Environmental Studies 240 - The Value of Nature

Fall
2016
01
4.00
Timothy Farnham
M 01:15PM-04:05PM
Mount Holyoke College
98162
Clapp Laboratory 327
tfarnham@mtholyoke.edu
Through this seminar, students develop an in-depth knowledge of and articulate vocabulary for the significant and diverse ways that humans value the natural world - utilitarian, scientific, aesthetic, naturalistic, symbolic, ethical, and spiritual. We use these different typologies of human environmental values as frameworks for readings and discussion, extending our examination to historical and cultural variations in values, competing perspectives of the natural world, and other value concepts, including intrinsic and transformative value. We examine the concept of biophilia and probe the role values play in the concern over losses of biological diversity and its implications.
Prereq: ENVST-100.
gateway course for minor in Conceptual Foundations of Science
Permission is required for interchange registration during the add/drop period only.