ABSTRACT

Why save endangered species without clear aesthetic, economic, or ecosystemic value? This book takes on this challenging question through an account of the intrinsic goods of species. Ian A. Smith argues that a species’ intrinsic value stems from its ability to flourish—its organisms continuing to reproduce successfully and it avoiding extinction—which helps to demonstrate a further claim, that humans ought to preserve species that we have endangered. He shows our need to exercise humility in our relations with endangered species through the preservation of their intrinsic goods, which in turn rectifies our degradation of their importance. Unique in its appeal to virtue ethics and to species concepts, The Intrinsic Value of Endangered Species is an important resource for scholars working in environmental ethics and the philosophy of biology.

chapter 1|19 pages

Introduction

The Humpback Chub

chapter 3|12 pages

Rolston's Account

Objective Value

chapter 4|9 pages

Johnson's Account

Well-Being Interests

chapter 5|8 pages

Callicott's Account

Leopold's Story

chapter 7|8 pages

The Role of Humility

chapter 8|11 pages

Problems and Solutions