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  1. Three Types of Anthropocentrism.Ben Mylius - 2018 - Environmental Philosophy 15 (2):159-194.
    This paper develops a language for distinguishing more rigorously between various senses of the term ‘anthropocentrism.’ Specifically, it differentiates between:1. Perceptual anthropocentrism ;2. Descriptive anthropocentrism 3. Normative anthropocentrism.
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    Three Types of Anthropocentrism.Ben Mylius - 2018 - Environmental Philosophy 15 (2):159-194.
    This paper develops a language for distinguishing more rigorously between various senses of the term ‘anthropocentrism.’ Specifically, it differentiates between:1. Perceptual anthropocentrism (which characterizes paradigms informed by sense-data from human sensory organs);2. Descriptive anthropocentrism (which characterizes paradigms that begin from, center upon, or are ordered around Homo sapiens / ‘the human’)3. Normative anthropocentrism (which characterizes paradigms that constrain inquiry in a way that somehow privileges Homo sapiens / ‘the human’ [passive normative anthropocentrism]; and which characterizes paradigms that make assumptions or (...)
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    Change-oriented Conceptions of Climate: A Response to Thom Brooks’ How Not to Save the Planet.Ben Mylius - 2016 - Ethics, Policy and Environment 19 (2):150-152.
    Thom Brooks key insight is this: if we continue to misunderstand climate change as a problem with an ‘end-state solution’, we remain unable to grapple with three related realities. Th...
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    Steve Vanderheiden. Environmental Political Theory.Ben Mylius - 2021 - Environmental Ethics 43 (4):383-384.
  5.  9
    The Stories We Share: Learnings from a Hundred Years of the Three Communities.Ben Mylius - 2023 - Political Theory 51 (1):178-189.
    This essay is part of a special issue celebrating 50 years of Political Theory. The ambition of the editors was to mark this half century not with a retrospective but with a confabulation of futures. Contributors were asked: What will political theory look and sound like in the next century and beyond? What claims might political theorists or their descendants be making in ten, twenty-five, fifty, a hundred years’ time? How might they vindicate those claims in their future contexts? How (...)
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