Since Longtermism as a concept doesn’t seem widely appealing, I wonder how other time-focused ethical frameworks fare, such as Shorttermism (Focusing on immediate consequences), Mediumtermism (Focusing on foreseeable future), or Atemporalism (Ignoring time horizons in ethical considerations altogether).
I’d guess these concepts would also be unpopular, perhaps because ethical considerations centered on timeframes feel confusing, too abstract or even uncomfortable for many people.
If true, it could mean that any theory framed in opposition, such as a critique of Shorttermism or Longtermism, might be more appealing than the time-focused theory itself. Critizising short-term thinking is an applause light in many circles.
If true, it could mean that any theory framed in opposition, such as a critique of Shorttermism or Longtermism, might be more appealing than the time-focused theory itself. Critizising short-term thinking is an applause light in many circles.
I agree this could well be true at the level of arguments i.e. I think there are probably longtermist (anti-shorttermist), framings which would be successful. But I suspect it would be harder to make this work at the level of framing/branding a whole movement, i.e. I think promoting the ‘anti-shorttermist’ movement would be hard to do successfully.
Since Longtermism as a concept doesn’t seem widely appealing, I wonder how other time-focused ethical frameworks fare, such as Shorttermism (Focusing on immediate consequences), Mediumtermism (Focusing on foreseeable future), or Atemporalism (Ignoring time horizons in ethical considerations altogether).
I’d guess these concepts would also be unpopular, perhaps because ethical considerations centered on timeframes feel confusing, too abstract or even uncomfortable for many people.
If true, it could mean that any theory framed in opposition, such as a critique of Shorttermism or Longtermism, might be more appealing than the time-focused theory itself. Critizising short-term thinking is an applause light in many circles.
I agree this could well be true at the level of arguments i.e. I think there are probably longtermist (anti-shorttermist), framings which would be successful. But I suspect it would be harder to make this work at the level of framing/branding a whole movement, i.e. I think promoting the ‘anti-shorttermist’ movement would be hard to do successfully.