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Latest Module Specifications

Current Academic Year 2025 - 2026

Module Title Environmental Ethics & Global Moral Issues
Module Code PHE1021 (ITS: TP233)
Faculty Theology, Philosophy & Music School Humanities & Social Sciences
NFQ level 8 Credit Rating 5
Description

This module will introduce students to environmental philosophy, providing them with a critical understanding of the ontological, political and ethical issues surrounding the environment. The topics to be studied in the module cover the major issues of environmental philosophy: theories of nature; the ‘anthropocene’; intrinsic value and inherent value in nature; animal consciousness and rights; human rights and the environment; the ethics of over-population; consumerism and mass-extinction; holism and atomism; future generations; distribution of harms and benefits; geoengineering; food systems. These issues are amongst the most pressing issues confronting humanity in the 21st century. Students taking the module will gain an understanding of the philosophical concepts framing our relationship with the environment. Students will gain an understanding of cutting-edge ontological and ethical issues raised by climate change, extinction risks, and over-population. Students are expected to attend and contribute to lectures, and to engage with the recommended texts and readings as they progress through the module.

Learning Outcomes

1. comprehend central issues and themes in the history of environmental philosophy
2. construct arguments using the conceptual tools of environmental philosophy and apply these arguments to contemporary issues;
3. understand the wider natural, generational, social, political and cultural significance of these issues and themes;
4. engage in critical analysis and interpretation of important philosophical texts;
5. Evaluate and independently assess key conceptual ideas and movements in environmental philosophy;
6. communicate the meaning and evolution of environmental philosophical issues and present their own arguments and ideas clearly in written form.


WorkloadFull time hours per semester
TypeHoursDescription
Lecture22No Description
Independent Study103No Description
Total Workload: 125
Section Breakdown
CRN20874Part of TermSemester 2
Coursework0%Examination Weight0%
Grade Scale40PASSPass Both ElementsY
Resit CategoryRC1Best MarkN
Module Co-ordinatorFiachra O'BrolchainModule Teacher
Section Breakdown
CRN12075Part of TermSemester 1 & 2
Coursework0%Examination Weight0%
Grade Scale40PASSPass Both ElementsY
Resit CategoryRC1Best MarkN
Module Co-ordinatorFiachra O'BrolchainModule Teacher
Assessment Breakdown
TypeDescription% of totalAssessment Date
Essayn/a100%n/a
Reassessment Requirement Type
Resit arrangements are explained by the following categories;
RC1: A resit is available for both* components of the module.
RC2: No resit is available for a 100% coursework module.
RC3: No resit is available for the coursework component where there is a coursework and summative examination element.

* ‘Both’ is used in the context of the module having a coursework/summative examination split; where the module is 100% coursework, there will also be a resit of the assessment

Pre-requisite None
Co-requisite None
Compatibles None
Incompatibles None

All module information is indicative and subject to change. For further information,students are advised to refer to the University's Marks and Standards and Programme Specific Regulations at: http://www.dcu.ie/registry/examinations/index.shtml

Indicative Content and Learning Activities

On Nature
understanding nature and its value

Other Animals
non-anthropocentric ethics

Climate Change
responsibility, costs, and mitigation

Duties & Obligations
duties towards non-human animals, ecosystems, those at risk from climate

States of Affairs
consequentialism and environmental thought

Consumption
global food systems, and consumption patterns

The Anthropocene
humans' impact on the world

Indicative Reading List

Books:
  • Henry David Thoreau: 2002, Walden,
  • Mary Midgely: 1978, Beast and Man,
  • Peter Singer: 1981, The Expanding Circle,
  • Rachel Carson: 2000, Silent Spring,
  • Peter Godfrey Smith: 2017, Other Minds: The Octopus and the Evolution of Intelligent Life,
  • Stephen M. Gardiner: 2011, A Perfect Moral Storm,
  • Martha Nussbaum: 2006, Frontiers of Justice: Disability, Nationality, Species Membership,
  • David Rothenberg: 2013, Survival of the Beautiful,


Articles:
None
Other Resources

None

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