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  1. Biocentrism and Artificial Life.Robin Attfield - 2012 - Environmental Values 21 (1):83-94.
    Biocentrism maintains that all living creatures have moral standing, but need not claim that all have equal moral significance. This moral standing extends to organisms generated through human interventions, whether by conventional breeding, genetic engineering, or synthetic biology. Our responsibilities with regard to future generations seem relevant to non-human species as well as future human generations and their quality of life. Likewise the Precautionary Principle appears to raise objections to the generation of serious or irreversible changes to the quality of (...)
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  • Emergence of a techno-legal specialty: Animal tests to assess chemical safety in the UK, 1945–1960.Anne-Marie Coles - 2021 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 90 (C):131-139.
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  • Censoring Science in Research Officially.Clive L. Spash - 2010 - Environmental Values 19 (2):141-146.
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  • The Controversy over GM Canola in Australia as an Ontological Politics.Rosemary Robins - 2012 - Environmental Values 21 (2):185 - 208.
    In this paper I examine the controversy over genetically modified canola (GM canola) in Australia as an ontological politics, drawing on recent work in Science and Technology Studies that extends actor-network theory and its commitment to the contingency of reality. I examine three different and overlapping performances of GM canola: as an agronomic object, a risk object and a market object. I focus on how each performance effects similarities and differences between GM and conventional canola that are productive of ontological (...)
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