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Joshua Duclos, "Wilderness, Morality, and Value" (Lexington Books, 2022)

Dec 1, 2025
Joshua Duclos, philosopher and author of *Wilderness, Morality, and Value*, explores the paradox of wilderness in relation to wildlife suffering. He challenges the notion that wilderness is inherently good for wildlife, highlighting the moral ambiguity of wilderness preservation. Duclos advocates for reframing our understanding of wilderness, discussing rewilding, wild animal welfare, and the anthropocentric values we assign to natural spaces. He emphasizes the need for more philosophical and scientific inquiry into intervention strategies that could alleviate suffering in wild animals.
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ANECDOTE

Global Life, New England Home

  • Joshua Duclos recounts living and studying in many places, including India, France, and the Czech Republic.
  • He says New England, especially New Hampshire, remains his home and shaped his love of wilderness.
ANECDOTE

Guide Work Sparked Philosophical Questions

  • Duclos describes working as an outdoor guide while doing graduate work, which blended his practical wilderness experience with philosophical reflection.
  • That dual life motivated his long-term interest in nature and wilderness ethics.
INSIGHT

Wilderness As Its Own Category

  • Duclos distinguishes 'wilderness as wilderness' from instrumental uses of nature and stresses we must define wilderness to assess any intrinsic value.
  • He argues many debates conflate wilderness with resources or experiences, missing wilderness's distinct identity.
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