Anthropogenic Climate Change, Political Liberalism and the Communion of Saints

Studies in Christian Ethics 24 (1):34-49 (2011)
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Abstract

Political liberals refuse that there are biophysical limits to human wealth accumulation. Coal fuelled the first liberal political economy — England’s — for 800 years before coal smoke was legally regulated in London. The English also have an enduring love for the diverse and scenic quality of their island nation, and a long history of commons governance that predates the acts of land theft which accompanied the emergence of political liberalism. By contrast the United States is a modern liberal polity with little collective memory of commons. American political economists therefore refuse that commons can be collectively governed, or even that atmospheric pollution may be conceived as a problem of commons governance. The historically unsituated character of North American liberals — and liberalism more generally — also explains their inability adequately to describe moral connections between past, present and future generations implicated in anthropogenic climate change. The Christian account of the spiritual communion of saints remains a more powerful intergenerational narrative than political liberalism. As interpreted by Tolstoy, Gandhi and John Howard Yoder, true spiritual communion is characterised by the Christ-shaped refusal to render evil for evil. This refusal is an essential corrective to the realist and violent frame of international relations in which the international implications of climate change is conventionally conceived

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Michael Northcott
University of Edinburgh

Citations of this work

Scattered In Times.Sarah Stewart-Kroeker - 2020 - Journal of Religious Ethics 48 (1):45-73.

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References found in this work

The Tragedy of the Commons.Garrett Hardin - 1968 - Science 162 (3859):1243-1248.
Fair Chore Division for Climate Change.Martino Traxler - 2002 - Social Theory and Practice 28 (1):101-134.
Fair Chore Division for Climate Change.Traxler Martino - 2002 - Social Theory and Practice 28 (1):101-134.
Contract and Birthright.Sheldon S. Wolin - 1986 - Political Theory 14 (2):179-193.

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