Description of Challenge
sustainable thinking and the drive towards a sustainable world will be strewn with difficult choices and dilemmas that may have no clear-cut or obvious right/wrong outcome. We need an ethical framework to support sustainability fundamentals of ecological and social needs whilst avoiding the sustainability thinking blunders across our path.“If success or failure of this planet and of human beings depended on how I am and what I do... how woujld I be? What would I do?” (Buckminster Fuller)
Solution
some choices are “right versus wrong” and most people only take a moment of reflection to come to the proper decision. Some choices are more complex and might be viewed as “right versus right”. From a sustainability perspective, there are six suggested categories, that can help guide our decision making
Individual versus community.
Global versus local.
Law versus truth.
Short term versus long term.
Toxic versus non toxic.
Justice versus mercy .
We can also consider the pros and cons of situations from the perspective of 3 principles that have been around for many hundreds of years.
.
1. Do what’s best for the greatest number of people. This is “ends-based” thinking.
2. Act in accordance with whatever laws we would like other people to follow in similar situations. This is “rules based” thinking.
3. Do what you want to do. This is “care based” thinking, known as “The Golden Rule”