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[...]... deserts were thought by us to have been a calculated policy to increase a past generation’s non-renewed wealth, at our expense, we would condemn them for it Any obligations we have to generations future to us that find no exact analog in obligations past persons owed us arise, I believe, both from special features of our known control over the existence and the conditions of life of future generations and... of what we owe to past generations We are especially self-conscious members of the crossgenerational community, aware both of how much, and how much more than previous generations, we benefit from the investment of earlier generations and of the extent to which we may determine the fate of future generations Such self-consciousness has its costs in added obligations Another sort of obligation we may... enduring families, nations, the rights of past and future persons 9 cultures, traditions Perhaps we could even use Kant’s language and say that it is because persons are noumenal beings that obligations to past persons and to future persons reinforce one another, that every obligation is owed by, to, and toward persons as participants in a continuing process of the generation and regeneration of shared values... generations have owed it to the moral community as a whole, and to past generations in particular, to try to leave things no worse than they found them, then we too have that obligation In addition, as far as past generations, by supererogatory effort, left things better than they found them, we owe it to them to pass on such inherited benefits We must not poison the wells, even such wells as we have... superstition 12 M P Golding, “Obligations to Future Generations,” Monist ( Jan 1972), 91 2 For the Sake of Future Generations 1 Introduction Moral philosophers have only quite recently worried over the question of what we are morally obliged to do, or not to do, for the sake of persons who will live after we are dead Classical moral traditions give us little help with this question Though ordinary common... against the charge of doing them that sort of wrong But such wrongs, although real, are only one sort of wrong we can do people, and there are plenty other wrongs which depend not upon the victims’ special needs, but upon their common human nature However little we know about future people, however much about them is not yet fixed, as long as they are human people they can be expected to need air, water,... not accept their savings as only our just due, we do not usually condemn past generations where their actions have had bad effects in the present But the reason for this may be that we are reluctant to attribute obligations where we are uncertain of the ability to meet them Past generations, unlike ours, were rarely in a position to foresee the long-term effects of their actions, so are rightly not blamed... rights .We should first recognize that we have obligations, then devote ourselves to clarifying the precise content of these If when that is done we find that we do believe we should give priority to certain definite individuated rights of future persons, we can then recognize and itemize such rights I have not detailed the content of our obligations to future persons, but have addressed myself only to... immediate successor generations would live in the ruins of civilization as we have known it, we might judge that there was no point in trying to preserve, say, the Bill of Rights for one’s successors, although they had a prima facie right to inherit it One might on their behalf waive that right, in extreme conditions, and bury the Constitution, rather than prolong our agony to fight for it But such... of our actions for other people, when making a moral decision It is natural, if one finds the principle plausible, to think of consequences for future people as well as for our contemporaries, and to see a moral agent’s responsibility as extending to the foreseeable effects of our actions on future and distant as well as present and close persons I suggest, then, that one reason why it is only recently . class="bi x0 y0 w0 h1" alt="" Refl ections on How We Live This page intentionally left blank Reflections on How We Live Annette C. Baier 1 Great Clarendon Street, Oxford ox2 6dp Oxford University. same condition on any acquirer British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data Data available Library of Congress Cataloguing-in-Publication Data Baier, Annette. Refl ections on How We Live/ Annette. it unasked. The essays on faces, on friend- ship, and on alienating affection are personal refl ections, not theoretical conclusions on how anyone else should live. And “Other Minds,” the last