Biodiversity Loss, Extinction, and Moral Responsibility
Biodiversity loss matters ethically because extinction is not merely a biological event. It is a moral event. This article examines the ethical significance of biodiversity decline through extinction, irreversibility, intrinsic and instrumental value, ecological interdependence, differentiated responsibility, climate and land-use pressures, and obligations to future generations. It argues that sustainable systems require more than technical conservation. They require moral restraint, public accountability, and institutions capable of treating species loss as a matter of justice and stewardship rather than as an acceptable externality.









