editorial boards of two Springer series (first, the International Library of Environmental, Agricultural and Food Ethics, and, second, Ecology and Ethics) and one Sydney University Press series: Animal Publics. She has served on the editorial boards of various journals, including Environmental Humanities; Ethics, Policy and Environment; Environmental Ethics; Environmental Values; the Journal of Agricultural and Environmental Ethics; and the Journal for the Study of Religion, Culture and Nature.[1]

Books edit

  • Palmer, Clare (1997). Environmental Ethics. Santa Barbara and Denver: ABC-CLIO.
  • Palmer, Clare (1998). Environmental Ethics and Process Thinking. Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press.
  • Palmer, Clare (2010). Animal Ethics In Context. New York: Columbia University Press.
  • Sandøe, Peter, Sandra Corr and Clare Plamer (2015). Companion Animal Ethics. Oxford: Wiley-Blackwell.
  • Palmer, Clare, Bob Fischer, Christian Gamborg, Jordan Hampton and Peter Sandøe (2023). Wildlife Ethics: The Ethics of Wildlife Management and Conservation. Oxford: Wiley.

Edited collections and anthologies edit

  • Ball, Ian, Margaret Goodall, Clare Palmer and John Reader, eds. (1992). The Earth Beneath. London: SPCK.
  • Callicott, J. Baird, and Clare Palmer, eds. (2005). Environmental Philosophy, Vols. 1–5. London and New York: Routledge.
  • The Animal Studies Group, ed. (2006). Killing Animals. Champaign-Urbana: Illinois University Press.
  • Palmer, Clare, ed. (2007). Teaching Environmental Ethics. Leiden: Brill.
  • Palmer, Clare, ed. (2008). Animal Rights. Farnham: Ashgate.
  • Fudge, Erica, and Clare Palmer, eds. (2014). Veterinary Science: Humans, Animals and Health. London: Open Humanities Press.
  • Rozzi, Ricardo, Steward Pickett, Clare Palmer, Juan Armesto and J. Baird Callicott, eds. (2014). Linking Ecology and Ethics for a Changing World: Values, Philosophy, and Action. Dordrecht: Springer.

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Palmer, Clare (October 2015). (PDF). Texas A&M University. Archived from the original (PDF) on 19 December 2015. Retrieved 12 August 2016.
  2. ^ Ball, Ian, Margaret Goodall, Clare Palmer and John Reader, eds. (1992). The Earth Beneath. London: SPCK.
  3. ^ "Clare Palmer; Professor 2 April 2016 at the Wayback Machine. Texas A&M University. Retrieved 10 September 2016.
  4. ^ a b c d Morris, Randall C. (2001). "Environmental Ethics and Process Thinking" The Journal of Theological Studies 52 (1): 499–501. doi:10.1093/jts/52.1.499.
  5. ^ Palmer, Clare (1997). Environmental Ethics. Santa Barbara and Denver: ABC-CLIO.
  6. ^ Palmer, Clare (1997). "Editorial". Worldviews: Environment, Culture, Religion 1 (1): 1–2. doi:10.1163/156853597X00173
  7. ^ Palmer, Clare (1998). Environmental Ethics and Process Thinking. Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press.
  8. ^ a b c d e f Garland, William J. (2000). "Clare Palmer, Environmental Ethics and Process Thinking" Ethics 110 (4): 859–861. doi:10.1086/233388.
  9. ^ Matthew, Richard A. (1999). "Environmental Ethics and Process Thinking". Environment 41 (7): 30.
  10. ^ a b Clark, Stephen R. L. (1999). "Book review: Environmental Ethics and Process Thinking, by Clare Palmer". Studies in Christian Ethics 12 (2): 89–91. doi:10.1177/095394689901200209
  11. ^ Sprigge, T. L. S. (2000). "Environmental Ethics and Process Thinking". Environmental Ethics 22 (2): 191. doi:10.5840/enviroethics200022235.
