Minerals And The Environment: We Don't Have To Choose Between Them

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
David S. Brown
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
57
File Size:
23021 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1989

Abstract

What troubles me so often about debates over the environment, which I have heard since I entered government in the late 1960's, is that the issues are so often presented as a false dilemma--the either-or fallacy in logic. The either-or fallacy allows only two possible choices: Either protect the environment or exploit it. In reality, however, there may be a few more options. The diverse, often competing, values that the Earth offers require us to weigh and balance those options through a range of policy options. A quality environment and economic growth and opportunity are not mutually exclusive. First, let me acknowledge that I support a set of resource values recognized in U.S. laws and deemed important down through history for the success of free, progressive, and secure societies: the importance of access to raw materials. Increasingly, however, mineral raw materials have been viewed at best as not particularly relevant to a sophisticated, technologic society, and at worst monstrously destructive of our natural environment. Both perceptions, in my judgment, are wrong.
Citation

APA: David S. Brown  (1989)  Minerals And The Environment: We Don't Have To Choose Between Them

MLA: David S. Brown Minerals And The Environment: We Don't Have To Choose Between Them. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1989.

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