Justice Between Generations

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Justice Between Generations

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The non-existence of future persons. Uncertainty and future generations ... could truly claim, Even if railways and motor cars had never been invented, I ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Justice Between Generations


1
Justice Between Generations
  • Introduction
  • The Intergenerational Justice Argument
  • The non-existence of future persons
  • Uncertainty and future generations
  • Reciprocity and future generations
  • The non-identity problem
  • Further questions

2
1. Introduction
  • Concepts and definitions
  • Intergenerational justice
  • What is a future generation / future person?
  • Context
  • Pollution, radioactive waste, non-renewables
  • Ozone layer, Climate change
  • Art, culture and language
  • Natural and social-scientific understanding
  • Contrasting approaches
  • Impartiality, cosmopolitanism and individual
    rights
  • Partiality, nationalism and collectivism

3
2. Intergenerational Justice Argument (IJA)
  • P1 Depletionary policies threaten the well-being
    of future persons
  • P2 Human activities that threaten the well-being
    of future persons are unjust
  • C Depletionary policies are unjust

4
Some problems with the IJA
  • Against P1 The optimists
  • Against P1 Uncertainty
  • Against P1 Non-Identity
  • Against P2 Non-existence
  • Against P2 Reciprocity

5
3. Non-existence of future generations
  • Claim the formal nature of rights bars
    non-existing entities, whether dead or unborn,
    from being valid sources of just claims entities
    that do not yet exist cannot possess rights now
  • But is this true? It seems to depend on our
    theory of rights
  • Interest-theory justice involves the protection
    of interests of a sufficient importance to hold
    others under a duty to protect them (Raz)
  • Choice theory justice involves the protection of
    the freedoms, property and equality of persons
    who are active, choosing, agents (Steiner).
  • The former is (1) more in tune with the
    considered convictions of most people (2) fully
    compatible with future persons rights
  • Reconciliation with IJA there will be people in
    the future who come into existence with interests
    vulnerable to our acts/policies.

6
Future imperfect obligations
  • Another doubt about non-existence arguments is
    that justice also seems to contain elements not
    reducible to the discourse of rights and
    correlative duties.
  • Onora ONeill (eg) argues that there are
    imperfect obligations of environmental
    preservation towards as yet unspecified, and
    possibly unborn, agents whom we can assume will
    feel the impacts of our acts policy choices
  • Irrelevant, ONeill, that future people be
    ascribed a list of essential properties for
    rights-possession, but rather whether we already
    make assumptions about them in our actions
    practical reasoning.

7
4. Uncertainty and future generations
  • Risk vs. uncertainty
  • Predicting future events
  • Predicting future needs/interests
  • Low probability, high impact events
  • Predicting future technologies

8
  • The Generalised Uncertainty Argument (GUA)
  • P1 Obligations presuppose reliable information
    about the interests they protect
  • P2 Unlike the present and near future, we can
    have no reliable information about the remote
    future
  • C We have no obligations to the remote future

9
The Practical Uncertainty Argument (PUA)
  • P1 Obligations presuppose enough information
    about future events to discriminate between
    alternative hypotheses
  • P2 Uncertainty about the future is to great for
    us to discriminate between alternative hypotheses
  • C While we may be theoretically bound by
    obligations to future people we cannot in
    practice take future interests into account.

10
Key areas of uncertainty
  • Environment (ice age ? climate change ? ??)
  • Health (Spanish Flu ? H5N1 ? ??)
  • Technologies (guns ? semiconductors ? ??)
  • Resources (whale oil ? Germanium ? ??)
  • Warfare (rifle ? nuclear weapons ? ??)
  • Socioeconomic/political change (collapse of
    Soviet Union ? globalization ? ??)
  • Tastes (headware ? consumer goods ? ??)
  • Values (extended ? nuclear family ? ??)

11
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12
Some Erroneous predictions
  • Health if excessive smoking plays a role in
    lung cancer, it seems to be a minor one (HC
    Heuper, US National Cancer Institute (1954))
  • Technology Fooling around with alternating
    current is just a waste of time. Nobody will ever
    use it (Thomas Edison (1889))
  • Technology Rail travel at high speed is not
    possible, because passengers, unable to breath,
    would die of asphyxia (Dr Dionysys Larder,
    Astronomer, UCL (1820))
  • Nuclear energy/weapons Atomic energy might be
    as good as our present day explosives, but it is
    unlikely to produce anything more dangerous
    (Churchill (1939))
  • Tastes TV wont last because people will soon
    get tired of staring at a plywood box every
    night (Darryl Zanuck, 20th C Fox (1946))
  • Tastes There is no reason anyone would want a
    computer in their home (Ken Olson, DEC (1977))
  • Socio-political It will be years not in my
    time before a woman will become PM (Margaret
    Thatcher (1969))

