Before moving on I would like to briefly discuss the potential philosophical   significance of the vulnerability-care model as presented thus far. The ethics   of vulnerability and care and the VCP is theoretically attractive because it   suggest that many of our commonly-held beliefs about special moral obligations   in the spheres of the family, regarding contracts/promises, and business and   professional relationships can be viewed as derived from considerations of the   vulnerability and dependence of the objects of these responsibilities, and the   practice and value of care on the parts of their bearers. In other words, many   types of special moral responsibilities that we commonly accept and act in   accordance with on a daily basis can be explained at least in part by the fact   that there is a moral patient is vulnerable and is dependent on others for   their care. If this insight is correct it seems that we can posit stronger   evaluative reasons, if not motivational ones as well, for elevating the   importance of the social responsibilities we might have regarding ill,   impoverished, or persecuted people living in other countries, future persons   who are temporally distant from us, and threatened nonhuman species and the   ecosystems on which their survival and well-being depends.           
The VCP might, for instance, help to explain and justify the widely held moral   intuition behind the project of global humanitarian relief. Is it appropriate   to believe that people living relatively comfortable, affluent, and secure   lives have special moral responsibilities to come to the aid of other people,   far away, whose homes and livelihoods have been suddenly destroyed by a   cyclone, an earthquake, flood, or tsunami? Many people do in fact respond   morally to such natural catastrophes with generosity and compassion. Why   should they? They have made no promises or entered into any voluntary   agreements to aid those in need. Rather, they respond conscientiously because   they feel the pull of a social responsibility to protect the vulnerable and   understand that while they are not uniquely placed to help those in need, they   can contribute something of value to ameliorate and remedy a situation of   helplessness and vulnerability which they did not create. This moral response,   the caring response, is a fundamental feature of the moral life, and is   rightly considered a moral virtue which should be cultivated as supported.   Caring, in this context, is part of an emerging cosmopolitan ethic in which   national borders, ethnic, religious, or linguistic differences among   individuals do not matter. What does matter is that we regard all living human   beings on the planet as members of a single moral community.           
In light of the vulnerability-care model, we might also view it as wrong to   appropriate the world's nonrenewable resources for our exclusive use knowing   that future generations will be disadvantaged if we do so. Morally speaking,   many people believe we should not take advantage of the fact that future   generations cannot voice objections to any of our current practices because   they do not yet exist and cannot know that we are making their position   disadvantageous. Future persons are vulnerable to us in ways in which we are   not vulnerable to them. We might see it as morally wrong to be aware of the   fact that, without our moral concern, future generations will suffer various   sorts of harms, such as for instance are predicted to result from global   warming, and fail to prevent them (even though we are the only ones in a   position to do so), even when the cost to us would not be grave. The   vulnerability-care principle would seem to indicate that we can have in such   cases a social responsibility to protect those who are particularly vulnerable   and dependent on our choices and actions, even when they cannot reciprocate.   In this case, distance in time, not only in space, appears to make no   difference in the nature of our moral responsibilities towards future   generations. We the living can have moral responsibilities towards those who   will come after us, not because we agreed to accept them, or because we have a   social contract between us and persons who do not now (and may never) exist,   but because, whomever comes after us is now in a position of relative   vulnerability to us since they cannot affect our well-being while we can   affect theirs.           
Vulnerability seems to be one of those ethical principles which carries both   justificatory weight as well as motivational strength. However, the most   significant problem with this sort of motivation as applied to concern for   future generations is the difficulty in assessing how and to what extent   future generations are vulnerable to our present actions. Truly, there can be   little argument that they depend upon us for the world that they will inherit,   but the question remains is how far can such a motivation go in terms of   distance into the future and perceived need of those living in it, as well as   the extent to which members of the current generation should sacrifice their   own well-being in light of such considerations.
But if we think that we, as   member of society, do have some special moral responsibilities towards members   of future generations of human beings, these responsibilities cannot it seems   be accounted for on the voluntaristic model. Future people, because they do   not yet exist, cannot be parties to a contract or a promise. If we owe them   anything, morally speaking, it must be for some other reason.          
Similar considerations arise with respect to the relationship between human   beings and other biological organisms. Because of our technological prowess we   humans have become the masters of the earth, and to a significant extent, the   well-being and survival of other living species now depends upon our choices   and actions. That other species are vulnerable to us and dependent on our   choices and actions, might provide a moral reason for our taking steps to   ensure that their habitats are protected, and that they can continue to   flourish in whatever ways are appropriate to their natures. According to the   vulnerability principle we can acquire special moral responsibilities towards   non-human species to protect their interests and well-being, even though, like   infants, the mentally impaired and infirm, and members of future generations,   they cannot function as parties to contractual agreements.            Contracts and promises can be made between moral agents who enjoy equal moral   status and they engender rights and reciprocal responsibilities.
But some   moral responsibilities arise as well between moral agents and moral patients   who are unequal in moral status and in which the moral responsibilities   generated are asymmetrical and non-reciprocal. If we are to provide an account   for the intuitions that many people have that such moral responsibilities do   exist, then the vulnerability-care principle provides at least a plausible theory of how we can think about these kinds of moral responsibilities.      
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