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Volumn 32, Issue 4, 2002, Pages 475-490

Sumner on desires and well-being

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EID: 35348964484     PISSN: 00455091     EISSN: 19110820     Source Type: Journal    
DOI: 10.1080/00455091.2002.10716527     Document Type: Review
Times cited : (14)

References (28)
  • 2
    • 42549104272 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Ph.D. Dissertation, Uppsala University
    • To be exact, there are two forms of well-being preferentialism: the object version and the satisfaction version. According to the object version, something is good for me if it is an object of one of my desires. According to the satisfaction version, in contrast, something is good for me if it consists in the satisfaction of one of my desires. This distinction can be brought out by the following example. Suppose that Eric wants to drink pink champagne and in fact drinks pink champagne. The satisfaction preferentialist assigns value to the whole state of affairs that consists of Eric's preference for pink champagne and his drinking pink champagne, whereas the object preferentialist assigns value only to the part of the state that consists of his drinking pink champagne. This is an important distinction, but for the purposes of this paper I think it can be safely put aside. For more on this distinction, see Krister Bykvist, Changing Preferences: A Study in Preferentialism (Ph.D. Dissertation, Uppsala University 1998)
    • (1998) Changing Preferences: A Study in Preferentialism
    • Bykvist, K.1
  • 3
    • 85015957805 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Value Based on Preferences. on Two Interpretations of Preference Utilitarianism
    • and Wlodek Rabinowicz and Jan Österberg, 'Value Based on Preferences. On Two Interpretations of Preference Utilitarianism,' Economics and Philosophy 12 (1996) 1-27
    • (1996) Economics and Philosophy , vol.12 , pp. 1-27
    • Rabinowicz, W.1    Österberg, J.2
  • 5
    • 0003740191 scopus 로고
    • Oxford: Clarendon Press
    • Derek Parfit, Reasons and Persons (Oxford: Clarendon Press 1992), 171
    • (1992) Reasons and Persons , pp. 171
    • Parfit, D.1
  • 6
    • 0005093696 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Ph.D. Dissertation, Acta Universitatis Gothoburgensis
    • Bengt Brülde also points out that Sumner's concept of desire is unusually narrow, in The Human Good (Ph.D. Dissertation, Acta Universitatis Gothoburgensis 1998), 176, n.40
    • (1998) The Human Good , Issue.40 , pp. 176
    • Brülde, B.1
  • 7
    • 0003587862 scopus 로고
    • Oxford: Clarendon Press
    • Richard Hare, Moral Thinking (Oxford: Clarendon Press 1981), 101-2
    • (1981) Moral Thinking , pp. 101-102
    • Hare, R.1
  • 9
    • 85038733398 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Brülde also stresses that there is negative counterpart of wanting, in The Human Good, 160, 161, and 170
    • The Human Good , vol.160 , Issue.161 , pp. 170
  • 10
    • 0039685899 scopus 로고
    • Self-Interest and the Concept of Self-Sacrifice
    • A similar constraint is proposed by Mark Overvold, 'Self-Interest and the Concept of Self-Sacrifice,' Canadian Journal of Philosophy 10 (1980), 117-18. However, his constraint is inferior to mine in two respects. To begin with, it requires that the agent exists at the time of the desired state of affairs. So, my desire for p is relevant to my well-being only if I exist at the time of p. This would exclude too much. It would, for instance, exclude my desire to be buried in my home village on a certain day, and my desire to donate my organs after my death. The second flaw is that Overvold treats his constraint as a sufficient condition for well-being. He thinks that all preferences that fulfill his constraint directly concern the preferrer and, therefore, are in his interest. But this cannot be right. Any preference of mine whose object is of the form I exemplify feature F, would then count, even if F is a mere Cambridge-property, e.g., the property of living in a world in which it is true that snow is white
    • (1980) Canadian Journal of Philosophy , vol.10 , pp. 117-118
    • Overvold, M.1
  • 11
    • 85038696537 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • One could object that Sumner's desire does range over a fact that entails that Sumner exists, since the state of affairs that Sumner's brother is cured entails that Sumner exists (at some point of time). But I assume that Sumner's desire should be read de re. Assuming that Fred is Sumner's brother, what Sumner desires is that Fred is cured, not that whoever is Sumner's brother is cured. I will not take a stand on whether the satisfaction of this latter de dicto desire improves well-being. Jan Österberg made me aware of the relevance of this distinction
    • One could object that Sumner's desire does range over a fact that entails that Sumner exists, since the state of affairs that Sumner's brother is cured entails that Sumner exists (at some point of time). But I assume that Sumner's desire should be read de re. Assuming that Fred is Sumner's brother, what Sumner desires is that Fred is cured, not that whoever is Sumner's brother is cured. I will not take a stand on whether the satisfaction of this latter de dicto desire improves well-being. Jan Österberg made me aware of the relevance of this distinction
