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PHIL302 to state that the water itself has no intrinsic value because it has no interests. Hank does not affect the flourishing of the water or hinder its goals; it still flows down the mountain and it is still a liquid. Water may be necessary to life but the stream is only sufficient. The reference to the ecosystem being harmed may also be misleading, for it is only biotic aspects of the system that were harmed, and ecosystems incorporate abiotic entities too. Therefore, it is life that is important. If we try to apply justice to ecosystems it can only be indirect justice. Proponents of holism would disagree. For them we are all constituents of a whole that is more important than the individual, and “the survival of species and systems is functionally necessary for the existence and well-being of individuals, some would go further and maintain that it is ultimately the species and ecosystems that should be valued,” (Attfield, 2003, p.8). An individual’s only value is what she contributes to the overall system. This view attributes only instrumental value to all sentient and non-sentient creatures, and as such denies entitlements of direct justice to the individual. Callicotts’s land ethical-holism “maintains that if culling a white-tailed deer is necessary for the protection of the holistic good, then it is a land-ethical requirement to do so […] the same point also applies to human individuals because they are also members of the biotic community” (see Brennan and Lo, 2015). This for me is an indefensible position for a normative ethical theory, and shows the inherent problems of preferring whole over individual. Again the holism ethic does not view ecosystems as living entities or ends in themselves, so cannot qualify for considerations of justice with the criteria we are using. References Attfield, R. (2003) Environmental Ethics. Great Britain, Polity Press. It is difficult to generate the passion to argue against the concept of justice for ecosystems, as they offer spiritual and aesthetic values along with instrumental value. Yet, the thought of placing intrinsic value on abiotic aspects of the ecosystem is incomprehensible. It would lead to a state of affairs in which we would not be able to have any interaction with the natural wold for fear of harming it. It would preclude us from walking up mountains, for this displaces rocks and stones and could be viewed as harming the integrity of the mountain. We can see by Hank the astronaut’s first foray that there is an intuitive value we place on life and for me that is the most fundamental, and least arbitrary, place to start when deciding how humans should interact with the natural world. If we adopt a biocentric philosophy of environmental justice we will be able to start saving the biotic aspects of ecosystems, and through indirect entitlements to give justice to the abiotic. Cahen, H. (1988) ‘Against the Moral Considerability of Ecosystems’. In, Environmental Ethics an Anthology, (2003) Eds. A. Light, and H. Rolston III. United Kingdom, Blackwell, pp. 114-128. 117 Brennan, A., and Lo, Y-S. (2015) ‘Environmental Ethics’. In Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, (Winter 2015), ed. E. N. Zalta [Online] Available at http:// plato.stanford.edu/entries/ ethics-environmental/, accessed 01 November 2015. Clewell, A., F. and Aronson, J. (2007) Ecological restoration - Principles, values, and structure of an emerging profession. Washington D.C., Island Press. Holland, B. (2008) ‘Justice and the Environment in Nussbaum’s “Capabilities Approach” - Why sustainable ecological capacity is a meta-capability’, Political Research Quarterly, Volume 61, Issue 2, pp. 319-332. S Nussbaum, M. (2007) Frontiers of Justice. USA, Harvard University Press. Rawls, J. (1971) A Theory of Justice. USA, Harvard University Press. Taylor, P. (1986) Respect for Nature. USA, Princeton University Press.