Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Deontological Desert
View through CrossRef
Although the nature of moral desert has sometimes been examined in axiological terms—focusing on the thought that it is a good thing if people get what they deserve—deontologists typically think desert is more appropriately treated in terms of duties and obligations. They may, for example, prefer to talk in terms of there being a moral duty to give people what they deserve. This essay distinguishes a number of forms such a duty might take, and examines four of them more closely. (In particular, it looks at positive and negative duties with regard to both comparative and noncomparative desert). Questions about the contents of each of these duties are raised, making clearer just how much work would be involved in spelling out the relevant duties more completely. The essay concludes with a brief discussion of the possible implications of such desert-based duties for population ethics.
Title: Deontological Desert
Description:
Although the nature of moral desert has sometimes been examined in axiological terms—focusing on the thought that it is a good thing if people get what they deserve—deontologists typically think desert is more appropriately treated in terms of duties and obligations.
They may, for example, prefer to talk in terms of there being a moral duty to give people what they deserve.
This essay distinguishes a number of forms such a duty might take, and examines four of them more closely.
(In particular, it looks at positive and negative duties with regard to both comparative and noncomparative desert).
Questions about the contents of each of these duties are raised, making clearer just how much work would be involved in spelling out the relevant duties more completely.
The essay concludes with a brief discussion of the possible implications of such desert-based duties for population ethics.
Related Results
Desert is a dyadic relation
Desert is a dyadic relation
Abstract
The orthodox view of the metaphysics of desert is that desert is a triadic relation that obtains between a subject, an object and a desert base. Not only is...
Processes of Paleoindian site and desert pavement formation in the Atacama Desert, Chile
Processes of Paleoindian site and desert pavement formation in the Atacama Desert, Chile
AbstractA distinct feature of many of the earliest archaeological sites (13,000-11,200 cal yr BP) at the core of the Atacama Desert is that they lie at or just below the surface, o...
Sand, Water, and Stars: Chinese Mapping of the Gobi and Taklamakan Deserts
Sand, Water, and Stars: Chinese Mapping of the Gobi and Taklamakan Deserts
Abstract
Many Chinese maps from the mid-sixteenth century onwards mark the Gobi Desert as a prominent strip visually separating China from what lies beyond. Even before that ti...
Landscape evolution of the Ulan Buh Desert in northern China during the late Quaternary
Landscape evolution of the Ulan Buh Desert in northern China during the late Quaternary
AbstractThe evolution of arid environments in northern China was a major environmental change during the Quaternary. Here we present the dating and environmental proxy results from...
Desert wetlands record hydrologic variability within the Younger Dryas chronozone, Mojave Desert, USA
Desert wetlands record hydrologic variability within the Younger Dryas chronozone, Mojave Desert, USA
AbstractOne of the enduring questions in the field of paleohydrology is how quickly desert wetland ecosystems responded to past episodes of abrupt climate change. Recent investigat...
Manganese Accumulation in Rock Varnish on a Desert Piedmont, Mojave Desert, California, and Application to Evaluating Varnish Development
Manganese Accumulation in Rock Varnish on a Desert Piedmont, Mojave Desert, California, and Application to Evaluating Varnish Development
AbstractRock varnish coatings tend to become thicker, darker, and more continuous over time, leading to the use of changes in overall varnish color and the percentage of clast surf...
Fossil Insect Evidence for Late Quaternary Climatic Change in the Big Bend Region, Chihuahuan Desert, Texas
Fossil Insect Evidence for Late Quaternary Climatic Change in the Big Bend Region, Chihuahuan Desert, Texas
AbstractA series of 50 packrat midden assemblages from the Big Bend region of the Chihuahuan Desert, ranging in age from >36,000 yr B.P. to recent, yielded abundant, diverse art...
Serious Tourists
Serious Tourists
Mina Loy and William Carlos Williams employ drastically disparate images of the Mexican landscape as a means of articulating both their respective positions as tourists and their i...