Lecture
Kant's Philosophy Today
Session 2: The Ethics of the Climate Crisis
Kant developed a hugely influential moral philosophy, centred on what he called the ‘categorical imperative’. But critics have argued that Kantian ethics neglect the specificities of everyday ethical problems. Two experts will explore this topic with reference to one of the most pressing of today’s issues: the new ethical problems produced by the climate crisis.
Chaired and curated by Stephen Howard (FRIAS, University of Freiburg)
In cooperation withThe Institute of Philosophy, School of Advanced Study, University of London
Martin Sticker is Senior Lecturer in Ethics at the University of Bristol. He works on Kantian ethics as well as Consequentialism. His wider interests include applied ethics, including global poverty and global justice, political philosophy, climate ethics, Hegel, Aristotle and enlightenment philosophy. He is the author of Rationalizing (Vernünfteln)
(Cambridge University Press, 2022).
Ewa Wyrębska is Researcher at the Ruhr-University of Bochum. Her work addresses various aspects of Kant’s practical philosophy, as well as contemporary topics in political and social philosophy. She is the author of Filozofia prawa Immanueal Kanta. Wprowadzenie (Immanuel Kant’s Legal Philosophy. An Introduction) (University of Lodz Press, 2018). Along with Martin Sticker and other colleagues, she is part of the UK-German research project “Using people well, treating people badly”.
Details
Senate House
Room G22/26, Ground floor
Malet Street
London
WC1E 7HU
United Kingdom
Part of series Kant's Philosophy Today