
How to Think Seriously about the Planet
The Case for an Environmental Conservatism
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Narrado por:
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Simon Prebble
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De:
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Roger Scruton
The environment has long been the undisputed territory of the political Left, which casts international capitalism, consumerism, and the overexploitation of natural resources as the principle threats to the planet and sees top-down interventions as the most effective solution.
In How to Think Seriously about the Planet, Roger Scruton rejects this view and offers a fresh approach to tackling the most important political problem of our time. He contends that the environmental movement is philosophically confused and has unrealistic agendas. Its sights are directed at large-scale events and the confrontation between international politics and multinational business. But Scruton argues that no large-scale environmental project, however well intentioned, will succeed if it is not rooted in small-scale practical reasoning. Seeing things on a large scale promotes top-down solutions, managed by unaccountable bureaucracies that fail to assess local conditions and are rife with unintended consequences. Scruton calls for the greater efficacy of local initiatives over global schemes, civil association over political activism, and small-scale institutions of friendship over regulatory hypervigilance, suggesting that conservatism is far better suited to solving environmental problems than either liberalism or socialism.
Rather than entrusting the environment to unwieldy NGOs and international committees, we must assume personal responsibility and foster local control. People must be empowered to take charge of their environment, to care for it as they would a home, and to involve themselves through the kind of local associations that have been the traditional goal of conservative politics. Our common future is by no means assured, but as Roger Scruton clearly demonstrates in this important book, there is a path that can ensure the future safety of our planet and our species.
Roger Scruton is a visiting scholar at the American Enterprise Institute. He has taught at the Universities of Cambridge, London, Oxford, Princeton, and Boston and has been a freelance writer and commentator for the past 15 years. His many books include Beauty: A Very Short Introduction, Death-Devoted Heart, and The Uses of Pessimism.
©2012 Roger Scruton (P)2012 Blackstone Audio, Inc.Listeners also enjoyed...




















Reseñas de la Crítica
Conservative politicians are often painted as anti-conservation, but this is really not the case. Opposition to unwieldy legislation with unintended consequences is often mistaken as opposition to the environment itself. For example, the author brings up the familiar request of removing national or international regulation of industries. But the motive is not that these industries should not be regulated. Rather, when the government usurps authority to protect a resource from the local community(i.e. those with the greatest interest in protecting it) the environment often suffers. He argues for locally brokered and enforced regulation where the costs of polluting are returned to the polluters instead of diffused through a bureaucracy.
The book delves deeply into philosophy. He discusses Kant's Categorical Imperative, Hobbes, Locke and Rousseau's Social Contract theory and a dozen other thinkers past and present. He expects the reader to have a basic grasp of epistemology, logic and ethics. you don't need a degree in Philosophy, but he does not spoon feed these concepts.
I found the book informative and insightful. Simon Prebble's narration is spot on, as usual. The author offers much common ground to those on the left and he is eager to engage rather than ridicule.
Interesting and insightful
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A new perspective on Environmental responsibility
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Finally a philosopher who understands economics
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Highly Recommend
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Sir Roger on form
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Wonderful, Thoughtful, and Practical.
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The author goes back and forth making arguments that don't make sense and muddy whatever his perspective is. In one chapter, he rips into environmental safety laws that ban dangerous chemicals based on a weird cost per death metric as if that's the only metric to consider and that it can be accurately calculated.
After blindly doubting environmentalists on that front, he blindly takes the IPCC predictions as fact that requires serious public policy changes to save the world. In that way, he follows the Bjorn Lomborg path of accepting a completely broken "science" that is simply historically inaccurate predictions as fact, but stands up as a "conservative" by only giving leftists some of the things they want.
Rather than digging into the science of the IPCC and determining if their assumptions are true, he likes to label a far left argument, a far right argument, then brag abut he's being sensible by being somewhere in between. Being a centrist is not valuable. Being right is.
Poor environmental book + poor economics book
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