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Everybody to Count for One? Inclusion and Exclusion in Welfare-Consequentialist Public Policy

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Author/contributor
Title
Everybody to Count for One? Inclusion and Exclusion in Welfare-Consequentialist Public Policy
Abstract
Which individuals should count in a welfare-consequentialist analysis of public policy? Some answers to this question are parochial, and others are more inclusive. The most inclusive possible answer is ‘everybody to count for one.’ In other words, all individuals who are capable of having welfare – including foreigners, the unborn, and non-human animals – should be weighed equally. This article argues that ‘who should count’ is a question that requires a two-level answer. On the first level, a specification of welfare-consequentialism serves as an ethical ideal, a claim about the attributes that the ideal policy would have. ‘Everybody to count for one’ might succeed on this level. However, on the second level is the welfare-consequentialist analysis procedure used by human analysts to give advice on real policy questions. For epistemic reasons, the analysis procedure should be more parochial than ‘everybody to count for one.’
Publication
Moral Philosophy and Politics
Volume
9
Issue
2
Pages
293-322
Date
2022-10-01
Language
en
ISSN
2194-5624
Short Title
Everybody to Count for One?
Accessed
9/29/23, 8:27 PM
Library Catalog
Rights
De Gruyter expressly reserves the right to use all content for commercial text and data mining within the meaning of Section 44b of the German Copyright Act.
Extra
Publisher: De Gruyter
Citation
Semple, N. (2022). Everybody to Count for One? Inclusion and Exclusion in Welfare-Consequentialist Public Policy. Moral Philosophy and Politics, 9(2), 293–322. https://doi.org/10.1515/mopp-2020-0014
Author / Editor