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Feldman, Fred
Department of Philosophy
University of Massachusetts
Print publication date: 2004 (this edition)
Published to Oxford Scholarship Online: August 2004 Print ISBN-13: 978-0-19-926516-9 doi:10.1093/019926516X.003.0011 |
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Contains a review of the main themes of the book and a description of my vision of the Good Life. It also contains an admission of some of the puzzles left unsolved here. Among the main themes are: the importance of being clear about what an axiological theory is supposed to tell us; the importance of formulating one's proposed axiological theory (hedonistic or not) in a coherent way; the importance of recognizing the distinction between forms of sensory hedonism and forms of attitudinal hedonism; the advantages of attitudinal hedonism and its capacity (especially in desert-adjusted forms) to avoid classic objections; the plasticity of attitudinal hedonism; the importance and interest (and difficulty) of determining precisely what makes it correct to categorize an axiological theory as ‘hedonism’.
Keywords: axiology, desert, hedonism, the repugnant conclusion, totalism,
doi:10.1093/019926516X.003.0011
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