  12. ^ Griffin, David R. (2004). "Forum Introduction". Process Studies 33 1: 3. doi:10.5840/process200433122
  13. ^ a b Cobb, John B. (2004). "Palmer on Whithead: A Critical Evaluation". Process Studies 33 1: 4–23. doi:10.5840/process200433123
  14. ^ a b Menta, Timothy (2004). "Clare Palmer's Environmental Ethics and Process Thinking: A Hartshornean Response". Process Studies 33 1: 24–45. doi:10.5840/process200433124
  15. ^ a b Palmer, Clare (2004). "Response to Cobb and Menta". Process Studies 33 1: 46–70. doi:10.5840/process200433125
  16. ^ Cobb, John B. (2005). "Another Response to Clare Palmer". Process Studies 34 1: 132–5. doi:10.5840/process200534127
  17. ^ Callicott, J. Baird, and Clare Palmer, eds. (2005). Environmental Philosophy, Vols. 1–5. London and New York: Routledge.
  18. ^ The Animal Studies Group, ed. (2006). Killing Animals. Champaign-Urbana: Illinois University Press.
  19. ^ Palmer, Clare, ed. (2007). Teaching Environmental Ethics. Leiden: Brill.
  20. ^ Palmer, Clare, ed. (2008). Animal Rights. Farnham: Ashgate.
  21. ^ Palmer, Clare (2010). Animal Ethics in Context. New York: Columbia University Press.
  22. ^ Rollin, Bernard (2012). "Book review: Animal Ethics in Context Clare Palmer". Anthrozoös 25 (2): 250–1. doi:10.2752/175303712X13316289505666.
  23. ^ Zinser, Jason (2012). "Animal Ethics in Context by Clare Palmer". The Quarterly Review of Biology 87 (3): 246–7. doi:10.1086/666786.
  24. ^ Dieterle, J. M. (2011). "Animal Ethics in Context". Environmental Ethics 33 (2): 223–4. doi:10.5840/enviroethics201133223.
  25. ^ a b c d e Wilson, Scott D. (2011). "Animal Ethics in Context by Palmer, Claire". Ethics 121 (4): 824–8. doi:10.1086/660788.
  26. ^ a b c d Dombrowski, Daniel A. (2012). "Animal Ethics in Context by Clare Palmer". Journal of Animal Ethics 2 (1): 113–5. doi:10.5406/janimalethics.2.1.0113.
  27. ^ a b Dorado, Daniel (2015). "Ethical Interventions in the Wild. An Annotated Bibliography". Relations. Beyond Anthropocentrism 3 (2): 219–38. doi:10.7358/rela-2015-002-dora.  
  28. ^ Palmer, Clare (2013). "What (If Anything) Do We Owe Wild Animals?" Between the Species 16 (1): 15–38. doi:10.15368/bts.2013v16n1.4.  
  29. ^ a b Palmer, Clare (2015). "Against the View That We Are Normally Required to Assist Wild Animals". Relations. Beyond Anthropocentrism 3 (2): 203–10. doi:10.7358/rela-2015-002-palm.  
  30. ^ a b MacClellan, Joel (2013). "What the Wild Things Are: A Critique on Clare Palmer's 'What (If Anything) Do We Owe Animals?'" Between the Species 16 (1): 53–67. doi:10.15368/bts.2013v16n1.1.  
  31. ^ Burghart, Gordon (2013). "Beyond Suffering – Commentary on Clare Palmer". Between the Species 16 (1): 39–52. doi:10.15368/bts.2013v16n1.6.  
  32. ^ a b Faria, Catia (2015). "Disentangling Obligations of Assistance. A Reply to Clare Palmer's 'Against the View That We Are Usually Required to Assist Wild Animals'". Relations. Beyond Anthropocentrism 3 (2): 211–18. doi:10.7358/rela-2015-002-fari.  
  33. ^ Fudge, Erica, and Clare Palmer, eds. (2014). Veterinary Science: Humans, Animals and Health. London: Open Humanities Press.
  34. ^ Rozzi, Ricardo, Steward Pickett, Clare Palmer, Juan Armesto and J. Baird Callicott, eds. (2014). Linking Ecology and Ethics for a Changing World: Values, Philosophy, and Action. Dordrecht: Springer.
  35. ^ a b Sandøe, Peter, Sandra Corr and Clare Plamer (2015). Companion Animal Ethics. Oxford: Wiley-Blackwell.
  36. ^ Palmer, Claire (1994). "A Bibliographical Essay on Environmental Ethics". Studies in Christian Ethics 7 (1): 68–97. doi:10.1177/095394689400700107.
  37. ^ Palmer, Claire (1994). "Some Problems with Sustainability". Studies in Christian Ethics 7 (1): 52–62. doi:10.1177/095394689400700105.
