Workshop on Longtermism and Non-Consequentialist Moral Philosophy

4-5 August 2022, Oxford University

Topic

The Global Priorities Institute will host a two-day workshop (4-5 August 2022) on longtermism and non-consequentialist moral philosophy.

Longtermism may be understood as a moral perspective that takes seriously the vast size of the potential future population and the potentially momentous effects of present actions on the value of the long-term development of human civilization. Some longtermists argue that differences in expected value between the acts available to us are almost entirely attributable to possible good and bad outcomes distributed across the very long run, with limited weight placed on outcomes within the next hundred or even thousand years.

For consequentialists, the bearing of these claims on what we ought to do appears reasonably straightforward: we should assign overwhelming moral importance to attempts to beneficially influence the long-run future and deprioritize problems that do not bear significantly on the long-run trajectory. What are the implications of and for the longtermist viewpoint if we do not accept consequentialism?

Agenda

The workshop will provide a venue to address topics relevant to this question, including such questions as what non-consequentialist duties we have and do not have in preventing human extinction, how a duty not to harm affects the longtermist picture, what Scanlonian Contractualism implies for what we owe to the future, how longtermism interacts with intergenerational justice, and much more. Speakers will include:

  • Christopher Cowie (Durham University)
  • Emma Curran (University of Cambridge)
  • Elizabeth Finneron-Burns (University of Western Ontario)
  • Molly Gardner (University of Florida)
  • Rahul Kumar and Owen Clifton (Queen's University)
  • Kritika Maheswhari (University of Groningen)
  • Lukas Meyer (University of Graz)
  • Andreas Mogensen (Oxford University)
  • Ketan Ramakrishnan (FTX Foundation)
  • Korbinian Rüger (LNU Munich)
  • Matthew Rendall (University of Nottingham)
  • Charlotte Unruh (Technical University of Munich)

Attending the workshop

Applications to attend the workshop are now closed.