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On Environmental Responsibility
By David E. Wilson, Jr.

What is environmentally responsible?

ith better biology and education, notions of such responsibility have changed over time, but the underlying premise remains the same — being environmentally responsible means acting willfully to protect or preserve natural resources by sacrificing some of your freedoms for the common good.

or more than 2,000 years, Western culture has espoused the Aristotelian view that acting both with good intention and without coercion of law determine which acts are moral and which are not. Saving a drowning victim is a moral act; simply paying your taxes is not. And like pouring salt on slugs or getting permits to fill wetlands, just because something is legal, doesn't make it ethical.





n conjunction with these criteria, recognizing the rights of other people and other living things over your right to immediate gratification, wealth, or other self-indulgence prescribes responsible behavior in the environmental sphere. Along with this, educating yourself on how your behavior might affect the common good is a moral obligation. Fishermen or developers who indiscriminately keep undersized fish or chop down trees claiming ignorance of biodiversity are equally culpable. With rights come responsibilities.

f course what is environmentally responsible varies with trade. For a fisherman it might mean using barbless hooks, throwing back keepers when you have a freezer full of fish at home, or taking care to avoid seagrass beds or bird rookeries.





or farmers it could mean planting wildlife habitat, limiting pesticide use, or building water control structures. For foresters, environmental responsibility might imply leaving large stream buffers, and avoiding rare and endangered species habitat.

or business owners it could translate into using recycled paper, avoiding throwaway cups and plates, and limiting impervious surfaces on their property. For homeowners planting native plant species, limiting the use of any chemical, and finding ways to conserve water and energy might be environmentally responsible.

imiting herbicide, pesticide, and fertilizer use and leaving as much natural vegetation as possible would be a good start for golf course managers.





nd for developers, tailoring their projects to save open space by clustering, avoiding wetland and forest impacts, and going beyond minimum legal requirements to protect plants and animals living on their property would be to behave in a morally responsible way.

nvironmental responsibility lies in our capacity to forego a modicum of our rights and to act beyond the sphere of law to do what we have learned is right for the community. It is not a mechanical adherence to rudimentary legal standards as some imply when they claim their projects meet all regulatory requirements.



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