ABSTRACT

This book develops a politico-ethical response to climate change that accounts for the novelty and uncertainty that it entails.

This volume explores the ethical dimensions of climate change and posits that one must view it as a social construction intimately tied to political issues in order to understand and overcome this environmental challenge. To show how this ethos builds upon the need for new forms of responsiveness, Anfinson analyzes it in terms of four features: commitment, worldly sensitivity, political disposition, and practice. Each of these features is developed by putting four thinkers – Kierkegaard, Nietzsche, Schmitt, and Foucault respectively – in conversation with the literature on climate change. In doing so, this book shows how social habits and norms can be transformed through subjective thought and behavior in the context of a global environmental crisis.

Presenting a multidisciplinary engagement with the politics, philosophy, and science of climate change, this book will be of great interest to students and scholars of climate change, environmental politics, environmental philosophy and environmental humanities.

chapter |9 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|25 pages

The challenge to ethics

Climate change as event

chapter 2|22 pages

Impassioned trouble

Committing to the event

chapter 3|26 pages

The self in the social

Sensitivity to an eventful world

chapter 4|26 pages

Risk or security

Politics in the event

chapter 5|26 pages

Power and possibility

Techniques of the event

chapter 6|25 pages

An ethos for the climate event