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" The Ethics of Wicked Problems "
Whitney A. Bauman
Document Type
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AL
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Record Number
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1086063
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Doc. No
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LA129692
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Call No
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10.1163/15685357-02101002
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Language of Document
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English
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Main Entry
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Whitney A. Bauman
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Title & Author
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The Ethics of Wicked Problems [Article]\ Whitney A. Bauman
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Publication Statement
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Leiden: Brill
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Title of Periodical
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Worldviews: Global Religions, Culture, and Ecology
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Date
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2017
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Volume/ Issue Number
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21/1
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Page No
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7–20
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Abstract
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Wicked problems call for more complex thinking than many of our ethical problem-solving traditions are equipped to deal with. Multi-generational, multi-causal problems with no single solution call on us to think ethics in a new way. This article explores three such facets of what it might mean to live through and with climate change and think ethically about such changes. The reality of our planetary problems and lives might better be addressed using models based upon entanglement, multiple causality, and multiple understandings of time (“rainbow” time). Wicked problems call for more complex thinking than many of our ethical problem-solving traditions are equipped to deal with. Multi-generational, multi-causal problems with no single solution call on us to think ethics in a new way. This article explores three such facets of what it might mean to live through and with climate change and think ethically about such changes. The reality of our planetary problems and lives might better be addressed using models based upon entanglement, multiple causality, and multiple understandings of time (“rainbow” time). Wicked problems call for more complex thinking than many of our ethical problem-solving traditions are equipped to deal with. Multi-generational, multi-causal problems with no single solution call on us to think ethics in a new way. This article explores three such facets of what it might mean to live through and with climate change and think ethically about such changes. The reality of our planetary problems and lives might better be addressed using models based upon entanglement, multiple causality, and multiple understandings of time (“rainbow” time). Wicked problems call for more complex thinking than many of our ethical problem-solving traditions are equipped to deal with. Multi-generational, multi-causal problems with no single solution call on us to think ethics in a new way. This article explores three such facets of what it might mean to live through and with climate change and think ethically about such changes. The reality of our planetary problems and lives might better be addressed using models based upon entanglement, multiple causality, and multiple understandings of time (“rainbow” time).
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Descriptor
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causality
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entanglement
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new materialisms
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time
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Location & Call number
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10.1163/15685357-02101002
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