Abstract
Panpsychism is a striking metaphysical claim: every part of the physical world
has some form of consciousness. Does this striking claim have equally striking ethical
implications? Does it change what duties we owe to which beings, or how we
should understand the relation between self-interest and altruism? Some defenders
as well as critics of panpsychism have suggested it does. Others have disagreed. In
this paper, we attempt to survey and organize these existing discussions. We suggest
that panpsychism is likely to have significant implications, but that they 1) stop
short of some of the most radical implications sometimes associated with the view
(by both critics and proponents), and 2) often depend heavily on the exact sort of
panpsychism that is endorsed, as well as how one settles various independent questions about value and identity.