  38. ^ Gill, Robin (1994). "A Response to Clare Palmer". Studies in Christian Ethics 7 (1): 63–7. doi:10.1177/095394689400700106.
  39. ^ a b Palmer, Clare (2003). Placing Animals in Urban Environmental Ethics". Journal of Social Philosophy 34 (1): 64–78. doi:10.1111/1467-9833.00165.
  40. ^ a b Palmer, Clare (2003). "Animals, Colonisation and Urbanisation". Philosophy and Geography 6 (1): 47–58. doi:10.1080/1090377032000063315.
  41. ^ Palmer, Clare (2002). "Christianity, Englishness and the Southern English Countryside: A Study of the Work of H.J. Massingham". Social and Cultural Geography 3 (1): 25–38. doi:10.1080/14649360120114125.
  42. ^ Palmer, Clare, and Emily Brady (2007). "Landscape and Value in the Work of Alfred Wainwright (1907–1991)". Landscape Research 32 (4): 397–421. doi:10.1080/01426390701449778.
  43. ^ Palmer, Clare (2004). "'Respect for nature' in the Earth Charter: The value of species and the value of individuals". Ethics, Place & Environment 7 (1–2): 97–107. doi:10.1080/1366879042000264804.
  44. ^ Palmer, Clare (2009). "Harms to Species? Species, Ethics and Climate Change: The Case of the Polar Bear". Notre Dame Journal of Law, Ethics and Public Policy 23 (2): 587–603.
  45. ^ Palmer, Clare (2010). Animal Ethics in Context. New York: Columbia University Press. pp. 1–2.
  46. ^ Palmer, Clare (2011). "Animal Disenhancement and the Non-Identity Problem: A Response to Thompson". Nanoethics 5 (1): 43–8. doi:10.1007/s11569-011-0115-1.
  47. ^ Sandøe, Peter, Paul M. Hocking, Sophie Collins, Björn Forkman, Kirsty Haldane, Helle H. Kristensen and Clare Palmer (2014). "The Blind Hens' Challenge: Does it undermine the view that only welfare matters in our dealings with animals?" Environmental Values 23 (6): 727–42.
  48. ^ Palmer, Clare (2013). "Companion Cats as Co-Citizens? Comments on Sue Donaldson and Will Kymlicka's Zoopolis". Dialogue: Canadian Philosophical Review 52 (4): 759–67. doi:10.1017/S0012217313000826.
  49. ^ Palmer, Clare (2012). "Does Breeding a Bulldog Harm It? Breeding, Ethics and Harm to Animals". Animal Welfare 21: 157–66. doi:10.7120/09627286.21.2.157
  50. ^ Hiestand, Karen (2016). "Companion Animal Ethics". Veterinary Record 178 (11): 269. doi:10.1136/vr.i1425.

External links edit

  • at Texas A&M University
  • "", Environmental Humanities
  • "Clare Palmer on her book Animal Ethics in Context", Rorotoko interview

clare, palmer, born, 1967, british, philosopher, theologian, scholar, environmental, religious, studies, known, work, environmental, animal, ethics, appointed, professor, department, philosophy, texas, university, 2010, previously, held, academic, appointments. Clare Palmer born 1967 is a British philosopher theologian and scholar of environmental and religious studies She is known for her work on environmental and animal ethics She was appointed as a professor in the Department of Philosophy at Texas A amp M University in 2010 She had previously held academic appointments at the Universities of Greenwich Stirling and Lancaster in the United Kingdom and Washington University in St Louis in the United States among others Clare PalmerBorn1967 age 56 57 NationalityBritishAlma materUniversity of OxfordNotable workEnvironmental Ethics and Process Thinking 1998 Animal Ethics in Context 2010 InstitutionsTexas A amp M UniversityMain interestsEnvironmental ethicsAnimal ethicsShe has published three sole authored books Environmental Ethics ABC CLIO 1997 Environmental Ethics and Process Thinking Oxford University Press 1998 and Animal Ethics in Context Columbia University Press 2010 She has also published two co authored books and has edited or co edited seven collections or anthologies She is a former editor of the religious studies journal Worldviews Environment Culture Religion and a former president of the International Society for Environmental Ethics In Environmental Ethics and Process Thinking which was based on her doctoral research Palmer explores the possibility of a process philosophy inspired account of environmental ethics focussing on the work of Alfred North Whitehead and Charles Hartshorne She ultimately concludes that a process ethic is not a desirable approach to environmental questions in disagreement with some environmentalist thinkers In Animal Ethics in Context Palmer asks about responsibilities to aid animals in contrast to the typical focus in animal ethics on not harming animals She defends a contextual relational ethic according to which humans will typically have duties to assist only domestic and not wild animals