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Title: Revising Rawls: A


1
  • Revising Rawls A Force of Nature Original
    Position
  • Charles Tandy, Ph.D. ? Fooyin University ? Taiwan
  • www.DoctorTandy.com
  • This is a ROUGH DRAFT!
  • Your comments are welcomed tandy_at_ria.edu
  • PART ONE
  • 1. Introductory Remarks
  • 2. Rawlsian Basics
  • 3. Alternative Original Positions
  • 4. Alternative Approaches to Theory Construction
  • 5. A Revisionist Rawls, and an Alternative
    Position
  • 6. Historical Dynamics and the Force of Nature
    Position
  • PART TWO
  • 7. Technology Today to Implement Principles Zero
    and One
  • 8. An Evolutionary Implementation of the
    Principles
  • 9. Closing
    Remarks 1

2
  • Revising Rawls A Force of Nature Original
    Position
  • Charles Tandy, Ph.D. ? Fooyin University ? Taiwan
  • Abstract
  • John Rawls (1921-2002) analyzed the
    conditions of a just society and of decent
    relations between societies.
  • PART ONE We piece together his various revisions
    of his own work and present a new and original
    scheme of five (not two) principles of a revised
    Rawlsian justice as fairness original position,
    listed in lexical priority. This Revised Rawls
    is then used as a springboard toward developing
    our own alternative position. Rawlss conception
    of fairness leaves out, in an important way,
    the injustices of nature.
  • PART TWO We show that almost now is the
    opportune time for almost universal peace via
    implementation of our non-controversial PFIT
    (Peaceful, Free, Intentional, Transparent
    physical-social technology) proposal.
    Technological humans have become a force of
    nature.

3
  • 1. Introductory Remarks
  • ... the limits of the possible are not given by
    the actual, for we can to a greater or lesser
    extent change political and social institutions,
    and much else.
  • John Rawls (Rawls, 2001 5)
  • We have become more powerful than any force of
    nature.
  • Al Gore (Gore, 2006 300)

4
  • 2. Rawlsian Basics
  • According to the distinguished
    philosopher, Martha Nussbaum John Rawls is the
    most distinguished moral and political
    philosopher of our age. (Nussbaum, 2001) John
    Rawls (1921-2002) is known for his theory of
    justice as fairness based on his methodology of
    the original position. The justice as
    fairness idea is that of a just society
    perceived as a system of cooperation, publicly
    transparent, which is fair to all its free and
    equal citizens.

5
  • In Rawlss initial A Theory of Justice (1971)
    TofJ, he focuses on the domestic dimensions of
    a just society. The original position idea is
    that of a kind of original or first step to help
    us engage in fair or impartial deliberation about
    the principles and structures of a just society.
    In said thought experiment, one attempts to
    modify the principles and structures, and the
    conditions of the original position, while taking
    into account other relevant considerations such
    as the empirics of the actual world, until they
    coordinate to produce a reasonable political
    conception.

6
  • Rawls later said that his initial TofJ was
    flawed or confused in that he there failed to
    understand the proper role of a political
    conception in his theorizing. (Rawls, 1999
    179-180) Herein we will try to take seriously the
    distinction Rawls makes between a "political
    conception" and "comprehensive doctrines." A
    political conception addresses persons only with
    respect to, or at the level of, citizenship.
    However, comprehensive doctrines, whether
    religious or secular, address the full range, or
    deep levels, of ones personhood and
    relationships.

7
  • Rawls says that his TofJ should have attempted to
    formulate a political conception rather than a
    comprehensive doctrine. For Rawls, it is possible
    for numerous comprehensive doctrines to live
    together in a single society (with a common
    political conception). It may be possible to
    formulate a reasonable political conception
    without first formulating and justifying a
    comprehensive doctrine or paying too much
    attention to metaphysics.

8
  • 3. Alternative Original Positions
  • Rawls has formulated more than one
    original position e.g., he analyzed (1) the
    conditions of a just society (in TofJ, 1971)
    and, (2) the conditions of decent relations
    between societies (in The Law of Peoples, 1999
    LofP). In alternative thought experiments in
    the form of original positions, there can be
    alternative topics to be deliberated and
    alternative parties to the deliberation.
  • Likewise, the veil of ignorance
    (explained below) is modifiable. Rawls is here
    influenced or inspired by Kant, who argued that
    reasonable moral decisions and authentic autonomy
    are closely related. Authentic autonomy and
    reasonable moral decisions are difficult in that
    we too easily become confused by our own passions
    and perspectives. We may passionately feel or
    firmly think that our decision was fair only
    later to change our mind.

