Climate Change: Life and Death, John Broome, Visiting Professor, Stanford University and Emeritus White's Professor of Moral Philosophy, University of Oxford  

Submitted by Kate Goldyn on
Climate change: life and death poster

Join us on March 4, 2016 from 3:30 to 5:30 pm in Savery Hall Room 260 for The Ben Rabinowitz Lecture in Environmental Ethics Climate change: life and death, John Broome, Visiting Professor, Stanford University, Emeritus White's Professor of Moral Philosophy, University of Oxford, U.K.  

Climate change raises important and difficult issues of ethics. Broadly they fall into two classes. There are issues of justice concerned with how the work of dealing with climate change should be shared among countries and people. There are issues of value concerned with judging the harm that climate change will do, and the benefits of measures to control it. I shall concentrate on value, and particularly on the special problems for value theory that arise from the life-and-death effects of climate change. Climate change will shorten many people's lives, and it will affect the number of people who will be born. How should we value these effects?

John Broome is Emeritus White's Professor of Moral Philosophy at Oxford University and a Visiting Professor of Philosophy at Stanford University. He was a Lead Author of the Fifth Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. His most recent books are *Climate Matters: Ethics in a Warming World* (2012) and *Rationality Through Reasoning* (2013).

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