in need However humans will often be permitted to assist wild animals and may be obligated to do so if there is a particular causal relationship between humans and the animals plight Contents 1 Career 2 Thought 2 1 Environmental ethics 2 2 Animal ethics 3 Selected bibliography 3 1 Books 3 2 Edited collections and anthologies 4 References 5 External linksCareer edit nbsp The Queen s College Oxford pictured 2012 where Palmer read for her doctorate Palmer read for a BA Hons in theology at Trinity College Oxford graduating in 1988 before reading for a doctorate in philosophy at the same university From 1988 to 1991 she was based at Wolfson College before becoming a Holwell Senior Scholar at The Queen s College 1 In 1992 having previously published book reviews Palmer published her first research publication 1 Stewardship A Case Study in Environmental Ethics in the edited collection The Earth Beneath A Critical Guide to Green Theology published by SPCK She was also along with Ian Ball Margaret Goodall and John Reader a co editor of the volume 2 She graduated from Oxford in 1993 with a doctorate from The Queen s College 3 her thesis focussed on process philosophy and environmental ethics 4 She worked as a research fellow in philosophy at the University of Glasgow from 1992 to 1993 before becoming a lecturer in environmental studies at the University of Greenwich She worked at Greenwich from 1993 until 1997 after which she spent a year as a research fellow at the University of Western Australia 1 In 1997 she published her first 1 book Environmental Ethics was published with ABC CLIO 5 Additionally the first issue of Worldviews Environment Culture Religion later renamed Worldviews Global Religions Culture and Ecology a peer reviewed academic journal in religious studies was published Palmer was the founding editor 6 and she remained editor until 2007 1 Palmer returned to working in the UK in 1998 becoming a lecturer in religious studies at the University of Stirling 1 That same year she published Environmental Ethics and Process Thinking with the Clarendon Press imprint of Oxford University Press 7 This was based ultimately on her doctoral dissertation 4 The book was reviewed by William J Garland in Ethics 8 Richard J Matthew in Environment 9 and Stephen R L Clark in Studies in Christian Ethics 10 Timothy Sprigge in Environmental Ethics 11 and Randall C Morris in The Journal of Theological Studies 4 It was also the subject of a forum in the journal Process Studies Introduced by David Ray Griffin the forum s editor 12 it featured a Palmer on Whithead A Critical Evaluation by John B Cobb 13 and Clare Palmer s Environmental Ethics and Process Thinking A Hartshornean Response by Timothy Menta 14 as well as a reply by Palmer herself 15 The next year Cobb published Another Response to Clare Palmer in the same journal 16 Palmer remained at Stirling for several years before taking up the post of senior lecturer in philosophy at Lancaster University in 2001 While at Lancaster she became the vice president of the International Society for Environmental Ethics ISEE In 2005 she moved to Washington University in St Louis where she took up the role of associate professor jointly appointed in departments of philosophy and environmental studies 1 The same year the five volume encyclopaedia Environmental Ethics co edited by Palmer and J Baird Callicott was published by Routledge 17 and in the subsequent year she was part of The Animal Studies Group which published the collection Killing Animals with the University of Illinois Press 18 While at Washington she was also the editor of both Teaching Environmental Ethics Brill 2007 19 and Animal Rights Ashgate Publishing 2008 20 In 2007 she was elected president of the ISEE a position she held until 2010 1 In 2010 Palmer was appointed professor in the Department of Philosophy at Texas A amp M University 1 The same year saw the publication of her Animal Ethics in Context with Columbia University Press 21 Among reviews of this book were pieces by Bernard Rollin in Anthrozoos 22 Jason Zinser in The Quarterly Review of Biology 23 J M Dieterle in Environmental Ethics 24 Scott D Wilson in Ethics 25 and Daniel A Dombrowski in the Journal of Animal Ethics 26 She has subsequently published papers on the theme of assisting animals in the wild ideas discussed in her Animal Ethics in Context 27 in animal focussed journals 28 29 prompting commentary from Joel MacClellan 30 Gordon Burghart 31 and Catia Faria 32 While at Texas A amp M Palmer co edited the 2011 Veterinary