Results for 'right'

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  1. What are the chances you’re right about everything? An epistemic challenge for modern partisanship.Hrishikesh Joshi - 2020 - Politics, Philosophy and Economics 19 (1):36-61.
    The American political landscape exhibits significant polarization. People’s political beliefs cluster around two main camps. However, many of the issues with respect to which these two camps disagree seem to be rationally orthogonal. This feature raises an epistemic challenge for the political partisan. If she is justified in consistently adopting the party line, it must be true that her side is reliable on the issues that are the subject of disagreements. It would then follow that the other side is anti-reliable (...)
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  2. Evolution of multicellularity: cheating done right.Walter Veit - 2019 - Biology and Philosophy 34 (3):34.
    For decades Darwinian processes were framed in the form of the Lewontin conditions: reproduction, variation and differential reproductive success were taken to be sufficient and necessary. Since Buss and the work of Maynard Smith and Szathmary biologists were eager to explain the major transitions from individuals to groups forming new individuals subject to Darwinian mechanisms themselves. Explanations that seek to explain the emergence of a new level of selection, however, cannot employ properties that would already have to exist on that (...)
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  3. On human dignity as a foundation for the right to privacy.Luciano Floridi - 2016 - Philosophy and Technology 29 (4):307-312.
    In 2016, the European Parliament approved the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) whose core aim is the safeguarding of information privacy, and, by corollary, human dignity. Drawing on the field of philosophical anthropology, this paper analyses various interpretations of human dignity and human exceptionalism. It concludes that privacy is essential for humans to flourish and enable individuals to build a sense of self and the world.
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  4. Free will, determinism, and the right levels of description.Leonhard Menges - 2021 - Philosophical Explorations 25 (1):1-18.
    ABSTRACT Recently, many authors have argued that claims about determinism and free will are situated on different levels of description and that determinism on one level does not rule out free will on another. This paper focuses on Christian List’s version of this basic idea. It will be argued for the negative thesis that List’s account does not rule out the most plausible version of incompatibilism about free will and determinism and, more constructively, that a level-based approach to free will (...)
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  5. Moral Appraisal for Everyone: Neurodiversity, Epistemic Limitations, and Responding to the Right Reasons.Claire Field - 2021 - Ethical Theory and Moral Practice 24 (3):733-752.
    De Re Significance accounts of moral appraisal consider an agent’s responsiveness to a particular kind of reason, normative moral reasons de re, to be of central significance for moral appraisal. Here, I argue that such accounts find it difficult to accommodate some neuroatypical agents. I offer an alternative account of how an agent’s responsiveness to normative moral reasons affects moral appraisal – the Reasonable Expectations Account. According to this account, what is significant for appraisal is not the content of the (...)
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  6. AI & democracy, and the importance of asking the right questions.Ognjen Arandjelović - 2021 - AI Ethics Journal 2 (1):2.
    Democracy is widely praised as a great achievement of humanity. However, in recent years there has been an increasing amount of concern that its functioning across the world may be eroding. In response, efforts to combat such change are emerging. Considering the pervasiveness of technology and its increasing capabilities, it is no surprise that there has been much focus on the use of artificial intelligence (AI) to this end. Questions as to how AI can be best utilized to extend the (...)
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  7. The importance of getting the ethics right in a pandemic treaty.G. Owen Schaefer, Caesar A. Atuire, Sharon Kaur, Michael Parker, Govind Persad, Maxwell J. Smith, Ross Upshur & Ezekiel Emanuel - 2023 - The Lancet Infectious Diseases 23 (11):e489 - e496.
    The COVID-19 pandemic revealed numerous weaknesses in pandemic preparedness and response, including underfunding, inadequate surveillance, and inequitable distribution of countermeasures. To overcome these weaknesses for future pandemics, WHO released a zero draft of a pandemic treaty in February, 2023, and subsequently a revised bureau's text in May, 2023. COVID-19 made clear that pandemic prevention, preparedness, and response reflect choices and value judgements. These decisions are therefore not a purely scientific or technical exercise, but are fundamentally grounded in ethics. The latest (...)
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  8. Can it be or feel right to hate? On the appropriateness and fittingness of hatred.Thomas Szanto - 2021 - Filozofija I Društvo 32 (3):341-368.