9
  • So in TofJ, Rawls drapes each party in the
    original position with a veil of ignorance
    here this means that each party does not know
    which person (citizen) she is representing in the
    dialogue. Citizens will vary in passions,
    perspectives, skills, abilities, personalities,
    religions, luck, etc. With fairness in mind, the
    parties are deliberating for the purpose of
    formulating and agreeing to the domestic
    principles of justice.
  • The veiling of the parties in the original
    position is meant to help provide a fair state
    of nature for rational deliberation and thus a
    hopeful basis for constructing a reasonable
    theory that can move us toward a more nearly just
    society. The persons in the original position are
    to reach unanimous agreement in their choice of
    principles. Therefore, we can view the choice in
    the original position from the standpoint of one
    person selected at random. (Rawls, 1971 139)

10
  • 4. Alternative Approaches to Theory Construction
  • The original position (including the
    veil of ignorance) is only part of a Rawlsian
    approach to theory construction we have already
    seen that, according to Rawls, alternative
    original positions are desirable. In this
    section, we will see that Rawls also believes,
    more generally, that alternative approaches to
    theory construction are called for.

11
.
  • In 31 of TofJ, Rawls outlines the four-stage
    sequence he uses to construct his domestic theory
    (justice as fairness).
  • But at (Rawls, 2001 48) he provides the
    following short summary In the first stage, the
    parties adopt the principles of justice behind a
    veil of ignorance. Limitations on knowledge
    available to the parties are progressively
    relaxed in the next three stages the stage of
    the constitutional convention, the legislative
    stage in which laws are enacted as the
    constitution allows and as the principles of
    justice require and permit, and the final stage
    in which the rules are applied.
  • It is now time to mention major principles
    arrived at in the justice as fairness original
    position as revised by Rawls in (Rawls, 2001
    42-44, 48)

12
.
  • ? Each person has the same indefeasible claim to
    a fully adequate scheme of equal basic liberties,
    which scheme is compatible with the same scheme
    of liberties for all freedom of thought and
    liberty of conscience political liberties (for
    example, the right to vote and to participate in
    politics) and freedom of association, as well as
    the rights and liberties specified by the liberty
    and integrity (physical and psychological) of the
    person and finally, the rights and liberties
    covered by the rule of law.
  • ? Social and economic inequalities are to satisfy
    two conditions first, they are to be attached to
    offices and positions open to all under
    conditions of fair equality of opportunity and
    second, they are to be to the greatest benefit of
    the least-advantaged members of society (the
    difference principle).

13
.
  • According to Rawls, the first of the two
    principles has priority it establishes basic
    liberties and a just constitution.
  • The second applies to social and economic justice
    in the background institutions, where fair
    equality of opportunity has priority over the
    difference principle. Taken together, these are
    sometimes viewed as Rawlss two principles and
    two priorities however we will see below that
    Rawls will add more principles and priorities to
    the original position.

14
.
  • In the meantime, here is a simplified outline of
  • the justice as fairness four-stage
    sequence
  • 1. Original Position Establish the two
    principles above.
  • 2. Constitutional Convention Incorporate the
    first principle above.
  • 3. Legislative Stage Incorporate the second
    principle above.
  • 4. Administrative Stage Apply the rules.

15
.
  • We have just described his TofJ approach to
    theory construction with respect to establishing
    a just domestic society.
  • But his LofP approach to theory construction with
    respect to establishing decent relations between
    societies is another matter. In LofP, Rawls is
    able to imagine various kinds of societies, some
    of whom may be well-ordered enough to become
    members of a cooperative system of peoples that
    includes constitutional democracies and decent
    non-democracies. Rawls does not believe that any
    decent non-democracies presently exist, but he
    does not want to rule out the possibility that
    they may exist in the future.

16
.
  • Rawls compares his two (TofJ and LofP) original
    positions in three respects, as follows (Rawls,
    2001 40)
  • The (TofJ and LofP) original positions compared
  • ?1.
  • In TofJ, the parties represent individual
    citizens actual citizens often subscribe to
    comprehensive doctrines.
  • In LofP, the parties represent peoples
    (societies) peoples (as peoples) often do NOT
    subscribe to comprehensive doctrines.
    (Specifically, a constitutional democracy as such
    subscribes to a political conception and does NOT
    subscribe to a comprehensive doctrine.)

