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Griffin’s Pessimism

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  11. Griffin’s Pessimism
Griffin’s Pessimism
Author(s)Crisp, Roger
AbstractDoes human well-being consist in pleasure, the satisfaction of desires, or some set of goods such as knowledge, friendship, and accomplishment? Does being moral contribute to well-being, and is there a conflict between people’s self-interest and the moral demands on them? Are the values of well-being and of morality measurable? Are such values objective? What is the relation between such values and the natural world? And how much can philosophical theory help us in our answers to these and similar questions? Issues such as these provide the focus for much of the work of James Griffin.
IssueNo
Pages115-128
ArticleArticle Not Available
SourceWell-Being and Morality: Essays in Honour of James Griffin
VolumeNo
PubDate 2000
ISBN_ISSN198235844

Concepts of Well-Being

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