Philosopher and Three Scientists to Explore Ethics and the Language of Conservation
By Scott Rappaport
The Institute for Humanities Research at UC Santa Cruz will present the inaugural event of its new research group, The Language of Conservation, on Friday afternoon, April 14, in the Humanities 1 building.
Titled What is Lost When A Species Goes Extinct? A Colloquium on the Unspeakable Value of Life, it will be a conversation about the impact of language—how particular words and concepts impact the public’s thinking about topics such as “sustainability,” “conservation,” and “extinction.”
The Language of Conservation is an interdisciplinary research group that seeks to change the way we talk and think about the value of life in all of its diverse forms.
It was launched by program directors Daniel Guevara (chair of the Philosophy Department) and Claudio Campagna (adjunct professor of ecology and evolutionary biology), who believe that the language used by the conservation movement over the past three decades has unintentionally undermined efforts to promote biodiversity–because it reinforces the politically self-serving language of “sustainable development.”
The two professors argue that we have been using the language of economics applied to nature, but that is a language incapable of grasping the value of life—except for its value to human development.
“The language of conservation today–including iconic terms like ‘sustainable development’ and emerging terms like ‘de-extinction’–is an example of what the philosopher Ludwig Wittgenstein called a ‘bewitchment of our intelligence by means of our language,” noted Guevara. “We must identify and battle the confusion this language gives rise to, before we can give authentic expression to the value of nature, and especially to the value of life in all its great diversity of forms.”