    What exactly is wrong with hating others? However deep-seated the intuition, when it comes to spelling out the reasons for why hatred is inappropriate, the literature is rather meager and confusing. In this paper, I attempt to be more precise by distinguishing two senses in which hatred is inappropriate, a moral and a non-moral one. First, I critically discuss the central current proposals defending the possibility of morally appropriate hatred in the face of serious wrongs or evil perpetrators and show (...)
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  9. A puzzle about the experience of left and right.Brian Cutter - 2020 - Noûs 55 (3):678-698.
    Imagine your mirror‐inverted counterpart on Mirror Earth, a perfect mirror image of Earth. Would her experiences be the same as yours, or would they be phenomenally mirror‐inverted? I argue, first, that her experiences would be phenomenally the same as yours. I then show that this conclusion gives rise to a puzzle, one that I believe pushes us toward some surprising and philosophically significant conclusions about the nature of perception. When you have a typical visual experience as of something to your (...)
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  10. Chreods, homeorhesis and biofields: Finding the right path for science.Arran Gare - 2017 - Progress in Biophysics and Molecular Biology 131:61-91.
    C.H. Waddington’s concepts of ‘chreods’ (canalized paths of development) and ‘homeorhesis’ (the tendency to return to a path), each associated with ‘morphogenetic fields’, were conceived by him as a contribution to complexity theory. Subsequent developments in complexity theory have largely ignored Waddington’s work and efforts to advance it. Waddington explained the development of the concept of chreod as the influence on his work of Alfred North Whitehead’s process philosophy, notably, the concept of concrescence as a self-causing process. Processes were recognized (...)
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  11. In What Sense Wrong Conceptions of Eudaimonia Get at Least Some Things Right.Fernando Martins Mendonça - 2024 - Dissertatio 58:272-301.
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  12. Possibility of two universal ancestors: It's always right coding principles.A. Eslami - unknown
    We propose that a 2-ancestor model may better preserve evolutionary “principles of coding” and avoid evolutionary stagnation.
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  13. Experiences of Absence which Get the World Right.Max Baker-Hytch - forthcoming - Episteme:1-19.
    The topic of absences and their ontological status has long been the focus of intense philosophical debate. Recent years have witnessed the burgeoning of a related discussion concerning the phenomenon of experiencing absences. A lot of this discussion revolves around the question of whether such experiences are best construed as literal perceptions or as some other kind of mental state. Rather than try to settle that ongoing debate, I take as my starting point a claim that seems to be granted (...)
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  14. 'A Poet with a Straight Left and a Right Hook': Words and Violence in Mr. Deeds Goes to Town.Mario Attie-Picker - forthcoming - In Garry L. Hagberg, Literature Through a Philosophical Lens: The Readerly Imagination. Palgrave Macmillan.
    I present a philosophical close reading of the concluding scene in Frank Capra's Mr. Deeds Goes to Town. In the scene in question Mr. Deeds, perhaps the most Capraesque of Capra's heroes, gives a speech to defend his sanity at a sham lunacy commission. Mr. Deeds uses the occasion to articulate an ethics of solidarity, a poetic vision of fellow feeling and understanding. And then he decides to punch the opposing lawyer in the face. The goal of the paper is (...)
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  15. Modifying the Environment or Human Nature? What is the Right Choice for Space Travel and Mars Colonisation?Maurizio Balistreri & Steven Umbrello - 2023 - NanoEthics 17 (1):1-13.
    As space travel and intentions to colonise other planets are becoming the norm in public debate and scholarship, we must also confront the technical and survival challenges that emerge from these hostile environments. This paper aims to evaluate the various arguments proposed to meet the challenges of human space travel and extraterrestrial planetary colonisation. In particular, two primary solutions have been present in the literature as the most straightforward solutions to the rigours of extraterrestrial survival and flourishing: (1) geoengineering, where (...)
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  16. Was Günter Grass's Rat Right? Should Terrestrial Life Welcome the End of Humans?Arran Gare - 2023 - Borderless Philosophy 6 (1):32-76.
    The development of AI appears to be not only rendering humans obsolete, but in being empowered could decide that humans should be eliminated for the benefit of life and the conditions for its own future. Given the behaviour of humans, this could be seen as a relief to the rest of terrestrial life, as Günter Grass suggested in his novel, The Rat. While there are many reasons to support this contention, in this paper I argue that humans do have the (...)
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  17. The Relation Between Memory and Imagination: A Debate about the Right Concepts.Cesar Schirmer Dos Santos, Christopher Jude McCarroll & Andre Sant'Anna - 2022 - In Andre Sant'Anna, Christopher McCarroll & Kourken Michaelian, Current Controversies in Philosophy of Memory. Current Controversies in Philosophy. pp. 38-56.
