ISBN13: | 9781032867151 |
ISBN10: | 1032867159 |
Binding: | Hardback |
No. of pages: | 264 pages |
Size: | 229x152 mm |
Language: | English |
Illustrations: | 20 Illustrations, black & white; 3 Halftones, black & white; 17 Line drawings, black & white; 2 Tables, black & white |
0 |
The Normative Status of Time Bias
GBP 135.00
Click here to subscribe.
This book empirically investigates the nature of time biases. This book focuses on three key kinds of time bias: near, present, and future bias. It presents a rich picture of the conditions under which we display these biases, and it outlines several psychological explanations for them.
This book empirically investigates the nature of time biases. Many philosophers think that it is rationally permissible to prefer a life that is overall worse to one that is overall better, as long as the badness of that life lies in the past rather than the future. These philosophers think that it is rationally permissible to be time biased. Time biased individuals differently value the wellbeing of their various selves in virtue of where those selves are located in time. This book focuses on three key kinds of time bias: near, present, and future bias. It presents a rich picture of the conditions under which we display these biases, and it outlines several psychological explanations for them. It then uses this new empirical research we conducted to inform arguments regarding the normative status of these biases. At its heart it considers the question: does having time biased preferences of one sort or another make us better off or worse off? And it uses the answers to these questions to inform our theorising about whether we have reason either to have or to avoid having such preferences.
Chapter 1: Introduction; Chapter 2: Do Time Biased Preferences Matter?; Chapter 3: Connecting the Time Biases; Chapter 4: Bad Upshot Arguments against Future Bias; Chapter 5: Arguments for Time Bias Part I; Chapter 6: Arguments against Time Bias Part II; Chapter 7: Arguments against Time Bias; Chapter 8: On Being Time Biased.