17
.
  • The (TofJ and LofP) original positions compared
  • ? 2.
  • (TofJ) An individuals fundamental interests as
    such have to do with their individual conception
    of the good, such as the pursuit of their
    happiness.
  • (LofP) A societys fundamental interests as such
    have to do with its conception of justice, such
    as receiving proper respect from other peoples.
  • ? 3.
  • In TofJ, the parties are selecting the principles
    of a just structure or political conception for a
    domestic society.
  • In LofP, the parties are selecting the principles
    of the Law of Peoples for direct and mutual use
    by all well-ordered peoples.

18
.
  • Another difference between the 1971 TofJ original
    position and the 1999 LofP original position is
    that the veils of ignorance differ.
  • In the 1999 LofP original position, the veil
    seems lighter in that the parties know they are
    not representing any society whatsoever, but only
    well-ordered peoples. One may be tempted to say
    more, that each party also knows if they are
    representing a constitutional democracy, on the
    one hand, or a decent non-democracy, on the
    other. If you have recently read LofP for the
    first time, you may say this is obviously the
    case.

19
.
  • Further reflection, however, may suggest
    otherwise. ?Rawls has us imagine an original
    position representing constitutional democracies.
    ?He has us imagine another original position
    representing decent non-democracies.
  • With respect to the Law of Peoples, the results
    from their respective original positions are
    identical. Herewith let us now suggest, given
    such results, that one can imagine the same
    results if both sets of parties had been
    deliberating in a single original position under
    a common veil of ignorance. (Of course, whether
    Rawls has correctly transcribed the results in
    each case is yet another matter!)

20
.
  • Given all that has been said so far, we can see
    that the four-stage sequence used in TofJ is not
    the sequence of theory construction that Rawls
    would find appropriate for his LofP.
  • The LofP sequence is simple and direct by
    comparison
  • In the original position, decide on the
    principles or rules of the Law of Peoples.
  • Have all well-ordered peoples endorse and follow
    said Law of Peoples.

21
.
  • 5. A Revisionist Rawls, and an Alternative
    Position
  • Next below we will try, briefly, to piece
    together his various revisions of his own work to
    give us a Revisionist Rawls. This will then be
    used as a springboard or point of departure
    toward developing our own alternative position.
  • After consulting with the Rawlsian scholar,
    Samuel Freeman, the following new and original
    scheme is presented as the five (not two)
    principles of a revised Rawlsian justice as
    fairness original position, listed in lexical
    priority
  • 0. Metabasic rights. Rawls credits R. G. Peffer
    (1990) for this principle.
  • 1. Basic liberties.
  • 2. Equal opportunity.
  • 3. Just assistance (A. just savings and, B. duty
    of assistance).
  • 4. Difference principle or permissible
    inequalities.

22
.
  • 0. Metabasic rights.
  • Rawls credits R. G. Peffer (1990) for this
    principle.
  • Rawls endorses principle zero (called above
    0. Metabasic rights) as lexically prior to all
    others (Rawls, 2001 44, n.7). Only principle
    zero and principle one are incorporated as soon
    as possible into his theory construction sequence
    (i.e., immediately at the Constitutional
    Convention stage). Principle zero, Rawls says,
    requires that basic needs be met, at least
    insofar as their being met is a necessary
    condition for citizens to understand and to be
    able fruitfully to exercise principle one
    their basic rights and liberties.

23
.
  • 3. Just assistance
  • (A. just savings and, B. duty of assistance).
  • We have reconstructed two Rawlsian principles
    into one as principle 3 according to Rawls,
    principle 3 is different from the others in that
    there are circumstances under which it would in
    whole or in part (there are two parts principle
    A principle B) terminate or, rather, be
    temporarily suspended but in any case, it is
    lexically prior to principle 4. The principles A
    and B of principle 3 have no lexical priority
    relation to each other so far as our reading of
    Rawls can determine. The principle A corresponds
    to the just savings principle mentioned in
    various parts of TofJ, including 44 however
    Rawls does not like his 1971 version of 44 he
    may or may not have been satisfied with his 1999
    version of 44. The principle B corresponds to
    the duty of assistance mentioned in various parts
    of LofP, including 15.