Science Humans Animals and Health with Erica Fudge 33 and the 2014 Linking Ecology and Ethics for a Changing World Values Philosophy and Action with Calliott Ricardo Rozzi Steward Pickett and Juan Armesto 34 In 2015 Wiley Blackwell published Palmer s Companion Animal Ethics co authored with Peter Sandoe and Sandra Corr 35 and in 2023 Wiley published her Wildlife Ethics The Ethics of Wildlife Management and Conservation which was co authored with Bob Fischer Christian Gamborg Jordan Hampton and Sandoe Thought editEnvironmental ethics edit nbsp The process philosopher John B Cobb pictured 2013 challenges Palmer s interpretation of Alfred North Whitehead s philosophy In Environmental Ethics and Process Thinking Palmer examines whether process philosophy in particular the philosophies of Alfred North Whitehead and Charles Hartshorne can provide an appropriate background for engaging in environmental ethics 8 Process thought Clark notes has frequently appealed more to theologically inclined environmental ethicists than classical theism in particular the views of Hartshorne and Cobb have been influential 10 Palmer first sets forth a process ethic The ethic she presents is similar to John Stuart Mill s utilitarianism but while Mill s approach locates value in pleasure Palmer s process ethic locates value in richness of experience She then compares this ethic to several dominant schools in environmental ethics individualist consequentialism as championed by Peter Singer Donald VanDeVeer and Robin Attfield individualist deontological environmental ethics including the diverse positions presented by Albert Schweitzer Kenneth Goodpastor Tom Regan and Paul W Taylor collectivist environmental ethics including those thinkers who advocate doing what is best for nature as a whole such as Aldo Leopold and Callicott in his earlier work and deep ecology 8 Process ethics Palmer argues is closer to individualist consequentialism than individualist deontological environmental ethics In considering collectivist environmental ethics Palmer asks how process thinkers could approach natural collectives such as ecosystems She argues that Whitehead could view them as single entities with a good of their own while Hartshorne could not The primary difference between process ethics and collectivist environmental ethics however is that the former has a theological basis The advocates of deep ecology have previously sought support from the views of Whitehead two affinities are the shared holism and a shared concern with the extension of the self but Palmer finds that the views of Whitehead and the views of the deep ecology advocate Arne Naess differ in these areas 8 The book was not intended to either present or defend any particular position in environmental ethics but rather to explore what process philosophers could say or have said about environmental issues 15 There are for Palmer two key problems with a process approach to environmental ethics The first concerns the value of human and nonhuman life for process thinkers the latter will always be trumped by the former in terms of value The second concerns human perspectives as process philosophy invariably models interpretation of all entities on human experience it is not well suited to characterising non human nature Palmer thus concludes that process philosophy does not provide a suitable basis for environmental ethics 8 The book was hailed as an important addition to the literature in both environmental ethics and process philosophy 4 Garland offered two challenges to Palmer s claims First he challenged her linking of process ethics with individualist consequentialism arguing that it is instead somewhere between individualist consequentialism and deep ecology Second he challenged Palmer s claim that process philosophers will always favour human ends over nonhuman ends 8 Cobb and Menta though both welcoming her consideration of process philosophy challenged Palmer s interpretation of the philosophy of Whitehead and Hartshorne on a number of points 13 14 In addition to writing on process approaches to the environment Palmer has contributed to Christian environmental ethics more broadly 36 37 38 urban environmental ethics 39 40 and scholarship on the environment in the work of English writers 41 42 Much of her work in environmental ethics has explored questions concerning animals including the tension between protecting individuals and protecting species 39 40 43 44 Animal ethics edit nbsp Palmer opens her Animal Ethics in Context by comparing our intuitive