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Stefan Skrimshire
University of Leeds
  1.  14
    Deep Time and Secular Time: A Critique of the Environmental ‘Long View’.Stefan Skrimshire - 2019 - Theory, Culture and Society 36 (1):63-81.
    The Anthropocene concept allows human history to be imagined within the temporal framework of planetary processes. Accordingly, some environmentalists increasingly favour massively lengthening the temporal horizons of moral concern. Whilst there are defensible reasons for doing so, I wish to take issue with the ‘secular time’ perspective underlying some such approaches. To make my case, I present, in the first section, two recent manifestations of the long view perspective: a) ‘deep future’ narratives in popular climate science and futurism; b) the (...)
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  2. Apocalyptic time and the ethics of human extinction.Stefan Skrimshire - 2023 - In Jakub Kowalewski (ed.), The Environmental Apocalypse: Interdisciplinary Reflections on the Climate Crisis.
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    Points of No Return.Stefan Skrimshire - 2009 - Environmental Philosophy 6 (2):1-20.
    According to recent scientific reports, certain climatic tipping points can be understood as “points of no return,” in which, for instance, anthropogenic interference changes global temperatures irreversibly. Such an outcome presents a situation unlike any considered before by risk theorists, for it introduces an element of radical uncertainty into the very value (considered ethically, culturally, and politically) of taking action on climate change. In the following I argue that ethical bases for action that rely on traditional concepts of risk (such (...)
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    Points of No Return.Stefan Skrimshire - 2009 - Environmental Philosophy 6 (2):1-20.
    According to recent scientific reports, certain climatic tipping points can be understood as “points of no return,” in which, for instance, anthropogenic interference changes global temperatures irreversibly. Such an outcome presents a situation unlike any considered before by risk theorists, for it introduces an element of radical uncertainty into the very value (considered ethically, culturally, and politically) of taking action on climate change. In the following I argue that ethical bases for action that rely on traditional concepts of risk (such (...)
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