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Investment without return: on futures that will never be ours
chapter
posted on 2023-06-09, 14:06 authored by Paul DaviesThis chapter reflects on what it means to have obligations to futures that necessarily will never be ours. It focuses on the non-empirical or transcendental operation of an ‘it is not too late’. It notes how the Kantian account of obligation seems unable to handle the significant urgency of climate change. It considers how Heidegger’s way of thinking about the catastrophic implications of technology succeeds in acknowledging such a significance. However, Heidegger seems to have to leave neither room nor time for a recognisable obligation. It argues that if there is a meaningfully distinct duty to a distant future then that future and its sense must be construed as ethical from the outset. It tries to meet the nihilist-realist’s challenge to this idea.
History
Publication status
- Published
Publisher
Palgrave MacmillanExternal DOI
Page range
221-245Book title
Climate change and the humanities: historical, philosophical and interdisciplinary approaches to the contemporary environmental crisisPlace of publication
London, UKISBN
9781137551238Department affiliated with
- Philosophy Publications
Full text available
- No
Peer reviewed?
- Yes