New perspectives in plant ethics
Université libre de Bruxelles - Salle de bibliothèque du CIERL, 17 avenue Roosevelt, 1000 Bruxelles
- — 09:00-18:30In recent years, environmental ethics and philosophy have become more specifically concerned with issues relating to the plant world, to the extent that some authors have even coined the term "plant turn" or "plant ethics". Plant ethics is not a hyper-specialized theoretical niche, but rather one of the expressions of a growing awareness of the extent of human responsibilities towards living beings, ecosystems and present and future societies. This awareness cuts across many disciplines. In agronomy, the characterization of so-called harmful, useful or invasive species has a bearing on the decision to favour certain crops. In molecular biology, the rise of plant transgenesis techniques places researchers and companies in a situation of unprecedented risk and uncertainty. In the fields of law, economics and social exchanges, the need for new rules to enable seed sharing and new principles for sustainable agri-food production are the subject of much debate. Because of their close links with ecosystems and biodiversity, as well as our agricultural, cultural and social history, the destruction and degradation of plants should not be considered ethically neutral, if only because of the serious consequences these behaviours have historically entailed and continue to entail. However, the theoretical reflection and actual implementation of more respectful actions towards plants are not straightforward. Neither reducible to animal (welfare) ethics nor completely soluble in environmental ethics in the broadest sense of the term, plants as organisms with their very particular biology and ecology call for their own ways of thinking. A number of practices are already integrating this ethical dimension into their actions, inventions and recommendations in the fields of law, agriculture, forestry, conservation biology and so on. It is these practices and actors that represent indispensable resources for the creation of new philosophical and ethical frameworks of thought, to articulate them coherently with existing literature.
The aim of this symposium is to bring together researchers from the academic world and practitioners in the field to discuss the new ethical issues raised by our relationship with the plant world. The organizers, therefore, invite speakers to submit papers in the (non-exhaustive) fields of philosophy and ethics, applied ethics, biology, agronomy, forestry, law, environmental history, anthropology or ethnobotany that integrate the ethical dimension of our relationship with plants.
With :
Robin Attfield, Professor Emeritus, Cardiff University, United Kingdom: “Biocentrism, Forests and Climate Change”
Paco Calvo, Professor of Philosophy, MINT Lab – Minimal Intelligence Lab University of Murcia, Spain
Marcello Di Paola, Professor of Philosophy, University of Palermo, Italy
Benoît Hartenstein, notaire à Metzervisse (Moselle), France, Fondateur de l’association « La Voix de l’Arbre »
Catherine Larrère, Professeur émerite de philosophie, Paris I Panthéon Sorbonne, France
Raphaël Larrère, Directeur de recherche émérite, INRAE, France
Michael Marder, Ikerbasque Research Professor of Philosophy at the University of the Basque Country, Vitoria-Gasteiz, Spain
Laure Oberli, Ingénieure forestière en charge de l'aménagement des forêts et des espaces naturels, République et canton de Neuchâtel, Suisse, fondatrice du bureau Popoulus.ch pour un accompagnement holistique de la forêt
Sylvie Pouteau, Chargée de recherche en philosophie à l'INRAE, France
Complete program here