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  1. The biopsychosocial model of human unsustainability: a move toward consilience.M. E. Pratarelli - 2014 - Global Bioethics 25 (1):56-70.
    This article introduces one type of comprehensive complex systems model to explain why humanity continues to be frustrated by its lack of progress toward sustainability. Human overconsumption has now raised concern over the depletion of resources and environmental decay to critical levels that threaten the integrity of the human species, the planet's biodiversity and the global ecosystem in general. The focus on biopsychosocial explanations of human unsustainability is framed to encourage an interdisciplinary approach to problem solving towards a global bioethics. (...)
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  • The Biological and Evolutionist Bases of Ethic.Brunetto Chiarelli - 2004 - Global Bioethics 17 (1):61-70.
    A rational and naturalistic definition of ethical norms must stipulate the preservation of the DNA typical of the species and the maintenance of its intra specific variability. Indeed, this aim of preserving the DNA of the species and preserving its intra specific variability is the basic principle of bioethics. The historically limited behaviour can be related to morality which can assume different norms in different hostorical contexts. Morality could therefore be governed by religion or normalized by discipline. Ethics, instead of (...)
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  • The bioecological bases of global bioethics.B. Chiarelli - 2014 - Global Bioethics 25 (1):19-26.
    Adaptive success and evolution are determined by how we interact with the natural environment and all other forms of life. Yet in our pursuit to dominate the natural world, we have lost sight of this basic premise and continue to exploit natural resources, to contaminate, to consume more than necessary and to misuse our reproductive capacities. For this reason, global bioethics emerged in the 1980s, a culmination of mental resistance on the part of many observers who sought to readdress the (...)
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  • CAP and Kyoto Conference: Taxaion or Environmental Standards to Improve Carbon Sinks.G. L. Corinto - 2007 - Global Bioethics 20 (1-4):65-73.
    The improvement of air good quality is a worldwide priority. The Kyoto Protocol, and the agreements achieved in the following process negotiation, have defined the LULUCF activities the industrialized countries have at disposal to reach the engagements of reduction of the climate emissions-changing. The CAP reform affirmed that the content of the policy will secure a multifunctional, sustainable and competitive agriculture throughout Europe. It will also be able to maintain the landscape and the countryside, make a key contribution to the (...)
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  • The Biological and Evolutionist Bases of Ethics.B. Chiarelli - 1997 - Global Bioethics 10 (1-4):161-170.
    A rational and naturalistic definition of ethical norms must stipulate the preservation of the DNA typical of the species and the maintemance of its intra specific variability. Indeed, this aim of preserving the DNA of the species and preserving its intra specific variability is the basic principle of bioethics. The historically limited behaviour can be related to morality which can assume different norms in different historical contexts. Morality could therefore be governed by religious or normalised by discipline. Ethics instead a (...)
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