24
.
  • Rawlss great inspiration, Immanuel Kant,
    formulated a cosmopolitan conception, the
    Commonwealth of Ends (sometimes translated as
    the Kingdom of Ends).
  • But Kant also developed a non-cosmopolitan
    conception which Rawls re-formulates as the Law
    of Peoples. Perhaps in Rawls there is a similar
    tension between cosmopolitan and
    non-cosmopolitan conceptions? Indeed, one can
    rather easily (if one so wishes) read Rawlss
    1971 TofJ (justice as fairness) as either a
    domestic or a cosmopolitan conception see, e.g.,
    (Pogge, 2006).

25
.
  • At times it does indeed seem obvious that Rawls
    would like us to aspire to attempt to formulate
    the original position of a cosmopolitan and
    omni-temporal (eternal) political conception.
  • The idea seems to be that given said original
    position, we will be able to see more clearly the
    political structure which is most appropriate for
    any societal context in any stage of history.
    This paper so aspires even should our results
    turn out, at best, to be only partially
    successful.

26
.
  • On the last page of the last section of both the
    1971 and 1999 versions of TofJ, we find Rawls
    speaking of the eternal original position here
    are his words
  • Without conflating all persons into one but
    recognizing them as distinct and separate, it
    the eternal original position enables us to
    be impartial, even between persons who are not
    contemporaries but who belong to many
    generations. Thus to see our place in society
    from the perspective of this position is to see
    it sub specie aeternitatis it is to regard the
    human situation not only from all social but also
    from all temporal points of view. The perspective
    of eternity ... is a certain form of thought and
    feeling that rational persons can adopt within
    the world. (Rawls, 1971 587)

27
.
  • To attempt to set up such an omni-temporal
    original position, we may find it wise to attempt
    to see history as dynamic and as potentially
    developmental. When we read Rawls, we may find
    his own more limited formulations as
    (philosophically) eloquent descriptions of static
    objects in reflective equilibrium. Amartya Sen
    criticizes his teacher for this culmination
    outcomes approach which fails to fully
    appreciate the historical dynamics of development
    and freedom see, e.g., (Sen, 1999 27-39,
    112-118).
  • Arguably, the air of Rawlss high philosophical
    mountain is too thin for the needed vitality of
    historical dynamism. Or, to put it another way,
    Rawlss original positions are stuck in time, in
    Humes world of moderate scarcity. On occasion
    Rawls seems genuinely afraid of wealth (whether
    within a world of moderate scarcity or beyond it)
    as a detriment to proper political structures and
    virtuous human relations.

28
.
  • In addition, Rawlss conception of fairness
    leaves out, in an important way, the injustices
    of nature. So, as we seek to formulate our new
    original position, we will need to broaden our
    perspective to include both the physical and the
    social world. Indeed, our political conception
    must widen beyond society to include environment.
    It will need to encompass not only new social
    structures (social technologies and inventions)
    but also new physical structures (physical
    technologies and inventions).
  • Like it or not, our advanced technologies make us
    a force of nature. Technology, at least
    potentially, allows us to literally remake our
    physical-social environment. So now that we are
    outside the Rawlsian box, we have a broader and
    more realistic perspective from which to attempt
    to develop our dynamic force of nature original
    position or political conception.

29
.
  • 6. Historical Dynamics and the Force of Nature
    Position
  • There are numerous alternative approaches
    to the periodization of human history. As we
    consider the dynamics of humanitys past,
    present, and future, we will want to try to make
    our periodization both accurate and relevant for
    the task at hand. Our belief is that the
    periodization formulated below is NOT
    controversial in any case, it was inspired by
    Kenneth E. Boulding (Boulding, 1964).
  • PERIOD I Before 3500BCE
  • Preglobal Consciousness (Preglobalizational
    Developments)
  • PERIOD II 3500BCE2000CE
  • Global Consciousness (Globalizational
    Developments)
  • PERIOD III After 2000CE
  • Postglobal Consciousness (Postglobalizational
    Developments)

30
.
  • PERIOD I Before 3500BCE Preglobal Consciousness
  • Era of Precivilization (Nomadic Tribes
    Agricultural Communities)
  • Hunting and Farming
  • Make-do Technology (languages, sticks, etc.)
  • PERIOD II 3500BCE2000CE Global Consciousness
  • Era of Civilization (Cities Empires)
  • Trade and War
  • Inventive Technology (writings, guns, etc.)
  • PERIOD III After 2000CE Postglobal
    Consciousness
  • Era of Transcivilization (Intentional
    Communities)
  • (Peace and Freedom? This question is addressed in
    7 below.)
  • Force-of-nature Technology (computers,
    nanomeds, etc.)

