Logic List Mailing Archive

Philosophy of the Precautionary Principle

3 May 2016
Tilburg, The Netherlands

Workshop: Philosophy of the Precautionary Principle
Location: TiLPS, Tilburg University, The Netherlands.
Dante Building, Room DZ003.
Date: May 3rd, 2016
Organizers: Thomas Boyer-Kassem and Jan Sprenger.
Contact: t.c.e.boyer@tilburguniversity.edu<mailto:t.c.e.boyer@tilburguniversity.edu>

Participation in the workshop and refreshments are free. Advance 
registration by email to tilps@uvt.nl<mailto:tilps@uvt.nl> is appreciated. 
There will be a social dinner after the workshop.

14:00-15:00 ? Martin Peterson (Texas A&M University, USA)
?When To Use the Precautionary Principle and When Not To Use It. A Geometric Analysis.?

Abstract:
In this talk I argue that geometric concepts such as points, distances, 
and lines can be used for construing the precautionary principle and other 
moral principles as abstract regions in a multidimensional space, as well 
as for balancing conflicting principles against each other. The main 
advantage of the geometric method is that it enables ethicists to sharpen 
discussions of the precautionary principle and other moral principles in 
ways that have previously been beyond the limits of the discipline. This 
adds a missing perspective to the ethics of risk and technology, and to 
methodological discussions of applied ethics in general. The talk is based 
on Ch. 2 and 5 of my book The Ethics of Technology: A Geometric Analysis 
of Five Moral Principles, forthcoming with Oxford University Press.

15:00-16:00 ? Thomas Boyer-Kassem (Tilburg University, The Netherlands)
?On the coherence of the Precautionary Principle as a decision rule?

Abstract:
What should exactly be the role of the Precautionary Principle (PP)? In 
the literature, the PP is traditionally envisaged either as a 
meta-principle, as a decision rule, or as an epistemic principle. Martin 
Peterson (2006) has argued that the PP as a decision rule is incoherent: 
when conjoined with some other (standard) decision theory principles, a 
contradiction obtains. In this talk, I want to challenge this incoherence 
result. First, I argue that one of the other decision theory principles, 
namely an Archimedian principle, is not sensible in a precautionary 
context. Second, I argue that Peterson's explication of the PP does not 
correspond to our intuition of what the PP is. The road is then free for 
the PP to be considered as a decision rule.

16:00-16:30 ? Break

16:30-17:30 Neelke Doorn (Delft University of Technology, The Netherlands)
?How safe is safe enough: The place of irreversibility in decision making about risks?

Abstract:

Irreversibility is one of the central notions in most formulations of the 
precautionary principle. Yet, the notion is poorly defined. Based on an 
analysis of different interpretations of irreversibility in physics, 
medicine, and economics respectively, I develop an account of 
irreversibility that takes into account the qualitatively distinct and 
unique nature of certain losses. My claim is that not only probabilities 
and the disvalue of consequences, but also the irreversible nature of 
these consequences should be taken into account when deciding about 
acceptable risk levels.
--
[LOGIC] mailing list
http://www.dvmlg.de/mailingliste.html
Archive: http://www.illc.uva.nl/LogicList/

provided by a collaboration of the DVMLG, the Maths Departments in Bonn and Hamburg, and the ILLC at the Universiteit van Amsterdam