I'm posting this in preparation for Draft Amnesty Week (Feb 24- March 2), but please also use this thread for posts you don't plan to write for Draft Amnesty. The last time I posted this question, there were some great responses.
If you have multiple ideas, I'd recommend putting them in different answers, so that people can respond to them separately.
It would be great to see:
- Both spur-of-the-moment vague ideas, and further along considered ideas. If you're in that latter camp, you could even share a google doc for feedback on an outline.
- Commenters signalling with Reactions and upvotes the content that they'd like to see written.
- Commenters responding with helpful resources or suggestions.
- Commenters proposing Dialogues with authors who suggest similar ideas, or which they have an interesting disagreement with (Draft Amnesty Week might be a great time for scrappy/ unedited dialogues).
Draft Amnesty Week
If the responses here encourage you to develop one of your ideas, Draft Amnesty Week (February 24- March 2) might be a great time to post it. Posts tagged "Draft Amnesty Week" don't have to be thoroughly thought through or even fully drafted. Bullet points and missing sections are allowed. You can have a lower bar for posting.
Moral problems for environmental restoration:
A post idea I’ve been playing with recently is converting part of my practicum write-up into a blog post about the ethics of environmental restoration projects. My practicum was with the “Billion Oyster Project”, which seeks to use oyster repopulation for geoengineering/ecosystem restoration, and I spent a big chunk of my write-up worrying about the environmental ethics of this, and I’ve been thinking this worrying could be turned into a decent blogpost.
I’ll discuss welfare biology briefly, but lots of it will survey non-consequentialist possibilities, like “does non-aggression animal ethics bar us from restoration?”, “if we care about the ecosystem as a moral patient, what does it take for restoration to be creating a new patient versus aiding an existing one?”, or “does creating a new ecosystem burden us with new special obligations, and are they obligations we can actually fulfill?”
I already have a substantial amount written for this, just because I have that section of my practicum write-up already, but it’s currently a bit rough and I might modify it to be more general than just the billion oyster case, or even to expand it in the direction of discussing the ethics of terraforming other planets. This is the one I am most leaning towards posting just because I am most likely to have a substantial amount of writing done for it on time.