31
.
  • For the moment, let us assume that advanced
    (physical-social) proactive force of nature
    technologies have the capacity to provide an
    environment of stable peace and evolving freedom
    which will also allow all persons and peoples
    therein to live beyond moderate scarcity in great
    wealth. (Later, in 7 below, we will show that
    this assumption turns out to be
    non-controversial.)
  • If this is the case, then a great moral-political
    imperative for our time is not so much whether we
    can more justly rearrange the chairs on the deck
    of the ship, but how quickly or slowly we will
    build new ships (intentional communities) not
    possible with previous technology.

32
.
  • Thus the new issue for our new time is not so
    much the old moral-political issue of moderate
    scarcity (Rawlss principles 2, 3, and 4 i.e.,
    2 equal opportunity, 3 just assistance, and 4
    permissible inequalities). Rawls made a
    philosophically heroic effort to solve a hugely
    difficult long-standing moral-political problem.
  • Fortunately, given our unprecedented level of
    technology, the actual philosophical
    moral-political task in our day (at the practical
    level) is easier than Rawls imagined. By focusing
    on the moral-political principles zero and one,
    we can guide our physical-social technology to
    evolutionarily realize the two principles at
    deeper and deeper levels over time while making
    the other principles effectively obsolete. For
    the sake of clarity, here are the two principles
    zero and one (based on 5 and 4 above)

33
.
  • 0. The Principle of Metabasic Rights
  • Each person has the same indefeasible claim to a
    fully adequate scheme of equal metabasic rights,
    which scheme is compatible with the same scheme
    of rights for all These rights include the
    rights required to meet basic needs, at least
    insofar as their being met is a necessary
    condition for citizens to understand and to be
    able fruitfully to exercise their basic liberties
    (see the principle of basic liberties).
  • 1. The Principle of Basic Liberties
  • Each person has the same indefeasible claim to a
    fully adequate scheme of equal basic liberties,
    which scheme is compatible with the same scheme
    of liberties for all These liberties include
    freedom of thought and liberty of conscience
    political liberties (for example, the right to
    vote and to participate in politics) and freedom
    of association, as well as the rights and
    liberties specified by the liberty and integrity
    (physical and psychological) of the person and,
    the rights and liberties covered by the rule of
    law.

34
.
  • PART TWO
  • 7. Technology Today to Implement Principles Zero
    and One
  • 8. An Evolutionary Implementation of the
    Principles
  • 9. Closing Remarks
  • 7. Technology Today to Implement Principles Zero
    and One
  • This section is adapted from previous work see,
    e.g., (Tandy, 2011). The purpose of this section
    is to defend the claim that advanced
    (physical-social) proactive force of nature
    technologies have the capacity to provide an
    environment of stable peace and evolving freedom
    which will also allow all persons and peoples
    therein to live beyond moderate scarcity in great
    wealth. We will find that this claim turns out to
    be non-controversial. As we shall see,
    Postglobalizational Developments or Consciousness
    III encourages us to use our new
    Force-of-nature Technology to establish a
    peaceful and free environment of intentional
    communities.

35
.
  • First however we comment on related matters that
    are also related to the two moral-political
    principles
  • We have a right to live in an environment of
    stable peace and evolving freedom. The autonomous
    rights of that individual person (call her Lou)
    imply your individual rights too. (Otherwise, an
    assertion of rights is an assertion about power,
    not about rights.) Buford (Buford, 1984 187)
    points out that For Lou to have a moral right
    to do x, someone else is morally obligated to act
    or refrain from acting regarding x if Lou wants
    that person to do so. On the one hand, where
    there is an obligation there is not necessarily a
    right. On the other hand Wherever there is a
    right to something there is a corresponding duty
    or obligation to attempt to honor that right.
  • Thus the interactive perspective of individual
    moral rights, properly understood, views persons
    as social beings instead of as egoistical atoms.

