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Do living people owe posterity any obligation? Can we - presently living people - admit to owing remote yet-to-be-conceived people and their world of, say, 200years ahead - the obligation of quality standard of life and opportunities to meet their own needs? Many people do not think we can and should. They vehemently reject such notion of responsibility on the basis of its myriad questions, paradoxes and perplexities. But Martin Heidegger and I think we can and should. And this book gallantly tells why.

Produktbeschreibung
Do living people owe posterity any obligation? Can we - presently living people - admit to owing remote yet-to-be-conceived people and their world of, say, 200years ahead - the obligation of quality standard of life and opportunities to meet their own needs? Many people do not think we can and should. They vehemently reject such notion of responsibility on the basis of its myriad questions, paradoxes and perplexities. But Martin Heidegger and I think we can and should. And this book gallantly tells why.
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Autorenporträt
Dr. Otto Dennis is an Ibibio native of Nigeria who currently lectures Philosophy at Akwa Ibom State University, Akwa Ibom State, Nigeria. His research specialty is in Ethics of Intergenerational Justice (also known as Ethics of Posterity). And he teaches Ethics, Metaphysics, Ontology, Phenomenology, Existentialism, and Postmodernism, competently.