Asymmetrical Reciprocity in Intergenerational Justice
Matthias Fritsch ()
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Matthias Fritsch: Concordia University
Chapter Chapter 2 in Future Design, 2020, pp 17-36 from Springer
Abstract:
Abstract TheFuture design notionsFuture generations of sustainability that are most widely accepted, domestically and internationally, are underwritten not only by duties to contemporaries, but also, and crucially, by responsibilities to non-overlapping generations. The point of this chapter is to argue that intergenerational dependence suggests that such responsibility is grounded in a form of reciprocity that is often called indirect: A gives to B but B gives ‘back’ to C. On this view, a current generationCurrent generation takes responsibility for the well-being of future generationsFuture generations because it is indebted to previous generations. In conversation with economic and philosophical literature, including so-called care ethicsCare ethics, I develop the basic ideaIdea further toward a concept I call asymmetrical intergenerational reciprocity. This concept connects reciprocity with altruistic concerns and with asymmetrical responsibilityAsymmetrical responsibility for the next generation. The basic point is that, as opposed to construing reciprocity as mutual advantage, asymmetrical reciprocity demands the return of benefits to a previously uninvolved third party, and thus invites the combination with an other-regarding concern for the well-being of this third party, future people in this case.
Keywords: Intergenerational justice; Indirect reciprocity; Asymmetrical responsibility; Altruism; Care ethics; Feminism; Contract theory (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2020
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:spr:eclchp:978-981-15-5407-0_2
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DOI: 10.1007/978-981-15-5407-0_2
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