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  18. What Frege Meant When He Said: Kant is Right about Geometry.Teri Merrick - 2006 - Philosophia Mathematica 14 (1):44-75.
    This paper argues that Frege's notoriously long commitment to Kant's thesis that Euclidean geometry is synthetic _a priori_ is best explained by realizing that Frege uses ‘intuition’ in two senses. Frege sometimes adopts the usage presented in Hermann Helmholtz's sign theory of perception. However, when using ‘intuition’ to denote the source of geometric knowledge, he is appealing to Hermann Cohen's use of Kantian terminology. We will see that Cohen reinterpreted Kantian notions, stripping them of any psychological connotation. Cohen's defense of (...)
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  19. Thinking What We Want: A Moral Right to Acquire Control over our Thoughts.Emma Dore-Horgan & Thomas Douglas - forthcoming - In Marc Jonathan Blitz & Jan Christoph Bublitz, The Law and Ethics of Freedom of Thought, Volume 2. Palgrave.
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  20. Theodor AdornoAspects of the New Right-Wing Extremism.Florian Grosser - 2020 - Journal of the Pacific Association for the Continental Tradition 3:29-32.
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  21. Medical Nihilism by Jacob Stegenga: What is the right dose?Jonathan Fuller - 2020 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C: Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences 81.
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  22. Why COVID-19 is the right time to increase carbon prices.Kian Mintz-Woo - 2020 - RTÉ Brainstorm.
    [Newspaper opinion] strengthening carbon pricing during COVID-19 is the best time to do so for both consumers and for governments.
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  23. Daniel Halliday. The Inheritance of Wealth. Justice, Equality, and the Right to Bequeath. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2018. 256 pp.Dick Timmer - 2018 - Ethical Perspectives 25 (2):347-350.
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  24. America's Upside-down Doctrine of Education: Albert Jay Nock's Theory of What Has Gone Wrong — Or Is It Right?Steven James Bartlett - 2018 - Willamette University Faculty Research Website.
    The American system of education makes important and sometimes unjustified assumptions that were questioned and criticized nearly a hundred years ago by author and educational theorist Albert Jay Nock. This essay discusses Nock’s theory of American education and finds that certain of these assumptions stand greatly in need of the support of evidence.
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  25. Sprawiedliwe prawo – niesprawiedliwe wyroki. Uwagi na marginesie Arthura Kaufmanna koncepcji prawa do sprzeciwu wobec władzy [Just Laws and Unjust Judgments: Notes on Arthur Kaufmann’s Conception of a Right to Civil Disobedience].Marek Piechowiak - 2017 - In Baranowska Grażyna, Gliszczyńska-Grabias Aleksandra, Hernandez-Połczyńska Anna & Sękowska-Kozłowska Katarzyna, O prawach człowieka. Księga jubileuszowa Profesora Romana Wieruszewskiego. Wolters Kluwer. pp. 107-127.
    Tekst dotyczy zaproponowanej przez Arthura Kaufmanna koncepcji prawa do sprzeciwu (wobec władzy - wobec niesprawiedliwych ustaw) "w drobnej monecie". Koncepcja ta stanowi punkt wyjścia do refleksji nad formułą Radbrucha (nad czymś, co określam mianem "ciemnej strony" formuły Radbrucha), nad możliwością modyfikacji tej formuły i nad rozproszoną kontrolą konstytucyjności jako sposobem realizacji prawa do sprzeciwu "w drobnej monecie".
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  26. Leibniz and the Early Modern Controversy over the Right of International Mediation.Andreas Blank - 2015 - In “Das Recht kann nicht ungerecht sein …” Beiträge zu Leibniz’ Philosophie der Gerechtigkeit. Stuttgart, Germany: pp. 117-135.
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  27. Mr. Robot, or the cost of being right.Benjamin James - 2026 - Internet Archive.
    Television has entered a golden age, or so we are told. Premium cable and streaming platforms have gifted us with countless programs described in breathless detail as “unflinching,” “provocative,” or “darkly relevant.” These shows gesture toward systemic critique the way a debutante gestures toward the punch bowl, with practiced elegance and no intention of actually drinking. They deploy anti-capitalist aesthetics as set dressing with corrupt executives, soulless corporations, and montages of urban decay scored to melancholy indie rock. One watches and (...)