36
.
  • Based on Rawls and on Buford, we may now
    articulate some of our findings with respect to
    individual (moral) rights and intentional
    (voluntary) communities Authentically choosing
    ones individual rights to life and liberty
    carries analogous implications for ones relation
    to others.
  • The individual rights we identify with life and
    living mean we have mutual-obligations not to
    kill each other our societal environment ought
    to be one of stable peace devoid of violence,
    killing, and war.
  • The individual rights we identify with living and
    liberty mean we have mutual-obligations to insure
    freedom of thought, of expression, of
    association, and to pursue happiness.
  • Therefore, our mutual-obligation society of
    individual rights includes the right to live in
    peaceful and free communities.

37
.
  • Presently we will proceed to show that
    Consciousness III force of nature technologies
    have the capacity to provide a Consciousness III
    post-scarcity environment of stable peace and
    evolving freedom.
  • In the process, we show this claim
    to be non-controversial.
  • We will begin first by discussing a feasible
    physical (green habitat) technology then we will
    discuss a feasible social (treaty organization)
    technology, finding that the two technologies
    combined result in a peaceful, free, prosperous
    environment of green habitat communities.

38
.
  • The astounding capacity of future technology can
    be glimpsed at by taking a non-controversial look
    at the future of extraterrestrial ONeill
    Habitats and of molecular Drexler Technology (and
    their eventual melding together).1, 2
  • We say non-controversial because the controversy
    in each case is over when, not if. Thus for
    present purposes we can overcome this dispute by
    simply talking non-controversially about these
    kinds of capacities in the far future (bypassing
    timeline predictions of near or far).

39
.
  • Abundant extraterrestrial resources will be used
    to construct greener-than-earth, self-sufficient,
    self-replicating ONeill Habitats (not to be
    confused with space stations!) in orbit around
    planets and suns.
  • Accordingly, barring catastrophe, it seems highly
    likely that in the long run almost all of our
    multitudinous offspring will be permanently
    living and working somewhere in the universe
    other than on planet Earth.
  • Indeed, molecular Drexler Technology is NOT
    required for construction and development of
    extraterrestrial ONeill Habitats (SEG
    communities) it just makes the task easier.

40
.
  • As life grew denser on planet earth, the
    environment on which each organism depended
    increasingly consisted of other living things.
  • But the development of advanced ONeill Habitats
    (Sustainable Extraterrestrial Greener-than-earth
    communities, or SEGs) in orbit around a planet or
    a sun will mean multiple, self-reproducing
    biospheres "unlimited free land (freely
    available territory) and, the realistic
    possibility of intentional (i.e., voluntary)
    communities for all persons.
  • Instead of remaining in the community or culture
    of one's birth, one will be realistically free to
    experiment living in one kind of community or
    another.

41
.
  • The following metaphorical insights have been
    widely quoted by SEG experts
  • "The Earth was our cradle, but we will not live
    in the cradle forever."
  • "Space habitats SEGs are the children of Mother
    Earth."
  • According to Carl Sagan, our long-term survival
    is a matter of spaceflight or extinction all
    civilizations become either space-faring or
    extinct.
  • According to the mass extinction article in The
    Columbia Encyclopedia (6th ed.) The
    extinctions, however, did not conform to the
    usual evolutionary rules regarding who
    survives the only factor that appears to
    have improved a family of organisms chance
    of survival was widespread geographic
    colonization.1

42
.
  • Now below we will discuss a feasible social
    (treaty organization) technology.
  • We will find that the two technologies (green
    habitat and treaty organization) combined result
    in a peaceful, free, prosperous environment of
    green habitat communities.
  • The Treaty Organization is to serve two
    functions (1) as gateway between planet earth
    and peaceful space this includes enforceably
    banning weapons and weapons-making from
    extraterrestrial space and, (2) as midwife to an
    evolving Extraterrestrial Society.

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  • On the one hand, our political interests today
    may constrain us in our present time and place.
    But, on the other hand, our political interests
    today may free us with respect to future times
    and places (e.g., our extraterrestrial future).
  • What this means is that today we have a realistic
    prospect of proactively establishing the legal
    structure and enforcement powers needed for a
    world at stable peace in extraterrestrial space.

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  • How many persons or peoples would accept or
    endorse a Space Treaty that effectively and
    enforceably bans weapons and their manufacture
    from extraterrestrial space?
  • In this context (a good and practical legacy to
    our offspring), we should think we should be
    diligent enough to rally enough supporters. For
    example, TO might be signed originally by, say,
    twenty Peoples or States (including most of the
    "major" ones).
  • But the Treaty would be strongly effectively
    enforced by TOs Agency for a Better Cosmos (ABC)
    NOT by Peoples/States against ALL and
    EVERYONE, whether or not they sign the Treaty.

