Green Paper 01 — Moral Biology
Green Papers: Notes Toward Planetary Guardianship
See series-wide editorial note on AI co-creation.
Abstract
This paper explores a simple proposition: ethics is not only a question of values or principles, but also a question of capacity. Moral life depends on regulation—within bodies, within relationships, and within institutions. Under sustained stress, systems lose coherence: attention narrows, trust declines, time horizons shrink, and responsibility becomes difficult to carry.
Moral Biology is not an attempt to reduce ethics to physiology, nor to replace normative thinking with science. It is an effort to clarify the conditions under which ethical judgment and collective responsibility remain possible— especially in an era marked by ecological constraint, institutional overload, and chronic uncertainty.
A calm starting point
People can know what ought to be done—and still be unable to do it.
Societies can state ethical ideals—and still produce harm through fragmentation, overload, and procedural drift.
This is not a denial of responsibility. It is a call for realism about the conditions that make responsibility possible.
Ethics as capacity
Ethical capacity includes attention that stays open rather than collapsing into threat; nervous systems that can recover; relationships that can tolerate difference without breaking; institutions that can coordinate without coercion; and cultures that can metabolize grief and conflict rather than carrying them as chronic stress.
Ethics is not only what we believe. It is what we can carry.
Body · relation · institution
A biological perspective does not excuse harm, and it does not reduce ethics to chemistry. It simply acknowledges constraint: stress shapes perception, and perception shapes responsibility.
Relational environments shape what is possible: trust, rupture, repair, and the costs of cooperation.
Institutions shape moral outcomes through incentives, rhythms, information flows, accountability, and default priorities— often without malice, simply through overload and fragmentation.
Planetary constraint
Ethics today is also biophysical. Planetary thresholds are not opinions. They deepen the meaning of responsibility and force longer time horizons—often carried under uncertainty, grief, and uneven burdens.
The moral challenge is not only “what is right.” It is also “what is viable.”
Methods / Editorial note
These Green Papers are written as field notes and working reflections. The drafting process combined (1) authorial writing and revision, (2) iterative prompts to an AI language model for drafting and editing, and (3) conventional editorial revision. Key practices:
- AI assistance: The AI produced early drafts and suggested language; the author reviewed and revised every paragraph.
- Sourcing: The papers use a “working bibliography” as orientation rather than a formal literature review. Citations are selective; empirical claims should be verified before formal use.
- Verification: The author is responsible for verification of cited sources and accepts responsibility for errors. Prior to academic submission, each reference and empirical claim should be independently checked and expanded.
- Versioning: Each paper carries a version line (v0.1). Substantial revisions will be tracked in a change log at Planetary Guardians / Spiralweb.
Closing questions
What is the minimum level of regulation required for ethical agency—individually and collectively? Which institutional patterns reliably produce moral overload, even when intentions are good? What practices restore coherence without becoming ideology? How do we design civic forms that support responsibility at planetary scale?
References (Working bibliography — selected, APA 7)
- Bachelard, G. (1958). The Poetics of Space. Beacon Press.
- Bateson, G. (1972). Steps to an Ecology of Mind. University of Chicago Press.
- Durkheim, É. (1912). The Elementary Forms of Religious Life (English translations available).
- Illich, I. (1973). Tools for Conviviality. Calder & Boyars.
- Latour, B. (2005). Reassembling the Social: An Introduction to Actor-Network-Theory. Oxford University Press.
- Lederach, J. P. (1997). Building Peace: Sustainable Reconciliation in Divided Societies. USIP Press.
- Meadows, D. H., Meadows, D. L., Randers, J., & Behrens III, W. W. (1972). The Limits to Growth. Universe Books.
- Ostrom, E. (1990). Governing the Commons. Cambridge University Press.
- Putnam, R. D. (2000). Bowling Alone: The Collapse and Revival of American Community. Simon & Schuster.
- Raworth, K. (2017). Doughnut Economics. Chelsea Green Publishing.
- Rockström, J., & Steffen, W. (2009). A safe operating space for humanity. Science (original planetary boundaries framing).
- Sennett, R. (2008). The Craftsman. Yale University Press.
- Simon, H. A. (1997). Administrative Behavior (4th ed.). Free Press.
- Steffen, W., Richardson, K., Rockström, J., et al. (2015). Planetary boundaries update / Anthropocene framing. Science.
- Tronto, J. C. (1993). Moral Boundaries: A Political Argument for an Ethic of Care. Routledge.
- Turner, V. (1969). The Ritual Process. Aldine.
- Weick, K. E. (1995). Sensemaking in Organizations. Sage.
- Winnicott, D. W. (1971). Playing and Reality. Tavistock Publications.
License & archival recommendation
These working papers are released under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license (CC BY 4.0). You are free to share and adapt with attribution. Please cite the version line (v0.1, January 2026) when re-using this material. For archival stability and citation, consider depositing a revised version in an open repository (e.g., Zenodo or OSF) to obtain a DOI.