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What We Owe The Future: A Million-Year View

(Hardback)

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Publishing Details

Full Title:

What We Owe The Future: A Million-Year View

Contributors:

By (Author) William MacAskill

ISBN:

9780861542505

Publisher:

Oneworld Publications

Imprint:

Oneworld Publications

Publication Date:

29th November 2022

UK Publication Date:

1st September 2022

Country:

United Kingdom

Classifications

Readership:

General

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Other Subjects:

Social forecasting, future studies
Other warfare and defence issues
Social and political philosophy
The environment
Social discrimination and social justice

Dewey:

171.8

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Hardback

Number of Pages:

352

Dimensions:

Width 153mm, Height 234mm, Spine 30mm

Description

We are remarkably early in the story of human civilisation. We are still five hundred million years away from the sterilisation of the Earth by the Sun, and one hundred trillion years away from the dying of the last stars. Leaving a shard of broken glass on the ground may harm someone tomorrow or one hundred thousand years hence. Our duty of care to each of those individuals is the same. Positively influencing the long-term future is a key moral priority of our time.This is the idea fuelling a burgeoning movement of longtermist thinkers: it explains why Elon Musk is trying to colonise Mars and why Jeff Bezos spent $42 million on a clock that will last 10,000 years. Yet future peoples are completely disenfranchised - they can't lobby or vote for change. As we lock in today the global values and systems that will outlast us by eons, let's not forget the many left to come whose quality of life is in our hands.

Reviews

A brilliant book that makes clear both how much is at stake when it comes to the long term, and the incredible opportunities we have to shape it. It has changed how I think about my time on earth.

-- Max Roser

An optimistic look at the future that moved me to tears

-- Joseph Gordon-Levitt

"MacAskills case for longtermism the idea that positively influencing the longterm future is a key moral priority of our time isoverwhelmingly persuasive. But its alsounapologetically optimistic and bracingly realistic: this is by some distance the most inspiring book on ethical living Ive ever read a powerful argument in favour of freedom of speech and viewpoint diversity The overall promise of this thrilling book is of a life both less burdened by ethical guilt by beating yourself up over every choice of groceries or transportation and much more effective at actually helping humanity.."

-- Guardian

No living philosopher has had a greater impact upon my ethics than Will MacAskill. And much of the good I now do is the direct result of his influence. InWhat We Owe The Future, MacAskill has transformed my thinking once again, by patiently dismantling the lazy intuitions that rendered me morally blind to the interests of future generations. This is an altogether thrilling and necessary book.

-- Sam Harris

Remarkable MacAskills command of factual detail isadmirable. So are his lightness of prose and facility in explaining tricky argumentsIs our world better off for containing WilliamMacAskill... I say yesMacAskill is a worthy heir to Derek Parfits philosophical legacy, adding deep factual research and accessible writing to a provocative line of thought.

-- TLS

This book isamonumental event. William MacAskill is one of the most important philosophers alive today, and this is his magnum opus.

-- Rutger Bregman, author of Humankind

Many books promise a new big idea, but few deliver one as brilliant as MacAskills in What We Owe The Future. A fascinating, profound read.

-- Julia Galef

What We Owe The Future brilliantly shows us the biggest picture of all andpersuasivelyreminds us of the vast impact we can all have.

-- Tim Urban

What We Owe The Futuremakes the case for thinking seriously about the very long term. Itgives a profoundly new perspective on human civilization and our place in it.

-- Lydia Cacho

There are moments when we can change outcomes easily, but if we dont bend those curves right then, we can lock in enormous longterm damage. Thisfascinating bookmakes us think relentlessly and usefully about such pivot points; few prods could be more important.

-- Bill McKibben

'Fascinating a work of advocacy rather than philosophy and as such it is a good and useful read.'

-- Sunday Times

'A social history of extraordinary scope, coupled with a haunting yet triumphant look to the future a grand tour into tomorrow'

-- Tablet

This book will change your sense of how grand the sweep of human history could be, where you fit into it, and how much you could do to change it for the better. Its as simple, and as ambitious, as that.

-- Ezra Klein

The decisions we make this century are like no other; either we go extinct by our own hand, or we lay the path to the stars. What We Owe The Future is our guidebook to navigating this critical moment.

-- Liv Boeree

'Riveting there is nothing familiar or predictable about this book. It challenges readers to reorganise their whole conceptual schema. It is part technical philosophy, part science fiction and part rallying cry.'

-- Prospect

Should we care about people who dont yet exist the billions who will live in the future Or is it better to help people living now This mind-bending, eon-hurtling, visionary, masterful book raises questions that are among the most crucial we face as a species. MacAskill makes a moral case for the future that is urgent, clear, and utterly convincing.

-- Larissa MacFarquhar, author of Strangers Drowning

I expected William MacAskill to write a forceful and persuasive argument for caring more about future people and this book did not disappoint. But its so much more What We Owe The Future is an engaged and deeply original exploration of questions ranging from the contingency of moral progress, to the perils of AI, to the very nature of a happy and fulfilled life. Its an important, stimulating, and delightful book.

-- Paul Bloom

[MacAskills] book is much more than a list of potential disasters. It is also a profoundly optimistic exploration of the opportunities our descendants might enjoy, and the steps we might take to help them there are plenty of insights and surprises along the way In focusing on the interests of future generations stretching into an indefinitely long future, MacAskill has thrust an important and neglected argument into the spotlight, while making it vivid and fun to read. He hopes that this book will change the world, and it might.

-- FT

I was captivated by MacAskills rolling out of the possibilities of a longtermist approach to the now. It is vital to do as he does, to take ethics out of the safety of lecture-hall thought experiments, paradoxes and what-ifs and into the turbulent real world, where the dynamic winds of history blow and where is massing on the horizon that monstrous, swelling tsunami that we call the future. This is a book of great daring, clarity, insight and imagination. To be simultaneously so realistic and so optimistic, and always so damn readable well that is a miracle for which he should be greatly applauded.

-- Stephen Fry

'Whether hes arguing that having children is on balance a positive thing to do for the planets future, or advising us to pay more attention to how our career choices can help us play a part, hes never less than compelling. And indeed since I read it, Ive scarcely stopped thinking about it.'

-- Caroline Sanderson, The Bookseller, Book of the Month

'MacAskill is probably one of the most influential thinkers in the world

-- The Times, Best Books of 2022

Author Bio

William MacAskillis an Associate Professor of Philosophy at Oxford University. His academic work spans a breadth of fields within normative philosophy, including practical ethics, population ethics, social choice theory and decision theory. At age 28, he became the youngest tenured professor of philosophy in the world. MacAskill is the cofounder of Giving What We Can, 80,000 Hours, the Centre for Effective Altruism and the Oxford University-based Global Priorities Institute. Hes recognised as a World Economic Forum Young Global Shaper and a Forbes 30 Under 30 Social Entrepreneur.

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