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  28. Technopolitics is Not Beyond Left and Right After All.James Hughes - 2021 - Institute for Ethics and Emerging Technologies.
    Attitudes towards science and technology are closely aligning with Culture War attitudes towards secularism, sexuality, gender, civil liberties, race and nationalism.
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  29. Why Children Should have the Right to Vote.Maura Priest - 2016 - Public Affairs Quartely 2.
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  30. “I Want to Do It, But I Want to Make Sure That I Do It Right.” Views of Patients with Parkinson’s Disease Regarding Early Stem Cell Clinical Trial Participation.Inmaculada de Melo-Martín, Michael Holtzman & Katrina S. Hacker - 2020 - AJOB Empirical Bioethics 11 (3):160-171.
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  31. Advocacy and Genuine Autonomy: The Lawyer's Role When the Client Has a Right to Do Wrong.Linda Radzik - 1999 - South Texas Law Review 40 (1):255-67.
    Stephen L. Pepper argues that lawyers and clients often act together in ways that their moral convictions would prevent them from acting individually. In an attempt to address this problem, I explore the nature of the attorney's responsibility to help her client reach autonomous decisions. To do this, I review the work of some prominent medical ethicists on a parallel to Pepper's problem in doctor-patient relationships.
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  32. Christopher Bertram, Do States Have the Right to Exclude Immigrants?Lukas Schmid - 2021 - Journal of Moral Philosophy 18 (2):202-205.
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  33. Review of Sarah Conly, One Child: Do We Have a Right to More?Peter Murphy - 2016 - Metapsychology Online Reviews 1:NA.
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  34. Division by Zero Through the Lens of Experiential Empiricism: What Physics Got Right About Constants That Mathematics Gets Wrong About Infinity.Brandon Sergent - manuscript
    Standard mathematics declares division by zero "undefined" while mechanical calculators physically demonstrate infinite iteration when executing the operation, and IEEE 754 floating-point arithmetic successfully returns infinity for the operation in billions of computations daily. When challenged with context-dependent results, mathematics refuses to formalize infinity as a number. Yet physics successfully formalized the speed of light despite it varying by material context, recognizing both a fundamental constant and context-dependent modifications. Alternative mathematical structures like wheel theory and transreal arithmetic have formalized division (...)
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  35. From Narcissism to Post-Human Politics: The Contradictions of “AI Sanae” and the Japanese Right.Ryusho Nemoto - manuscript
    This paper examines the political and cultural contradictions em- bodied in the emergence of “AI Sanae,” a digital persona modeled on politician Sanae Takaichi. While lacking substantial political achieve- ments, Takaichi has been artificially projected into the digital sphere as a symbolic leader. The phenomenon reveals three layers: personal narcissism, mass reactions, and the post-human transformation of pol- itics. Furthermore, public comments suggesting the creation of “AI Abe Shinzo” illustrate a disturbing desire to abandon human subjec- tivity itself.
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  36. Moral 'oughts' and pragmatic 'bests': How 'right' actions are composites.Zachary Isrow - 2017 - In Bojana Filej, 5th international scientific conference: All about people. pp. 885-889.
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  37.  77
    Wittgenstein's Willing Subject: How the Happy Life Is the Only Right Life - Part Two.Richard Mather - manuscript
    Part Two of a series focusing on ethics, aesthetics and identity in Wittgenstein's Notebooks 1914-1916.
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  38.  76
    Wittgenstein's Willing Subject: How the Happy Life Is the Only Right Life - Part Four.Richard Mather - manuscript
    Concluding part of a series on ethics, aesthetics and identity in Wittgenstein's Notebooks 1914-1916.
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  39.  73
    Wittgenstein's Willing Subject: How the Happy Life Is the Only Right Life - Part Three.Richard Mather - manuscript
    Part Three of a series focusing on ethics, aesthetics and identity in Wittgenstein's Notebooks 1914-1916.
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  40.  56
    Wittgenstein's Willing Subject: How the Happy Life Is the Only Right Life - Part One.Richard Mather - manuscript
    Part One of a series focusing on ethics, aesthetics and identity in Wittgenstein's Notebooks 1914-1916.
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  41. Human Rights: Moral or Political?Adam Etinson - 2018 - Oxford, United Kingdom: Oxford University Press. Edited by Adam Etinson.
    Human rights have a rich life in the world around us. Political rhetoric pays tribute to them, or scorns them. Citizens and activists strive for them. The law enshrines them. And they live inside us too. For many of us, human rights form part of how we understand the world and what must (or must not) be done within it. -/- The ubiquity of human rights raises questions for the philosopher. If we want to understand these rights, where do we (...)
