Abstract
How should we as a society value changes in population size? The
question may be crucial when evaluating global warming scenarios. I
defend the intuition of neutrality, which answers a part of the
question. It states that – other things being equal – it is ethically
irrelevant whether or not additional people are added to a population.
The argument against neutrality criticizes the intuition of neutrality
as inconsistent.
The contribution of this thesis is twofold: First, the framework of
welfare economics, the intuition of neutrality, and the argument against
neutrality will be presented with formal rigour. Second, the formalizations
will be used for a critical analysis of the argument against neutrality.
Three ethical frameworks will be assumed – the difference principle,
average utilitarianism, and contractarianism –, and their relation to
the explicit and hidden premises of the argument against neutrality will
be investigated.
The result will be that all three frameworks are compatible with the
intuition of neutrality (or slightly modified versions); so the argument
against neutrality does not hold within them.