Course Syllabus
Environmental Philosophies & Ethics
Instructor
Edward T. Wimberley, Ph.D., Professor Emeritus, Florida Gulf Coast Univeristy
9-Noon Thursday by Phone (239.405.4164) Facetime or Skype
Course Summary & Objectives
Over the past three decades a new area of philosophical study has emerged — environmental philosophy. Philosophers have turned to the environment in practical response to the multitude of ecological problems modern industrial society has spawned. This course will examine several such pressing environmental issues, principally employing pragmatic philosophical methodologies. After having pragmatic approaches to environmental philosophy and policy we will survey the major approaches philosophers and theoreticians have adopted to address a range of environmental problems. This will take us through an inquiry regading anthropocentrism and the concept of “moral community,” i.e., the realm of objects (human “persons”, members of other species, places, things) entitled to moral consideration. We will also examine several so-called ‘radical’ ecological movements whose proponents maintain that the only way to resolve the current spate of environmental problems is by fundamentally transforming modern society and revising how we look at the human-nature relationship. This course will also consider issues of environmental justice and the environmental perspectives of indigenous peoples. Finally, the course will also explore the impact of two key economic philosophers (A.F. Hayek and John Maynard Keynes) upon our modern attitudes toward sustaining the environment.
Objectives include:
Texts & Course Requirements
Zoom or Microsoft Teams Meetings
Periodically throughout the semester the instructor will schedule Zoom or Teams meetings to provide students an opportunity to ask questions or to inquire in more regarding a topic or topics of interest. These meetings are entirely voluntary on behalf of the student.
Attendance & Homework
Students are expected to attend each class session and demonstrate doing so by turning in the homework for the class session on time. Students who miss three consecutive classes without permission from the instructor will be urged to withdraw from the class or receive a failing grade. The principle purpose of weekly homework is to insure students read the assigned materials, view videos and show up in class prepared. Students who regualarly do so and submit thoughtful work cited and referenced in APA style can generally expect to recieve full credit for their work. Students participating in class sessions will, on a weekly basis, prepare their homework assignments and post their responses on Canvas email by 5:00 p.m. on the Saturday evening immediately following each on-campus class meeting. However, all reading assigned for each class session must be completed prior to the beginning of each class meeting on campus to insure that all students are prepared to participate in the class discussion. All posted attachments must be in Word or rich text format. Content written into or cut and pasted into the memo-field of the drop box will not be graded, nor will content submitted to the instructor via university email. All work must be attached as a Word or rich text format document. The instructor will only review and grade the responses and the homework posted Canvas email as an attachment. Any work mailed in from any other email source - even if mailed to the instructor's Canvas email address - will not be graded, in part because email sent from any external email address (i.e. Outlook, Yahoo, Hotmail, Gmail etc.) simply cannot be recieved at the instructor's Canvas email address. Consequently work sent in frome external web mail addresses will categorically not be accepted or graded.
Typically,
students
should be prepared to spend 2 - 3 hours of
preparation
& study for every 1 hour of classroom
time. This formula, which applies to general time commitment
for both classroom and distant learners, should
yield
approximately 6 to 9 hours of course effort
weekly. Some
week's assignments may entail less time
investment,
while other class periods may entail more
effort.
Minimal technology requierments for this course can be found at this web link: https://www.fgcu.edu/online/studentresources/technolgyrequirements#MinimumTechnology RequirementsforStudents
NOTE: If you have questions or issues that could get in the way of you completing any of your assignments you should contact the instructor by telephone at 239.405.4164. Dr. Wimberley is available virtually any time 24/7 to assist you if the issue you are working with serves as an immediate impediment of your completing your work.
Grading
Final semester grades for this course will be based on several criteria. Throughout the semester, grades will be assigned on a numerical basis. Only in determining the final semester grade will the numerical grades be translated to letter grades. The total possible points amounts to 1000, distributed as follows:
Grade Breakdown
Course
Requirements
|
Point Totals
|
Grade %
|
Course Exam
|
500 points
|
50%
|
|
|
|
Homework |
500 points
|
50%
|
Missing (i.e. nonparticipation or inadequate participation in class activities on Canvas) for 3 classes or more without instructor permission will result in students failing the class. Homework submitted later than 5:00 p.m. on the final date of each class or submitted somewhere other than Canvas Email will will be considered late homework and will not be credited toward class attendance and participation. The instructor is not obligated to grade your assignments. Distance learning course are considered to operate over a seven day week period. The rationale for this rather strict policy is quite simply that the total volume of the instructor's students in three classes makes it impossible for the professor to keep abreast of the weekly homework unless the student places the homework in Canvas email. Likewise, with many students and courses proceeding simultaneously in distance format the instructor simply lacks the time to search all over the web for your homework.