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  42.  77
    Marginalia on Militant Democracy, (Un)Civil Disobedience, and the Right to Resistance.Eraldo Souza dos Santos - 2025 - In Adam Burgos, Philosophizing Contestation: Refusal, Disobedience, Resistance, Decolonization. Bloomsbury Academic.
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  43. The Right Wrong‐Makers.Richard Yetter Chappell - 2020 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 103 (2):426-440.
    Right- and wrong-making features ("moral grounds") are widely believed to play important normative roles, e.g. in morally apt or virtuous motivation. This paper argues that moral grounds have been systematically misidentified. Canonical statements of our moral theories tend to summarize, rather than directly state, the full range of moral grounds posited by the theory. Further work is required to "unpack" a theory's criterion of rightness and identify the features that are of ground-level moral significance. As a result, it is (...)
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  44. The Right to Withdraw from Research.G. Owen Schaefer & Alan Wertheimer - 2010 - Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal 20 (4):329-352.
    The right to withdraw from participation in research is recognized in virtually all national and international guidelines for research on human subjects. It is therefore surprising that there has been little justification for that right in the literature. We argue that the right to withdraw should protect research participants from information imbalance, inability to hedge, inherent uncertainty, and untoward bodily invasion, and it serves to bolster public trust in the research enterprise. Although this argument is not radical, (...)
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  45. The Right to a Justification.Samuel Dishaw - 2025 - Political Philosophy 2 (2):496-520.
    Many institutions and organizations now delegate important decisions to algorithms. These algorithms promise greater predictive accuracy, at a lower operating cost than the human decision-makers they replace. But they also have the distinct disadvantage of being “black boxes”: we lack intelligible explanations of why they arrive at the decisions they do. Those adversely affected by these decisions, it seems, may reasonably object to the opaque nature of the decision-process. My aim in this paper is to explain the moral basis of (...)
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  46. It takes two to make a view go right[REVIEW]Danielle J. Williams - 2024 - The Brains Blog.
    The Physical Signature of Computation is the most “robust” mapping view that’s ever hit the market. It is impressive in its detail and the careful attention paid to its characterization of both the physical system and the formal computational description—a true service to the philosophical literature. The book promises a “unified account of artifact and biological computation,” but here’s where things take a turn: after handling artifacts, the Robust Mapping Account fades from view and the Mechanistic Account of Physical Computation (...)
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  47.  12
    Do Our Spiritual Needs Have the Right Not to Be Regarded as Inferior?Penghao Li - manuscript - Translated by Penghao Li.
    This essay redefines the demeaning judgments, in everyday discourse, directed at cultural practices such as games, anime, and short-form videos as a problem of the legitimacy of spiritual needs, rather than a difference in taste or a generational conflict. It first argues that spiritual needs themselves contain no natural hierarchy of “higher” and “inferior.” It then proposes that the minimum condition for cultural legitimacy is whether “connection” has occurred: as long as a practice has already formed a real connection with (...)
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  48. The Right to Parent and Duties Concerning Future Generations.Anca Gheaus - 2016 - Journal of Political Philosophy 24 (1):487-508.
    Several philosophers argue that individuals have an interest-protecting right to parent; specifically, the interest is in rearing children whom one can parent adequately. If such a right exists it can provide a solution to scepticism about duties of justice concerning distant future generations and bypass the challenge provided by the non-identity problem. Current children - whose identity is independent from environment-affecting decisions of current adults - will have, in due course, a right to parent. Adequate parenting requires (...)
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  49. One child: Do We Have a Right to More? [REVIEW]Erik Magnusson - 2016 - Contemporary Political Theory 15 (4):477-480.
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  50. Consequentialism & Machine Ethics: Towards a Foundational Machine Ethic to Ensure the Right Action of Artificial Moral Agents.Josiah Della Foresta - 2020 - Montreal AI Ethics Institute.
    In this paper, I argue that Consequentialism represents a kind of ethical theory that is the most plausible to serve as a basis for a machine ethic. First, I outline the concept of an artificial moral agent and the essential properties of Consequentialism. Then, I present a scenario involving autonomous vehicles to illustrate how the features of Consequentialism inform agent action. Thirdly, an alternative Deontological approach will be evaluated and the problem of moral conflict discussed. Finally, two bottom-up approaches to (...)
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