Human history has been entwined with the history of nature since the earliest accounts of creation. The advent of the environmental sciences secularised those histories, postulating new causal and consequential connections between nature and humanity. The Anthropocene is but the latest of the narratives that tie the laws of the Earth to the activities of nature’s most interventionist offspring: the human species. In this talk, Sheila Jasanoff, Pforzheimer Professor of Science and Technology Studies at the Harvard Kennedy School, will trace the modern scientific narratives of human-nature relationships through the parallel lens of environmental law. She will ask what difference the concept of the Anthropocene—in particular, its embrace of the geologic timescale—makes to our notions of responsibility toward a planet that we not only inhabit but also consume and transform through human enterprise.
The Anthropocene Lectures are open to the public. No registration required.
Veranstalter: | IASS Potsdam, Max Planck Institute für the History of Science |
Veranstaltungsort: | Max Planck Institute für the History of Science Boltzmannstraße 22 14195 Berlin |
Beginn: | 25.06.2018 17:00 Uhr |
Ende: | 25.06.2018 20:00 Uhr |
Internet: | Weitere Informationen |