This paper explores spiritual and aesthetic cultural values associated with ecosystems. We argue that these values are not best captured by instrumental or consequentialist thinking, and they are grounded in conceptions of nature that differ from the ecosystem services conceptual framework. To support our case, we engage with theories of the aesthetic and the spiritual, sample the discourse of ‘wilderness’, and provide empirical evidence from the recent UK National Ecosystem Assessment Follow-on Phase. We observe that accounts of spiritual and aesthetic value in Western culture are diverse and expressed through different media. We recognise that humans do benefit from their aesthetic and spiritual experiences of nature. However, aesthetic a...
Western moral traditions are seriously lacking in the necessary attitudes and resources that will al...
This paper defends that environmental aesthetics provides a consistent basis for environmental philo...
Aesthetic value, often viewed as subjective and even trivial compared to other environmental values,...
This paper explores spiritual and aesthetic cultural values associated with ecosystems. We argue tha...
AbstractThis paper explores spiritual and aesthetic cultural values associated with ecosystems. We a...
An analysis of conceptualisations of spiritual value in the ecosystem services literature and of nat...
Ecosystems services are provisions that humans derive from nature. Ecologists trying to value ecosys...
Different ways of viewing human-nature interactions affect the ways in which these are conceptualize...
The idea of nature's sacrality, contrasting starkly with industrial modernity's overwhelmingly instr...
Belief in the spiritual value of nature is most often associated with Aboriginal people, but is comm...
The ecosystem services (ES) framework was developed to articulate and measure the benefits humans re...
Environmentalists have argued that contemporary ethical theories have overly strict rules about what...
Introduction Ecosystems not only consist of physical attributes, they are subjected to and influence...
Nature provides humans with various 'services', some of which could be called spiritual, e.g. connec...
Various attempts have been made to amalgamate the concepts of intrinsic value and ecosystem services...
Western moral traditions are seriously lacking in the necessary attitudes and resources that will al...
This paper defends that environmental aesthetics provides a consistent basis for environmental philo...
Aesthetic value, often viewed as subjective and even trivial compared to other environmental values,...
This paper explores spiritual and aesthetic cultural values associated with ecosystems. We argue tha...
AbstractThis paper explores spiritual and aesthetic cultural values associated with ecosystems. We a...
An analysis of conceptualisations of spiritual value in the ecosystem services literature and of nat...
Ecosystems services are provisions that humans derive from nature. Ecologists trying to value ecosys...
Different ways of viewing human-nature interactions affect the ways in which these are conceptualize...
The idea of nature's sacrality, contrasting starkly with industrial modernity's overwhelmingly instr...
Belief in the spiritual value of nature is most often associated with Aboriginal people, but is comm...
The ecosystem services (ES) framework was developed to articulate and measure the benefits humans re...
Environmentalists have argued that contemporary ethical theories have overly strict rules about what...
Introduction Ecosystems not only consist of physical attributes, they are subjected to and influence...
Nature provides humans with various 'services', some of which could be called spiritual, e.g. connec...
Various attempts have been made to amalgamate the concepts of intrinsic value and ecosystem services...
Western moral traditions are seriously lacking in the necessary attitudes and resources that will al...
This paper defends that environmental aesthetics provides a consistent basis for environmental philo...
Aesthetic value, often viewed as subjective and even trivial compared to other environmental values,...