TITLE:
What Should Parents Do for Their Children —A Philosophical View of Parental Obligation
AUTHORS:
Hanhui Xu
KEYWORDS:
Parental Obligations, Decent Life, Maltreatment, Autonomy, Moral Education
JOURNAL NAME:
Open Journal of Philosophy,
Vol.11 No.4,
September
15,
2021
ABSTRACT: Parental obligations are the obligations acquired by parents to their
young children. It is believed that parents have special obligations to their children.
However, what are the contents of such obligations? Are parental obligations
limited to meeting children’s basic needs for food, clothing, and shelter? Do
parents have an obligation to best promote children’s welfare? What are the
requirements of the children’s right to an open future? And is it possible for
parents to meet such requirements? In this article, I try to address these
issues by appealing to a philosophical view of parental obligation, according
to which parental obligations require parents to ensure their children have a
reasonable expectation of a decent life. Thus, parents are obligated to protect
their children from abuse and neglect, help their children to become autonomous
agents and provide their children with an adequate moral education. In
addition, although the children’s right to an open future imposes given
obligations on parents, it does not indicate that parents are obligated to
expose children to as many activities and much experience as possible.
Such an understanding of the children’s right to an open future is incorrect.