person-affecting view of ethics, which longtermists reject
I’m a longtermist and I don’t reject (asymmetric) person(-moment-)affecting views, at least not those that think necessary ≠ only present people. I would be very hard-pressed to give a clean formalization of necessary people though. I think it’s bad if effective altruists think longtermism can only be justified with astronomical waste-style arguments and not at all if someone has person-affecting intuitions. (Staying in a broadly utilitarian framework. There are, of course, also obligation-to-ancestor-type justifications for longtermism or similar.) The person-affecting part of me just pushes me in the direction of caring more about trajectory change than extinction risk.
Since I could only ever give very handwavey defenses of person-affecting views and even handwaveier explanations of my overall moral views: Here’s a paper by someone that AFAICT is at least sympathetic to longtermism and discusses asymmetric person-affecting views. (I have to admit I never got around to read the paper.) (Writing a paper on how an asymmetric person-affecting view obviously also doesn’t necessarily mean that the author doesn’t actually reject person-affecting views)
Many current individuals will be worse off when resources don’t go to them, for instance, because they are saving future lives, versus when they do, for instance, funds focused on near-term utilitarian goals like poverty reduction. And if, as most of us expect, the world’s wealth will continue to grow, effectively all future people who are helped by existential risk reduction are not what we’d now consider poor. You can defend this via the utilitarian calculus across all people, but that doesn’t change the distributive impact between groups.
Equally, many future people will be worse-off than they would have been if we don’t reduce extinction risks. The claim is about the net total impact on non-white people
Your definition of problematic injustice seems far too narrow, and I explicitly didn’t refer to race in the previous post. The example I gave was that the most disadvantaged people are in the present, and are further injured—not that non-white people (which under current definitions will describe approximately all of humanity in another half dozen generations) will be worse off.
This is question begging: it only counterfactually harms the poor on a person-affecting view of ethics, which longtermists reject
I’m a longtermist and I don’t reject (asymmetric) person(-moment-)affecting views, at least not those that think necessary ≠ only present people. I would be very hard-pressed to give a clean formalization of necessary people though. I think it’s bad if effective altruists think longtermism can only be justified with astronomical waste-style arguments and not at all if someone has person-affecting intuitions. (Staying in a broadly utilitarian framework. There are, of course, also obligation-to-ancestor-type justifications for longtermism or similar.) The person-affecting part of me just pushes me in the direction of caring more about trajectory change than extinction risk.
Since I could only ever give very handwavey defenses of person-affecting views and even handwaveier explanations of my overall moral views: Here’s a paper by someone that AFAICT is at least sympathetic to longtermism and discusses asymmetric person-affecting views. (I have to admit I never got around to read the paper.) (Writing a paper on how an asymmetric person-affecting view obviously also doesn’t necessarily mean that the author doesn’t actually reject person-affecting views)
Is that true?
Many current individuals will be worse off when resources don’t go to them, for instance, because they are saving future lives, versus when they do, for instance, funds focused on near-term utilitarian goals like poverty reduction. And if, as most of us expect, the world’s wealth will continue to grow, effectively all future people who are helped by existential risk reduction are not what we’d now consider poor. You can defend this via the utilitarian calculus across all people, but that doesn’t change the distributive impact between groups.
Equally, many future people will be worse-off than they would have been if we don’t reduce extinction risks. The claim is about the net total impact on non-white people
Your definition of problematic injustice seems far too narrow, and I explicitly didn’t refer to race in the previous post. The example I gave was that the most disadvantaged people are in the present, and are further injured—not that non-white people (which under current definitions will describe approximately all of humanity in another half dozen generations) will be worse off.