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  • What seems to us both practical and fair in this
    context is to think in terms of an
    Extraterrestrial Society of Intentional
    Communities. The previous analyses are
    suggestive.
  • Each Intentional Community would have to work
    within the framework of peace established
    immediately above and as articulated in more
    detail below as PFIT given such an
    Extraterrestrial Society framework of
    requirements, consider now the following with
    respect to Intentional Communities

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  • At the level of the Society (of Communities) we
    have
  • Peace Weapons, weapons-making, and violence
    (including animal cruelty and serious animal
    pain) are strongly effectively enforceably banned
    (and so-called research would not be permitted
    as a way to get around the ban)
  • Freedom Every individual person is fully aware
    of and fully informed of their general liberty to
    leave their community. This too is strongly
    effectively enforced.
  • The Society and the Communities necessarily work
    closely together for the purpose of practical
    coordination to help prevent potential conflicts
    in particular, the Society and the Communities
    necessarily work closely together to fully insure
    the liberties and responsibilities associated
    with both Peace and Freedom.

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  • At the level of Communities (in the Society) we
    have
  • Intentionality (voluntariness) Within the
    good-faith transparent enforcement of Society's
    basic principles of peace and freedom, each
    Community has wide latitude for experimentation.
    Although there is a general liberty of members to
    leave the (intentional) Community, this does not
    necessarily relieve such persons from certain
    good-faith responsibilities to the Community
    and,
  • Transparency (accountability) Each Community
    must strongly, effectively, and transparently
    help enforce the Society's basic principles of
    peace and freedom.

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  • We believe the political theory or
    moral-political approach we have invented above
    with respect to TO is unique and original. The
    PFIT (Peaceful, Free, Intentional, Transparent)
    framework here presented differs from the Law of
    Peoples conception of John Rawls in that TO is
    meant to be structured so as to necessarily
    ultimately generate an Extraterrestrial Law of
    Persons.
  • Yet TO takes seriously the distinction Rawls
    makes between a "political conception" and
    "comprehensive doctrines." A political conception
    or model addresses persons only with respect to,
    or at the level of, citizenship. However,
    comprehensive doctrines or worldviews, whether
    religious or secular, address the full range, or
    deep levels, of ones personhood and
    relationships.
  • In our "Society of Communities" theory, Society
    corresponds to a political conception or model,
    and Communities represent numerous comprehensive
    doctrines or worldviews.

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  • Persons of Comprehensive Doctrine X may be
    passionately convinced that their worldview is
    basically good and correct and that other
    worldviews are evil or bad or incorrect.
  • Likewise, persons of Comprehensive Doctrine Y may
    be passionately convinced that their worldview is
    basically good and correct and that other
    worldviews are evil or bad or incorrect.
  • YET if X persons, Y persons, and other persons
    (holding numerous differing comprehensive
    doctrines) can sincerely and in good faith agree
    to our TO political conception (our approach
    above), then stable peace is possible. Otherwise,
    they may consider agreeing to TO only as a
    temporary strategic compromise (thus ultimately
    open to future use of force and violence).

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  • According to TO, the architectures of
    extraterrestrial settlements will have to be PFIT
    (Peaceful, Free, Intentional, Transparent).
    Indeed, the architectures of all extraterrestrial
    structures will have to be congruent with PFIT.
  • TO, via TOs ABC (Agency for a Better Cosmos),
    will proactively enforce the PFIT requirements.
    TO and ABC will have to be on the cutting edge of
    such changing technologies if they are to
    successfully fulfill their missions. PFIT
    preplanning and PFIT retrofitting of PFIT
    extraterrestrial settlements and structures will
    be an ongoing task.

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  • 8. An Evolutionary Implementation of the
    Principles
  • In 7 above we looked at physical (green habitat)
    technology and at social (treaty organization)
    technology. We defended the claim that, combined,
    these two advanced proactive force of nature
    technologies have the capacity to provide an
    environment of stable peace and evolving freedom
    which will also allow all persons and peoples
    therein to live beyond moderate scarcity in great
    wealth.
  • We found that the claim turns out to be
    non-controversial.

