Manufactured Uncertainty: Implications for Climate Change Skepticism

Manufactured Uncertainty: Implications for Climate Change Skepticism

by Lorraine Code
Manufactured Uncertainty: Implications for Climate Change Skepticism

Manufactured Uncertainty: Implications for Climate Change Skepticism

by Lorraine Code

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Overview

In this provocative work, Lorraine Code returns to the idea of "epistemic responsibility," as developed in her influential 1987 book of the same name, to confront the telling new challenges we now face to know the world with some sense of responsibility to other "knowers" and to the sustaining, nonhuman world. Manufactured Uncertainty focuses centrally on the environmental and cultural crises arising from postindustrial, man-made climate change, which have spawned new forms of passionately partisan social media that directly challenge all efforts to know with a sense of collective responsibility. How can we agree to act together, Code asks, even in the face of inevitable uncertainty, given the truly life-threatening stakes of today's social and political challenges? How can we engage responsibly with those who take every argument for an environmentally grounded epistemology as an unacceptable challenge to their assumed freedoms, comforts, and "rights?" Through searching critical dialogue with leading epistemologists, cultural theorists, and feminist scholars, this book poses a timely challenge to all thoughtful knowers who seek to articulate an expanded and deepened sense of epistemic responsibility—to a human society and a natural world embraced, together, in the most inclusive spirit.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781438480541
Publisher: State University of New York Press
Publication date: 11/01/2020
Pages: 256
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 1.00(d)

About the Author

Lorraine Code is Distinguished Research Professor Emerita of Philosophy at York University, Canada. She is the author of several books, including Epistemic Responsibility, also published by SUNY Press, and Ecological Thinking: The Politics of Epistemic Location.

Table of Contents

Foreword ix

Acknowledgments xi

Introduction 1

Chapter 1 Epistemic Responsibility, Now 27

Chapter 2 Doubt and Denial: Epistemic Responsibility Meets Climate Change Skepticism 63

Chapter 3 Care, Concern, and Advocacy: Is There a Place for Epistemic Responsibility? 99

Chapter 4 Particularity, Epistemic Responsibility, and the Ecological Imaginary 141

Chapter 5 How to Think Globally, Revisited: Or, A Plea for Ignorance 177

Bibliography 219

Index 229

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