BOOK

Future Generations in Environmental Ethics

John Nolt

Year: 2016 Oxford University Press eBooks   Publisher: Oxford University Press

Abstract

Intergenerational ethics is the study of our responsibilities to future individuals—individuals (human or not) who are not now alive but will be. The term “future” characterizes, not the kind of a thing, but rather the temporal perspective from which it is being described. Future people, as such, therefore differ from us neither intrinsically nor in moral status. Our responsibilities to them are best understood by attempts to see things from their perspective, not from ours. Though intergenerational ethics takes various forms, the credible forms in conjunction with known facts yield two great practical conclusions: we must reduce human population, and we must keep most fossil fuels in the ground. The demandingness of these conclusions is no objection against them, but rather an accurate measure of the moral burdens of our godlike knowledge and power.

Keywords:
Perspective (graphical) Environmental ethics Population Power (physics) Conjunction (astronomy) Term (time) Epistemology Sociology Philosophy Computer science

Metrics

7
Cited By
0.54
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
0
Refs
0.73
Citation Normalized Percentile
Is in top 1%
Is in top 10%

Citation History

Topics

Climate Change and Geoengineering
Physical Sciences →  Environmental Science →  Global and Planetary Change

Related Documents

BOOK-CHAPTER

Environmental Ethics and Future Generations

Douglas MacLean

Temple University Press eBooks Year: 2009 Pages: 118-141
JOURNAL ARTICLE

Responsibilities to future generations, environmental ethics

James P. Lodge

Journal:   Atmospheric Environment (1967) Year: 1982 Vol: 16 (5)Pages: 1289-1290
JOURNAL ARTICLE

Environmental Ethics and the Rights of Future Generations

Bryan G. Norton

Journal:   Environmental Ethics Year: 1982 Vol: 4 (4)Pages: 319-337
© 2026 ScienceGate Book Chapters — All rights reserved.