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  • The implementation of PFIT (Peaceful, Free,
    Intentional, Transparent) physical-social
    technology is a step in the evolutionary ladder,
    and there are steps within PFIT too, since it
    cannot magically appear full-grown overnight. But
    at some point it seems we will have to confront
    the great question of a cosmopolitan Commonwealth
    of Ends. PFIT has the virtue, if it is a virtue,
    of giving us more time to think about that
    profound puzzle.
  • With the birth of PFIT there are not one but two
    realms Terrestrial or Earth and
    Extraterrestrial or PFIT.

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  • No doubt we shall have to make up the
    evolving-emerging details as we move along.
    Providing a broad outline or proactive agenda is
    important and necessary.
  • However, micromanaging the future in advance (as,
    historically, some tyrants have tried) is
    undesirable and even dangerous. But one
    reasonable question to consider now, with the
    initiation of PFIT, is How much will it cost and
    who will pay for it? There are indeed
    alternative answers or solutions possible here,
    as professional diplomats and treaty-makers will
    tell us even as we also ask Can we afford not
    to do it?

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  • Or, to put it another way Does not some version
    of principle three (just assistance) come into
    play here?
  • Principle three is the duty, under certain
    conditions, of justly assisting (A) future
    generations and, (B) burdened societies. We may
    want to say that the Terrestrial System (Earth)
    has a duty to assist future generations (via
    PFIT) in order to assist itself (via PFIT) by
    preventing and overcoming its terrestrial
    burdens. This is a very special kind of
    reciprocity!

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  • How much will PFIT cost and who will pay for
    it?
  • Of numerous possible answers and solutions, we
    now briefly mention in passing one such
    possibility invented by the late Nobel laureate
    in economics, James Tobin. Here as follows is the
    Tobin tax idea in one of its versions There
    should be a worldwide tax on international
    currency transactions, set perhaps between 1.00
    1 and 0.01 1/100 of 1.
  • The tax could go, say, to pay for a global task
    or to numerous global tasks, and thus perhaps do
    much (or even very much) to help the human
    condition go from bad to better instead of from
    bad to worse.

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  • In terms, say, of the first few years or decades
    of PFIT, it might be funded (from whatever source
    or sources) at a high or a moderate or a
    nearly-zero level.
  • High here means thinking of PFIT as a major
    endeavor such as double the yearly costs (in
    adjusted dollars) of the Apollo Moon Landing
    Project of the 1960s (a difference being that
    Apollo was funded by a single country). According
    to our own simple quick and dirty calculations,
    a high funding level for PFIT would be
    considerably less than a global Tobin tax rate of
    0.01 1/100 of 1. To wit A global Tobin tax
    rate of 0.01 (1/100 of 1) of US1,000 trillion
    per year equals US100 billion per year.

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  • Our generation is privileged with the unique
    responsibility of taking the first PFIT step.
    Once the first PFIT step has been taken, then the
    additional hundreds or thousands of steps over
    many decades or centuries may proceed quickly or
    slowly.
  • The first step is to pen and sign the PFIT
    treaty, thus enforceably banning weapons and
    weapons-making from extraterrestrial space.
  • The first step is perhaps the most important
    one, and it requires no financial fees or Tobin
    taxes.

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  • 9. Closing Remarks
  • Almost now is the opportune time for almost
    universal peace.
  • Enforceably banning weapons and weapons-making
    from all of the universe (except for a single
    small planet) is politically feasible, morally
    desirable, and practically within our
    signature-signing hands.
  • But if we wait too long, we may not be so free to
    do the right thing.

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  • When wise persons learn the Way, they practice it
    with zest.
  • When mediocre persons learn of the Way, they are
    indifferent.
  • When foolish persons learn of the Way, they laugh
    mockingly.
  • If they did not laugh, it would not be worthy of
    being the Way.
  • Daodejing, 41

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  • Acknowledgements
  • We thank the philosophy department of National
    Central University (Taiwan) for their Visiting
    Scholar assistance and for the present venue.
  • We are also grateful to Jack Lee (Taiwan), Samuel
    Freeman (USA), and Shui Chuen Lee (Taiwan).
  • By permission, this presentation is adapted from
    Charles Tandys chapter on John Rawls in
    Charles Tandy Editor, Death And Anti-Death,
    Volume 9 (Palo Alto, California Ria University
    Press, 2011).
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