response to the suffering in a case of wildebeest drowning during migration example migration pictured and a case of horses neglected by their human owners 45 Palmer does not explicitly connect Environmental Ethics and Process Thought to Animal Ethics in Context her second monograph the latter does however address environmental ethics insofar as it offers an attempt to bridge environmental ethics and animal ethics 26 In contrast to more typical approaches to animal ethics which focus on the ethics of harming animals Palmer asks in Animal Ethics in Context about the ethics of aiding animals 25 with a focus on the distinction between wild and domestic animals 26 She follows mainstream animal ethics approaches in arguing that humans have a prima facie duty not to harm any animal However when it comes to aiding animals she argues that human obligations differ depending on the context 26 Palmer begins by defending the claim that animals have moral standing and then surveys three key approaches to animal ethics utilitarian approaches animal rights approaches and capabilities approaches All are lacking she argues as they are fundamentally capacity oriented and thus unable to properly take account of human relationships to animals However her approach leans more strongly towards a Regan inspired rights view She next identifies different kinds of relations humans may have with animals affective contractual and most significantly causal 25 Palmer identifies the laissez faire intuition LFI which is the intuition that humans do not have an obligation to aid wild animals in need There are three forms of the LFI The strong LFI according to which humans may not harm or assist wild animals The weak LFI according to which humans may not harm wild animals but may assist them despite lacking an obligation to do so No contact LFI according to which humans may not harm wild animals but may assist them and may gain obligations to assist them if humans are responsible for the animals plight 25 Ultimately Palmer endorses the no contact version of the LFI She defends the distinction between doing and allowing harm and then defends the idea that humans have different positive obligations towards domestic animals and wild animals At the centre of Palmer s approach is the fact that humans are causally responsible for the hardship faced by some animals but not the hardship faced by others She then deploys this philosophy in a number of imagined cases in which humans have varying relations to particular animals in need She closes the book by considering possible objections including the idea that her approach would not require someone to save a drowning child at little cost to themselves 25 Thus Palmer argues that humans are not normally required to aid wild animals in need 27 29 The philosopher Joel MacClellan a critic of intervention challenges Palmer on three grounds first he says that the difference between our obligations to domestic and wild animals in Palmer s thought experiments could be justified on scientific rather than moral grounds second he challenges Palmer s characterisation of wildness as a relationship rather than a capacity arguing that a description of an animal as wild likely conveys that the animal has certain capacities lacked by domestic animals and third he suggests that just as a utilitarian approach to wild animal suffering may demand too much Palmer s contextual approach may permit too much by allowing the policing of nature The affinities between utilitarian and contextualist approaches MacClellan argues come from their shared idea of what is and is not valuable 30 The pro intervention philosopher Catia Faria criticises Palmer s argument from the other direction Faria challenges Palmer s account by pointing to the counter intuitive conclusions it would reach Faria claims in cases of assisting humans with whom an individual does not have significant relationships Unless Palmer is willing to deny that humans have obligations to help suffering distant humans Faria argues the account cannot justify not aiding animals 32 In addition to contextual animal ethics and her exploration of animals in environmental ethics Palmer has written on disenhanced animals i e animals that have been engineered to lose certain capacities 46 47 and companion animals 48 49 The latter topic was the focus of her co authored text Companion Animal Ethics 35 which explores ethical issues concerning companion animals including feeding medical care euthanasia and others 50 Selected bibliography editIn addition to her