
A scientific and ethical discourse
Organiser:
Florianne Koechlin, Blueridge Institute, Switzerland
Speakers:
Florianne Koechlin: Plant Rights
Günter Altner: Ethical Discourse
Parichart Suwanbubbha: The plants in Buddhism
Razan Zuayter: The plants in Islam
Jürg Stöcklin: Scientific Discourse
Outline:
Part 1: Scientific discourse
Input: Jürg Stöcklin, Associate Professor at the Botanic University, Basel
New scientific findings reveal: Plants communicate above and below ground, with the help of scents; they learn from experience and have a memory; they forage actively and flexibly – but in science they often still appear as living automatons with predetermined reactions. How we see plants, determines how we deal with them.
Part 2: Ethical discourse
Input: Günter Altner, emer. Prof biology and theology, Parichart Suwanbubbha Buddhist, Prof for comparative religions at the Mahidol Univ., Thailand and Razan Zuayter, President Arab Group for the Protection of Nature (APN), Jordan & Palestine
Today we acknowledge that at least higher animals have a dignity which is to be respected. Animals are not longer things. But the discussion about the dignity of plants is miles away from this point. You can do everything to plants, without any ethical concerns. The 2 speakers will show why it is necessary to change this view of plants, from a Christian- Occidential and from a Buddhist view.
Part 3: Possible Consequences
Input: Florianne Koechlin, biologis
Rediscovering the plant from a scientific and ethical perspective should lead to concrete consequences: How can the dignity of plants be respected? Do plants have rights ?
In Basel an interdisciplinary group of experts (farmers, biologists, philosophers, NGOactivists) developed – provisional – thesis and rights. Presentation and discussion.
Goal of the workshop is a deepening of the discussion of the new view of plants and first strategic thoughts about strategies for respecting the ‘dignity of plants’.