Lesson 13 of 20 · Ethical Thinking
DebateintermediateEnvironmental Ethics
What You'll Learn
Key Concept: Our responsibility to nature
Think About This
Two experts disagree about an issue related to our responsibility to nature. How would you evaluate both positions to form your own informed opinion?
Thinking Steps
Define
State the problem or question about our responsibility to nature in your own words. Be specific.
Investigate
What evidence or information is available? What might be missing?
Consider Angles
Look at this from at least two perspectives. What would someone who disagrees say?
Reason It Out
Connect evidence to your conclusion: 'The evidence shows X, which means Y, because Z.'
Test Your Thinking
Could you be wrong? What evidence would change your mind? Rate your confidence 1-10.
Reflect & Connect
What thinking skill did you use? How could you apply this to something in your real life?
Key Points
Master our responsibility to nature
Apply ethical thinking in real situations
Build habits of ethical thinking
Key Vocabulary
Bias
A tendency to think a certain way that may not be fair
Perspective
A particular point of view or way of seeing things
Evaluate
Judging how good or effective something is
Why This Matters in Real Life
In every career — from medicine to technology to the arts — ethical thinking is a fundamental skill. Developing it now gives you a significant advantage.
Talk About It
Discuss these questions with a friend, parent, or classmate.
- 1Give a real-world example where our responsibility to nature would help you make a better decision.
- 2What's the most common mistake people make with this kind of thinking?
- 3How does this thinking skill connect to other subjects you study in school?
- 4If you had to teach this to a younger student, what's the ONE thing you'd make sure they understood?
Check Your Understanding
Question 1
1 of 3What is the main idea of our responsibility to nature?