Grading Scale
|
|
94-100%
|
A
|
90-93%
|
A-
|
87-89%
|
B+
|
84-86%
|
B
|
80-83%
|
B-
|
77-79%
|
C+
|
74-76%
|
C
|
70-73%
|
C-
|
67-69%
|
D+
|
64-66%
|
D
|
60-63%
|
D-
|
59% and Below
|
F
|
For students taking this course as a distance learning course, text and case study homework submitted later than 5:00 p.m. on the final date of the class session will will be considered late homework and will not be credited toward class attendance and participation, otherwise homework is due before each class. Distance learning courses are considered to operate over a seven day week period. NOTE: For all students, course assignments and schedule, course objectives, and grading criteria, distributions and weights may change as circumstances dictate and at the discretion of the instructor.
Attendance Policy
Attend class weekly online, participate in class, and submit homework on a regular basis. Students must participate fully during each class session. Attendance is also measured in terms of turning in homework in a timely fashion. In every case, students must answer weekly assigned questions and post their responses to all questions before class commences weekly. Students failing to log on to the course lesson board and successfully submit their homework on a weekly basis will fail the course. Missing (i.e. nonparticipation or inadequate participation in class activities on Canvas via email) for 3 classes or more without instructor permission will result in students being failed in the class.
From time to time students may be required to attend one or more personal conferences with the instructor. Whenever feasible, the consultation should happen in person at FGCU. However, if distance proves to be an obstacle then students may be required to meet at an off-campus location or to schedule and attend a telephone conference with the instructor. These conferences contribute toward the student's attendance and participation grade. Students do not have the option of not attending conferences when the instructor so instructs them to. Students failing to attend conferences can expect to experience a significant reduction in credit for their participation and attendance portion of the grade, or may be awarded an incomplete grade that can revert to an F if the student continues to refuse participating in a student/faculty conference.
Finally, it is important for all students to remain cognizant that all of their interactions with the instructor must maintain a civil, respectful and cordial tone. Incivility, rudeness and disrespect directed toward the instructor will not be tolerated. Students may be asked to withdraw from the class if they cannot honor this expectation, and can expect to see significant deductions to the attendance and participation portion of their grade.
Consequently, attendance and participation consists of (1) regular online and weekly classroom attendance in the class (2) regular online and classroom participation in the class as demonstrated by the regular and timely submission of complete homework / exams and the demonstrated capacity to convince the instructor that one has read all text and web assignments and is prepared to discuss them in class, (3) regular and appropriate posting of homework on Canvas email appropriate format, (4) meeting all criteria for homework submission, such as use of APA citations and references, (4) prompt attention to email and telephone messages from the instructor, (5) attendance and civil participation in all scheduled consultation meetings. The instruction may schedule periodic discussion meetings using Zoom. Failure to comply with any of these factors will result in a reduction in credit for this portion of the course at the discretion of the instructor.
FGCU Disclaimers
Academic Integrity
All assignments must include citations for each question sufficient enough for the instructor to determine where the answers were drawn from, as well as complete references at the end of each question set. Citations and references must be in APA style. I will expect every student to be familiar with this approach since it is taught in virtually every middle school and high school in the U.S. So, in the interest of not losing any course credit and to insure you don't find yourself plagiarizing any of your work, you would be strongly advised to purchase this book and learn how to cite and reference appropriately from the onset.Answers and questions must be included in homework, to include the correct numbering of assigned questions. Any work that has been copied verbatim from a source or that has been "cut and pasted" as responses to questions will be ignored. Such verbatim responses included in work that is not fully cited and referenced will be considered to be plagiarized and the student will receive an F for the course. All work submitted must be written in the student's own words.
APA Documentation Method:
I strongly encourage every student to take the time to complete the following online APA Citation and Reference Tutorial. One of the objectives of this class is that you learn how to use the APA documentation style. You can learn everything you need to know about how to use this method by studying the fmaterial at the following sites. Please understand that any of your discussion questions or your student presentation papers that are lacking in complete APA styled documentation will be returned to you and will not be graded until they are in order.
APA Documentation Aids:
Tips for Writing Research Papers in APA Style
Purdue University: Using American Psychological Association (APA) Format
APA Citation Styles - University of Toledo
APA Guide to Electronic Resources
Frequently Asked Questions Regarding APA Style