Title: Ethics: Discovering Right and Wrong
1 Chapter Four Value and the Quest for the Good
What sort of things are valuable? Convenience
Machine example
2Intrinsic and Instrumental Value
- Intrinsic goods good because of their nature and
are not derived from other goods - Instrumental goods worthy of desire because they
are effective means of attaining our intrinsic
goods
3The Value of Pleasure
Hedonism The doctrine that holds that all
pleasure is good, that pleasure is the only
thing good in itself, and that all other
goodness is derived from this
value. Hedonism comes from the Greek word
hedon, which means pleasure.
4Hedonists Subdivide into Two Categories
- Sensualism the view that equates all pleasure
with sensual enjoyment - Satisfactionism the view that equates all
- pleasure with satisfaction or enjoyment,
- which may not involve sensuality.
5Nonhedonists
Are divided into two separate groups 1.
Monists Believe that there is a
single intrinsic value, but it is
not pleasure. 2. Pluralists Admit that
pleasure is an intrinsic good, but
that there are other intrinsic goods
as well.
6Are Values Objective or Subjective?
Objectivist View Values are worthy of desire
whether or not anyone actually desires them.
Values exist independently. Subjectivist View
Values are dependent on desirers and are relative
to desirers.
7Relation of Value to Morality
- Value Theory is at the heart of Moral Theory.
- From our values we derive principles.
- We judge which principle to use, then decide what
to do. - Weakness of will meaning to do the right thing,
but being too morally weak to accomplish the task.
8The Good Life
- Aristotle (384-322 BCE) believed that all people
seek happiness. - Eudaimonia not merely a subjective state of
pleasure or contentment, but the kind of life we
would all want to live if we understood our
essential nature.
9The Good Life
- John Rawls' plan of life conception of
happiness - There is a plurality of life plans open to each
person, and what is important is that the plan be
an integrated whole, freely chosen by the person
and that the person be successful in realizing
his or her goals
10The Good Life
- Missing ingredients from the Happiness Machine
necessary for the happy life - Action
- Freedom
- Character
- Relationships
11The Good Life
- Moderate objectivism view of happiness
- Happiness is life in which there exists free
action (including meaningful work), loving
relations, and moral character and in which the
individual is not plagued by guilt and anxiety
bit is blessed with peace and satisfaction.