Kurdys, Joshua2019-09-252019-09-252010-09-152009-10http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12424/175525"In his recent article “A Perfect Moral Storm: Climate Change, Intergenerational Ethics and the Problem of Moral Corruption,” Stephen Gardiner shows that the complexity of climate change contributes to the underestimation of its moral significance. To illustrate the difficulties of comprehending the ethical duties invoked by climate change, Gardiner uses the image of a “perfect storm.” This image allows him to examine the problem in the distinct but related dimensions of its global impact, its intergenerational or historical impact and the theoretical complexity produced by the interaction of these distinct dimensions. While analyzing moral responsibility in each separate dimension poses its own set of challenges, combining both dimensions and gauging the impact of their collusion plainly exceeds the sophistication of current theoretical models, thereby inviting convenient delusions that alternately exaggerate or undervalue climate change. Instead of allowing us to evaluate climate change in terms of its complex reality, the combination of global, temporal and theoretical “storms” threatens to compromise the moral integrity of would-be respondents, thereby compounding rather than elucidating the problem." (p. 1).engWith permission of the license/copyright holderclimate ethicsmoralityclimate changeMethods of ethicsEnvironmental ethicsPhilosophical ethicsResources ethicsSummary of “a perfect moral storm: climate change, intergenerational ethics and the problem of moral corruption,” a paper by Stephan GardinerPreprint