@article{Ikerd_2016, place={Ithaca, NY, USA}, title={THE ECONOMIC PAMPHLETEER: Toward an Ethic of Sustainability}, volume={6}, url={https://foodsystemsjournal.org/index.php/fsj/article/view/413}, DOI={10.5304/jafscd.2016.063.001}, abstractNote={<p><em>First paragraphs:</em></p><p>Sustainable farming is ultimately an ethical commitment. As I have written in a previous column, "There are lots of other occupations where people can make more money with far fewer physical and intellectual challenges...Unless they truly believe that farming is their ’calling,’ I advise would-be farmers to choose other occupations" (Ikerd, 2015a, p. 10). A purpose or calling determines what a person should and should not do with their lives and thus is a matter of ethics.</p><p>In a previous column, I proposed a <em>Food Ethic </em>as a guide for purposeful eating (Ikerd, 2015b). I think we also need an <em>Ethic of Sustainability </em>as a guide for purposeful living, in farming or any other way of life. I propose: A<em> thing is right when it tends to enhance the quality and integrity of both human and nonhuman life on earth by honoring the unique responsibilities and rewards of humans as members and caretakers of the earth’s integral community. A thing is wrong when it tends otherwise.</em></p><p>First, the ethic goes beyond defining sustain-able practices or even principles by defining some things we might do as "right" and others as "wrong." Questions of right and wrong cannot be answered using currently accepted scientific methods. These are matters of belief or faith. Thus scientists tend to ignore them, and consequently so do most advocates of sustainability. This has allowed the concept of sustainability to be trivialized and coopted by corporations and marginalized by government agencies....</p>}, number={3}, journal={Journal of Agriculture, Food Systems, and Community Development}, author={Ikerd, John}, year={2016}, month={May}, pages={3–5} }