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Featured researches published by Brian K. Steverson.


Ethics, Place & Environment | 2008

Biogeography and Evolutionary Emotivism

Brian K. Steverson

Emotivism has enjoined a revival of sorts over the past few decades, primarily driven by a Darwinian interpretation of the Humean metaethic. Evolutionary ethics, the metaethical view that at the heart of our moral sense lies a set of moral sentiments whose existence ‘pre-dates’ in evolutionary terms our species’ ability to engage in more explicit, cognitive moral deliberations and discourse, whether in the discovery of deontological rules or in the crafting of social contracts, figures prominently in Robert Solomons work in justice theory and J. Baird Callicotts work in environmental ethics, to name just two efforts to revive emotivism. Though the idea that our moral sense is grounded in our evolved biology lies at the heart of the new ethical emotivism, there has been a curious lack of a truly evolutionary account of the origin of that biological predisposition in the work of Solomon, Callicott, and others involved in the revival. In particular, what is missing is an account of how we evolved our moral sense as an adaptation to the ecology in which our very early ancestors existed. The typical explanation is to treat it as selected for by the pressure to cooperate that bore upon our early ancestors; for example, the advantage that cooperative effort confers in bringing down big game or warding off competing groups. But this type of explanation, I hope to show, rather than providing an account of how our moral sense came to be, actually must presuppose the existence of a rudimentary moral sense. If so, then the origin of our moral sense must be accounted for as an adaptation to our pre-social, ecological environment. As a model for what such an explanation might look like I will use Jared Diamonds recent work in biogeography, Guns, Germs and Steel.


Environmental Ethics | 1995

Contextualism and Norton’s Convergence Hypothesis

Brian K. Steverson


Environmental Ethics | 1994

Ecocentrism and Ecological Modeling

Brian K. Steverson


Environmental Values | 1996

On the Reconciliation of Anthropocentric and Nonanthropocentric Environmental Ethics

Brian K. Steverson


Archive | 2012

Responding to Hate Speech on Social Media

Molly B. Pepper; Adriane Leithauser; Peggy Sue Loroz; Brian K. Steverson


International Journal of Cyber Ethics in Education archive | 2012

Responding to Hate Speech on Social Media: A Class Leads a Student Movement

Molly B. Pepper; Adriane Leithauser; Peggy Sue Loroz; Brian K. Steverson


Archive | 2019

Teaching Normatively: An Approach for Integrating Mission Values Across the Business Curriculum

Brian K. Steverson; Adriane Leithauser


Archive | 2012

Systems Theory and the New Ecophilosophy

Brian K. Steverson


Business and Professional Ethics Journal | 2012

Vulnerable Values Argument for the Professionalization of Business Management

Brian K. Steverson


Philosophy in review | 2007

Joseph Raz, The Practice of Value . Reviewed by

Brian K. Steverson

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