Index # 09945
Will Count Towards Philosophy MAJOR
Will Count Towards Philosophy MINOR
“A landmark report from the United Nations’ scientific panel on climate change paints a far more dire picture of the immediate consequences of climate change than previously thought,” Coral Davenport writes, in the December 7, 2018 edition of The New York Times, according to which “avoiding the damage requires transforming the world economy at a speed and scale that has ‘no documented historic precedent’.” Unless we change in ways that are literally unprecedented, in other words, we will, in only a few decades, pass a climate-change tipping point on the other side of which humanity becomes at best dystopian, at worst extinct. “But while [the report’s authors] conclude that it is technically possible to achieve the rapid changes required,” Davenport continues, “they concede that it may be politically unlikely.” The seminar will be designed to confront this concession.
Our starting point would be the recognition that giving in to the understandable temptation to respond to those who take the crisis less seriously, if seriously at all, by impressing upon them the doom and gloom that will result, has more often than not a relatively paralyzing effect. Our strategy would instead be Naomi Klein’s: to understand the crisis as a “galvanizing force for humanity, leaving us all not just safer from extreme weather, but with societies that are safer and fairer in all kinds of other ways as well” (This Changes Everything), and so a joyful prospect that we may be among those who help to save the day.
In doing so, our focus will be two-fold. On the one hand, we’ll review and address watershed analyses of the crisis, such as Klein’s, as well as various popular-cultural reflections of it, using the resources of Environmental Philosophy and Ecocriticism, among others. Our focus will also be, on the other hand, and equally urgently, to work together to develop solutions applicable locally at Rutgers, as an incubator for, and inspiration to the city, county, state, nation, and world in which we reside more generally.
About Professor McCrossin
EDWARD (TRIP) MCCROSSIN has been with the Philosophy Department at Rutgers for over fifteen years, working in various ways on the history and philosophy of the Enlightenment, and its legacy in contemporary ethics, politics, and popular culture. He attended college at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, and graduate school at Stanford and Yale. He’s working on several longish publications on the problems of evil and personal identity, and has essays periodically on these and other subjects in Blackwell’s and Open Court’s Popular Culture and Philosophy series.