  • 12
    • 85038763416 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Strictly speaking, there is yet another possibility: welfare facts may exist eternally. But this option will entail that I am better off both before my death when I am holding the desire and after my death when the desired state obtains
    • Strictly speaking, there is yet another possibility: welfare facts may exist eternally. But this option will entail that I am better off both before my death when I am holding the desire and after my death when the desired state obtains
  • 13
    • 0012525842 scopus 로고
    • Posthumous Harm
    • For a similar point, see Dorothy Grover, 'Posthumous Harm,' Philosophical Quarterly 39 (1989) 334-53
    • (1989) Philosophical Quarterly , vol.39 , pp. 334-353
    • Grover, D.1
  • 15
    • 85038772956 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • An object preferentialist would instead locate the value at the time of the preference object
    • An object preferentialist would instead locate the value at the time of the preference object
  • 16
    • 84959624096 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Griffin
    • Griffin, Well-Being, 23
    • Well-Being , pp. 23
  • 17
    • 85038779899 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • This theory is not without its problems as the editor of this journal suggested, To be a pure preferentialist theory, it will have to say that any ambition or aim confers meaning to a life. But, intuitively, not all ambitions are on a par. We would, for instance, want to say that a desire to count blades of grass confers less meaning to a life than a desire to contribute to nuclear disarmament. But this important objection does not affect my main point. For the objection does not show that a true preferentialist cannot capture our intuition that posthumous satisfactions have some significance. It shows, at most, that a pure preferentialist might have no plausible way of deciding the relative importance of different preferences, whether or not their satisfaction will be posthumous
    • This theory is not without its problems (as the editor of this journal suggested). To be a pure preferentialist theory, it will have to say that any ambition or aim confers meaning to a life. But, intuitively, not all ambitions are on a par. We would, for instance, want to say that a desire to count blades of grass confers less meaning to a life than a desire to contribute to nuclear disarmament. But this important objection does not affect my main point. For the objection does not show that a true preferentialist cannot capture our intuition that posthumous satisfactions have some significance. It shows, at most, that a pure preferentialist might have no plausible way of deciding the relative importance of different preferences, whether or not their satisfaction will be posthumous
  • 18
    • 33645729230 scopus 로고
    • Stanford: Stanford University Press
    • This distinction and the examples given to illustrate it are found in Martin Fischer, ed., The Metaphysics of Death (Stanford: Stanford University Press 1993), 17. However, Fischer does not use it to explain the nature of aims and goals
    • (1993) The Metaphysics of Death , pp. 17
    • Fischer, M.1
  • 19
    • 79956986324 scopus 로고
    • Harm and Self-Interest
    • New York: Oxford University Press
    • Joel Feinberg also stresses that my well-being depends crucially on who is bringing about the desired states of affairs, in 'Harm and Self-Interest,' in Law, Morality, and Society: Essays in Honour of H.A.L. Hart, P.M.S. Hacker and J. Hax, eds. (New York: Oxford University Press 1979). Feinberg says that '[my] interest in producing an excellent book, or a beautiful object is not fully satisfied by another person's creation of such objects. My interest is not simply that such objects exist, but that I bring them into existence' (60; italics in original)
    • (1979) Law, Morality, and Society: Essays in Honour of H.A.L. Hart, P.M.S. Hacker and J. Hax, Eds
    • Feinberg, J.1
  • 20
    • 85038677516 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • I am assuming here that Russell's, Sagan's, and Sumner's desires are intrinsic. It matters intrinsically to all of them who brings about the desired states of affairs. More specifically, each one desires intrinsically that he plays an active part in bringing about the desired state. This is not the only possibility, however. Sometimes our aims and goals are only extrinsic. We want to do something just because we think it will bring about something we desire intrinsically. In these cases, we may not mind at all who is bringing about the states of affairs. So, if another person happens to be in a better position, we might want her to bring about the desired state of affairs. But I strongly doubt that the satisfaction of these extrinsic desires necessarily makes us better off. It will not make us better off if our underlying intrinsic desires are not in any way about ourselves and our lives.
