Anthropocentrism in Environmental Ethics: A Comprehensive Exploration
Anthropocentrism in Environmental Ethics: A Comprehensive Exploration Introduction Anthropocentrism —from the Greek anthropos (human) and kentron (center)—is the philosophical viewpoint that human beings are the most significant entity in the universe . In environmental ethics, anthropocentrism holds that nature and the non-human world possess value only insofar as they benefit human interests . As one of the most dominant worldviews in Western thought, anthropocentrism has profoundly shaped how societies perceive and interact with the environment. While it has been instrumental in driving technological and economic development, it is also deeply implicated in ecological degradation , leading many scholars to challenge its ethical legitimacy. Defining Anthropocentrism In environmental ethics, anthropocentrism is a normative framework where: Moral value is assigned only to humans . The environment is valuable instrumentally —as a resource or utility for human benefit...