books Palmer has written or co written over 30 articles in peer reviewed journals and over 25 articles in scholarly collections as well as various encyclopaedia articles and book reviews 1 Editorial duties have included acting as an associate editor for Callicott and Robert Frodeman s two volume encyclopaedia Environmental Philosophy and Ethics and editing the journal Worldviews Palmer has served on the editorial boards of two Springer series first the International Library of Environmental Agricultural and Food Ethics and second Ecology and Ethics and one Sydney University Press series Animal Publics She has served on the editorial boards of various journals including Environmental Humanities Ethics Policy and Environment Environmental Ethics Environmental Values the Journal of Agricultural and Environmental Ethics and the Journal for the Study of Religion Culture and Nature 1 Books edit Palmer Clare 1997 Environmental Ethics Santa Barbara and Denver ABC CLIO Palmer Clare 1998 Environmental Ethics and Process Thinking Oxford and New York Oxford University Press Palmer Clare 2010 Animal Ethics In Context New York Columbia University Press Sandoe Peter Sandra Corr and Clare Plamer 2015 Companion Animal Ethics Oxford Wiley Blackwell Palmer Clare Bob Fischer Christian Gamborg Jordan Hampton and Peter Sandoe 2023 Wildlife Ethics The Ethics of Wildlife Management and Conservation Oxford Wiley Edited collections and anthologies edit Ball Ian Margaret Goodall Clare Palmer and John Reader eds 1992 The Earth Beneath London SPCK Callicott J Baird and Clare Palmer eds 2005 Environmental Philosophy Vols 1 5 London and New York Routledge The Animal Studies Group ed 2006 Killing Animals Champaign Urbana Illinois University Press Palmer Clare ed 2007 Teaching Environmental Ethics Leiden Brill Palmer Clare ed 2008 Animal Rights Farnham Ashgate Fudge Erica and Clare Palmer eds 2014 Veterinary Science Humans Animals and Health London Open Humanities Press Rozzi Ricardo Steward Pickett Clare Palmer Juan Armesto and J Baird Callicott eds 2014 Linking Ecology and Ethics for a Changing World Values Philosophy and Action Dordrecht Springer References edit a b c d e f g h i j k Palmer Clare October 2015 CV PDF Texas A amp M University Archived from the original PDF on 19 December 2015 Retrieved 12 August 2016 Ball Ian Margaret Goodall Clare Palmer and John Reader eds 1992 The Earth Beneath London SPCK Clare Palmer Professor Archived 2 April 2016 at the Wayback Machine Texas A amp M University Retrieved 10 September 2016 a b c d Morris Randall C 2001 Environmental Ethics and Process Thinking The Journal of Theological Studies 52 1 499 501 doi 10 1093 jts 52 1 499 Palmer Clare 1997 Environmental Ethics Santa Barbara and Denver ABC CLIO Palmer Clare 1997 Editorial Worldviews Environment Culture Religion 1 1 1 2 doi 10 1163 156853597X00173 Palmer Clare 1998 Environmental Ethics and Process Thinking Oxford and New York Oxford University Press a b c d e f Garland William J 2000 Clare Palmer Environmental Ethics and Process Thinking Ethics 110 4 859 861 doi 10 1086 233388 Matthew Richard A 1999 Environmental Ethics and Process Thinking Environment 41 7 30 a b Clark Stephen R L 1999 Book review Environmental Ethics and Process Thinking by Clare Palmer Studies in Christian Ethics 12 2 89 91 doi 10 1177 095394689901200209 Sprigge T L S 2000 Environmental Ethics and Process Thinking Environmental Ethics 22 2 191 doi 10 5840 enviroethics200022235 Griffin David R 2004 Forum Introduction Process Studies 33 1 3 doi 10 5840 process200433122 a b Cobb John B 2004 Palmer on Whithead A Critical Evaluation Process Studies 33 1 4 23 doi 10 5840 process200433123 a b Menta Timothy 2004 Clare Palmer s Environmental Ethics and Process Thinking A Hartshornean Response Process Studies 33 1 24 45 doi 10 5840 process200433124 a b Palmer Clare 2004 Response to Cobb and Menta Process Studies 33 1 46 70 doi 10 5840 process200433125 Cobb John B 2005 Another Response to Clare Palmer Process Studies 34 1 132 5 doi 10 5840 process200534127 Callicott J Baird and Clare Palmer eds 2005 Environmental Philosophy Vols 1 5 London and New York Routledge The Animal Studies Group ed 2006 Killing Animals Champaign Urbana Illinois University Press Palmer Clare ed 2007 Teaching Environmental Ethics Leiden Brill Palmer Clare ed 2008 Animal Rights Farnham Ashgate Palmer Clare 2010 Animal Ethics in Context New York Columbia University Press Rollin Bernard 2012 Book review Animal Ethics in Context Clare Palmer Anthrozoos 25 2 250 1 doi 10 2752 175303712X13316289505666 