    • I am assuming here that Russell's, Sagan's, and Sumner's desires are intrinsic. It matters intrinsically to all of them who brings about the desired states of affairs. More specifically, each one desires intrinsically that he plays an active part in bringing about the desired state. This is not the only possibility, however. Sometimes our aims and goals are only extrinsic. We want to do something just because we think it will bring about something we desire intrinsically. In these cases, we may not mind at all who is bringing about the states of affairs. So, if another person happens to be in a better position, we might want her to bring about the desired state of affairs. But I strongly doubt that the satisfaction of these extrinsic desires necessarily makes us better off. It will not make us better off if our underlying intrinsic desires are not in any way about ourselves and our lives. Also, the lifetime projects and ambitions that make our lives meaningful are not extrinsic in this way. My life cannot be meaningful if I do not intrinsically want to take any active part in it
  • 21
    • 85038790566 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Sumner mentions the possibility of narrowing the preferentialist theory by focusing only on preferences that function as aims or goals (Sumner, Welfare, Happiness, and Ethics, 132-3). But he rightly points out that this theory would exclude too much. It would, for instance, exclude pleasant surprises, and more generally, all agreeable things that happen to us without us planning for them. He fails to recognize, however, that we could still think, as I do, that the success in achieving our aims is a sufficient condition for our well-being
    • Sumner mentions the possibility of narrowing the preferentialist theory by focusing only on preferences that function as aims or goals (Sumner, Welfare, Happiness, and Ethics, 132-3). But he rightly points out that this theory would exclude too much. It would, for instance, exclude pleasant surprises, and more generally, all agreeable things that happen to us without us planning for them. He fails to recognize, however, that we could still think, as I do, that the success in achieving our aims is a sufficient condition for our well-being
  • 22
    • 0004273805 scopus 로고
    • New York: Basic Books
    • These implications are pointed out by, among others, Robert Nozick, Anarchy, State, and Utopia (New York: Basic Books 1974)
    • (1974) Anarchy, State, and Utopia
    • Nozick, R.1
  • 23
    • 0004140706 scopus 로고
    • Cambridge: Cambridge University Press
    • Thomas Nagel, Mortal Questions (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 1979)
    • (1979) Mortal Questions
    • Nagel, T.1
  • 24
    • 85038759064 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • In the movie, Truman comes to realize that his life is an illusion. At this point, of course, the experience requirement will not rule out that Truman is harmed
    • In the movie, Truman comes to realize that his life is an illusion. At this point, of course, the experience requirement will not rule out that Truman is harmed
  • 25
    • 84888237624 scopus 로고
    • Welfare, Preference, and Rationality
    • R.G. Frey and C.M. Morris, eds. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press
    • The same point is made in Wayne Sumner, 'Welfare, Preference, and Rationality,' in Value, Welfare, and Morality, R.G. Frey and C.M. Morris, eds. (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 1993), 82
    • (1993) Value, Welfare, and Morality , pp. 82
    • Sumner, W.1
  • 27
    • 84930845151 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Brülde
    • This is also stressed by Brülde, The Human Good, 35-7
    • The Human Good , pp. 35-37
  • 28
    • 85038786282 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • For many valuable comments, I would like to thank Bengt Brülde, Andrew Moore, Wayne Sumner, an anonymous referee for CJP, and the responsible editor
    • For many valuable comments, I would like to thank Bengt Brülde, Andrew Moore, Wayne Sumner, an anonymous referee for CJP, and the responsible editor


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