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Immortality and sentencing law

journal contribution
posted on 2002-05-01, 00:00 authored by R Haigh, Mirko Bagaric
The time may not be far away where we may be able to live much longer than we do now – potentially forever. This will have an enormous impact on the way people live their lives as the underlying premise that life is finite underpins many of the central decisions and life choices we make. This paper outlines some philosophical and legal doctrines that are based on the premise that life is finite and some of the changes that may need to occur in light of medical advances in ageing. In particular, it focuses on the changes to sentencing law that may be necessary to accommodate increased human longevity. For the skeptics who refuse to accept the concept of immortality, the arguments presented do not depend on living forever. Some of the issues discussed here are also relevant, albeit in an attenuated manner, because of increases in human longevity that have occurred in the last 100 years.

History

Journal

Journal of philosophy, science & law

Volume

2

Pagination

1 - 4

Publisher

Georgia State University

Location

Atlanta, Ga.

ISSN

1549-8549

Language

eng

Publication classification

C2 Other contribution to refereed journal

Copyright notice

2002, Journal of Philosophy, Science & Law

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