Many social policies require substantial sacrifices by existing persons in order to benefit the yet-unborn members of future generations. There is a substantial consensus that we do have ethical obligations to consider the interests of those future persons in our decisions. However, the questions of whether we do in fact have such ethical obligations, and if so then how to properly balance those obligations with our obligations to existing persons, are greatly complicated by the often-overlooked problem of person-altering consequences. This brief essay is intended to communicate to a broad readership the nature and scope of this problem and its dramatic implications for addressing these ethical and policy assessment questions
It is plausible that current generations owe something to future generations. One possibility is tha...
Despite widely held beliefs that current generations bear heavy obligations to look out for the welf...
This paper analyses the main challenges (particularly those deriving from the non-identity problem a...
Many social policies require substantial sacrifices by existing persons in order to benefit the yet-...
This article examines whether policy-making is constrained by ethical obligations to future generati...
Editor\u27s Summary: A commonly cited rationale for environmental protection is the ethical obligati...
A central issue in environmental ethics is characterization of our “moral relationship” to future ge...
The questions of whether we have obligations towards future generations, why we have such obligation...
Future generations do not exist, and are not determinate in their make-up. The moral significance of...
Our everyday notions of responsibility are often driven by our need to justify ourselves to specific...
Neither environmental economics nor environmental philosophy have adequately examined the moral impl...
From an ethical point of view, preventing the development of conditions that threaten the existence ...
Rights-based accounts of obligations to future generations suffer from a number of theoretical diffi...
Over the last fifty years or so, the concern for the condition of the natural environment has come w...
The article revolves around the question whether, given some very “fundamental threats” to future ge...
It is plausible that current generations owe something to future generations. One possibility is tha...
Despite widely held beliefs that current generations bear heavy obligations to look out for the welf...
This paper analyses the main challenges (particularly those deriving from the non-identity problem a...
Many social policies require substantial sacrifices by existing persons in order to benefit the yet-...
This article examines whether policy-making is constrained by ethical obligations to future generati...
Editor\u27s Summary: A commonly cited rationale for environmental protection is the ethical obligati...
A central issue in environmental ethics is characterization of our “moral relationship” to future ge...
The questions of whether we have obligations towards future generations, why we have such obligation...
Future generations do not exist, and are not determinate in their make-up. The moral significance of...
Our everyday notions of responsibility are often driven by our need to justify ourselves to specific...
Neither environmental economics nor environmental philosophy have adequately examined the moral impl...
From an ethical point of view, preventing the development of conditions that threaten the existence ...
Rights-based accounts of obligations to future generations suffer from a number of theoretical diffi...
Over the last fifty years or so, the concern for the condition of the natural environment has come w...
The article revolves around the question whether, given some very “fundamental threats” to future ge...
It is plausible that current generations owe something to future generations. One possibility is tha...
Despite widely held beliefs that current generations bear heavy obligations to look out for the welf...
This paper analyses the main challenges (particularly those deriving from the non-identity problem a...