Zinser Jason 2012 Animal Ethics in Context by Clare Palmer The Quarterly Review of Biology 87 3 246 7 doi 10 1086 666786 Dieterle J M 2011 Animal Ethics in Context Environmental Ethics 33 2 223 4 doi 10 5840 enviroethics201133223 a b c d e Wilson Scott D 2011 Animal Ethics in Context by Palmer Claire Ethics 121 4 824 8 doi 10 1086 660788 a b c d Dombrowski Daniel A 2012 Animal Ethics in Context by Clare Palmer Journal of Animal Ethics 2 1 113 5 doi 10 5406 janimalethics 2 1 0113 a b Dorado Daniel 2015 Ethical Interventions in the Wild An Annotated Bibliography Relations Beyond Anthropocentrism 3 2 219 38 doi 10 7358 rela 2015 002 dora nbsp Palmer Clare 2013 What If Anything Do We Owe Wild Animals Between the Species 16 1 15 38 doi 10 15368 bts 2013v16n1 4 nbsp a b Palmer Clare 2015 Against the View That We Are Normally Required to Assist Wild Animals Relations Beyond Anthropocentrism 3 2 203 10 doi 10 7358 rela 2015 002 palm nbsp a b MacClellan Joel 2013 What the Wild Things Are A Critique on Clare Palmer s What If Anything Do We Owe Animals Between the Species 16 1 53 67 doi 10 15368 bts 2013v16n1 1 nbsp Burghart Gordon 2013 Beyond Suffering Commentary on Clare Palmer Between the Species 16 1 39 52 doi 10 15368 bts 2013v16n1 6 nbsp a b Faria Catia 2015 Disentangling Obligations of Assistance A Reply to Clare Palmer s Against the View That We Are Usually Required to Assist Wild Animals Relations Beyond Anthropocentrism 3 2 211 18 doi 10 7358 rela 2015 002 fari nbsp Fudge Erica and Clare Palmer eds 2014 Veterinary Science Humans Animals and Health London Open Humanities Press Rozzi Ricardo Steward Pickett Clare Palmer Juan Armesto and J Baird Callicott eds 2014 Linking Ecology and Ethics for a Changing World Values Philosophy and Action Dordrecht Springer a b Sandoe Peter Sandra Corr and Clare Plamer 2015 Companion Animal Ethics Oxford Wiley Blackwell Palmer Claire 1994 A Bibliographical Essay on Environmental Ethics Studies in Christian Ethics 7 1 68 97 doi 10 1177 095394689400700107 Palmer Claire 1994 Some Problems with Sustainability Studies in Christian Ethics 7 1 52 62 doi 10 1177 095394689400700105 Gill Robin 1994 A Response to Clare Palmer Studies in Christian Ethics 7 1 63 7 doi 10 1177 095394689400700106 a b Palmer Clare 2003 Placing Animals in Urban Environmental Ethics Journal of Social Philosophy 34 1 64 78 doi 10 1111 1467 9833 00165 a b Palmer Clare 2003 Animals Colonisation and Urbanisation Philosophy and Geography 6 1 47 58 doi 10 1080 1090377032000063315 Palmer Clare 2002 Christianity Englishness and the Southern English Countryside A Study of the Work of H J Massingham Social and Cultural Geography 3 1 25 38 doi 10 1080 14649360120114125 Palmer Clare and Emily Brady 2007 Landscape and Value in the Work of Alfred Wainwright 1907 1991 Landscape Research 32 4 397 421 doi 10 1080 01426390701449778 Palmer Clare 2004 Respect for nature in the Earth Charter The value of species and the value of individuals Ethics Place amp Environment 7 1 2 97 107 doi 10 1080 1366879042000264804 Palmer Clare 2009 Harms to Species Species Ethics and Climate Change The Case of the Polar Bear Notre Dame Journal of Law Ethics and Public Policy 23 2 587 603 Palmer Clare 2010 Animal Ethics in Context New York Columbia University Press pp 1 2 Palmer Clare 2011 Animal Disenhancement and the Non Identity Problem A Response to Thompson Nanoethics 5 1 43 8 doi 10 1007 s11569 011 0115 1 Sandoe Peter Paul M Hocking Sophie Collins Bjorn Forkman Kirsty Haldane Helle H Kristensen and Clare Palmer 2014 The Blind Hens Challenge Does it undermine the view that only welfare matters in our dealings with animals Environmental Values 23 6 727 42 Palmer Clare 2013 Companion Cats as Co Citizens Comments on Sue Donaldson and Will Kymlicka s Zoopolis Dialogue Canadian Philosophical Review 52 4 759 67 doi 10 1017 S0012217313000826 Palmer Clare 2012 Does Breeding a Bulldog Harm It Breeding Ethics and Harm to Animals Animal Welfare 21 157 66 doi 10 7120 09627286 21 2 157 Hiestand Karen 2016 Companion Animal Ethics Veterinary Record 178 11 269 doi 10 1136 vr i1425 External links editClare Palmer at Texas A amp M University Editorial Profile Clare Palmer Environmental Humanities Clare Palmer on her book Animal Ethics in Context Rorotoko interview Portals nbsp United Kingdom nbsp Biography nbsp Christianity nbsp Theology Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Clare Palmer amp oldid 1188129588, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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