13
Are the uncertainties exaggerated?
  • Against GUA
  • Overstates the certainties of present near
    future
  • Moral judgment is inherently speculative and
    sketchy
  • Assumes an epistemological double-standard !
  • Against PUA
  • Enough knowledge to identify key risks
    uncertainties
  • Biomedical interests
  • Environmental interests (clean air, water)
  • Socio-political interests (stable institutions)

14
One Approach to Intergenerational Uncertainty
  • Avoid harm, be sensitive to sleeper effects
  • Low or zero discount rate
  • Substitution, not absolute conservation
  • Preserve options not promote welfare
  • Two Key Principles
  • Sustainable development Development that meets
    the needs of the present without harming the
    needs of future generations
  • Precautionary principle Actions giving rise to
    possible but quantitatively unknown and
    potentially large risks ought to be avoided or
    corrected

15
5. Reciprocity and future generations
  • Earlier generations seem to perform their
    laborious tasks only for the sake of the later
    oneswithout themselves being able to share in
    the happiness they were preparing
  • Immanuel Kant
  • We are always doing something for Posterity,
    but I would fain see Posterity doing something
    for us
  • Joseph Addison

16
The non-reciprocity problem
  • P1 Requirements of justice are owed only to
    those who can reciprocate with us.
  • P2 reciprocity exists only between persons who
    can affect each others interests.
  • P3 it is not possible to affect the interests of
    those who belong to earlier generations.
  • C social policies that threaten the well-being
    of future generations are not unjust.

17
Limits of the reciprocity problem
  • Against P1 Is justice reciprocity-based?
  • Limiting P1 Negative vs. positive duties
  • Against P2 Indirect and Cost Reciprocity
  • Against P3 Posthumous harm
  • Taking reciprocity seriously

18
Solving the Non-Reciprocity problem The Chain of
Concern Model
  • P1 Human beings share a sentimental concern for
    their nearest descendants
  • P2 Because this concern is (near) universal, the
    well-being of the next generation can be treated
    as a public good
  • C Each person in this, and all subsequent,
    generations is obliged to contribute their fair
    share to activities that protect the needs and
    interests of the next generation

19
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20
Problems with the Chain of Concern Model
  • People who are not motivated to save for the sake
    of future generations
  • Non-procreators
  • Harming remote generations

21
The Stewardship-Trusteeship Model
  • P1 many of the benefits enjoyed by present
    persons were produced by past persons with the
    intention that they be preserved indefinitely or
    for a specified amount of time.
  • P2 although the intended recipients of these
    benefits are not always specified, these benefits
    are nonetheless intended for someone.
  • P3 the obligation to pass on these benefits to
    future persons is analogous to the obligation to
    reciprocate for benefits received from unknown
    contemporaries.
  • C it is fitting and proportionate that
    existing persons pass on these benefits to our
    successors to satisfy the moral requirements of
    reciprocity (Becker, Reciprocity, p. 231).

22
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23
Problems with the Stewardship Model
  • Unintentionally produced benefits
  • Involuntarily received benefits
  • The Principle of Fairness

24
6. The non-identity problem
  • It may help to think about this question how
    many of us could truly claim, Even if railways
    and motor cars had never been invented, I would
    still have been born?
  • Derek Parfit (1984)

25
How to think about the identity problem
26
How not to think about the identity problem
27
The identity problem
  • P1 If any particular person had not been
    conceived when s/he was in fact conceived, s/he
    would never have existed.
  • P2 A social policy is unjust only if it harms a
    particular person.
  • P3 A social policy harms a particular person
    only if it makes them worse off than they
    otherwise would have been.
  • P4 Adopting a depletionary policy would be a
    necessary condition of all future persons coming
    into existence.
  • C Adopting a policy of depletion would not be
    unjust.

28
Limits of the identity problem
  • Depletion affect identities of existing persons
  • Depletion affect identities of all future
    persons
  • Depletion may result in some people leading lives
    that are not worth living
  • Taking non-identity seriously

29
7. Further questions
  • Is justice person-affecting or impersonal?
  • Can later generations harm earlier generations?
  • What is the appropriate currency of
    intergenerational justice?
  • How far into the future does justice extend?
  • Can there be natural injustices?

30
Next week.
  • Solving the identity problem.
  • Group interests?
  • Impersonal values?
  • Specific interests?
  • Subjunctive harm?
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