A Philosophical Analysis of the Inferential and Predictive Accuracy of the Green Paradox
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University of Ghana
Abstract
This thesis investigates Sinn’s Green Paradox, a theory that asserts that well-intentioned
climate mitigation designs aimed at reducing carbon emissions can, paradoxically, accelerate
a climate risk. By reducing the intricate web of climate realities to the rational, atomistic actions
of resource owners, the Paradox potentially oversimplifies the multifaceted dynamics of
climate change. In so doing, it neglects the unpredictable interplay among human,
technological, and nonhuman agents, each shaping outcomes in ways that defy linear causality.
Accordingly, I contend that this reduction of agency to a mere linear sequence
impoverishes both the inferential depth of the Paradox and the predictive reliability of designs
derived therefrom. Reflecting upon inferential logic, I critically analyse how rationality,
behavioural patterns, and technological determinism intertwine to influence the causal
trajectories of climate risk. Thus, this philosophical lens illuminates the limitations inherent in
the Paradox, compelling an advocacy for more nuanced, context-sensitive analyses.
Consequently, I argue that mitigation designs must transcend narrow data-driven
designs by incorporating an ethical responsiveness to the lived realities of risk. To advance this
argument, I employ agent-based modelling, enriched by philosophical insights from Reader’s
notion of the ‘other side of agency,’ Dempsey’s articulation of nonagential agency, and Okeja’s
idea of deliberative agency. These theoretical perspectives collectively inform my advocacy
for adaptive, participatory designs attuned to both local specificities and global exigencies.
Finally, while the Paradox foregrounds the unintended effects of designs, it does not
adequately engage with the philosophical reflections necessitated by the agential complexity
and radical uncertainty within the climate change spaces. My thesis, thus, situates the Paradox
within an expansive existential and ethical context, urging that climate mitigation designs
transcend economic reductionism to more fully account for the moral and epistemic challenges
inherent in our distributed agency and entangled lifeforms, life-worlds, and physical realities.
Description
PhD. Philosophy
