Abstract
Abstract The aim of the book is twofold: (1) to develop a comprehensive, contractualist theory of intergenerational ethics, and (2) to argue that contractualism’s ability to be that comprehensive theory of intergenerational ethics contributes to its plausibility as a moral theory in general. The book’s core claim is that contractualism provides us with a comprehensive theory of intergenerational ethics that justifies including future people in the scope of what we owe to each other and tells us how much we owe them. It begins by arguing that contractualism is not susceptible to the non-identity problem and so we must consider what future people could reasonably reject. It then argues that contractualism endorses ‘reason-balanced sufficientarianism’ and develops a series of moral principles guiding our behaviour towards future generations in terms of resource distribution, procreative decisions, optimal population size, and risk imposition. It concludes by applying these general principles to concrete, real-world individual and policy decisions and considering how the principles can and do interact with each other.
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