For as long as humans have pondered philosophical issues, they have
contemplated "the good life". Yet most suggestions about how to live a
good life rest on assumptions about what the good life actually is.
Thomas Carson here confronts that question from a fresh perspective.
Surveying the history of philosophy, he addresses first-order questions
about what is good and bad as well as metaethical questions concerning
value judgments.Carson considers a number of established viewpoints
concerning the good life. He offers a new critique of Mill's and
Sidgwick's classic arguments for the hedonistic theory of value,
employing thought experiments that invite us to clarify our preferences
by choosing between different kinds of lives. He also assesses the
desire or preference-satisfaction theory of value in detail and takes
a fresh look at both Nietzsche's Ubermensch ideal and Aristotle's
theory of the good life. In exploring foundational questions, Carson
observes that many established theories reston undefended assumptions
about the truth of moral realism. Arguing against this stand, he
defends the view that "good" means "desirable" and presents a
divine-preference version of the desire-satisfaction theory. In this he
contends that, if there exists a kind and omniscient God who created
the universe, then what is good or bad is determined by His
preferences; if such a God does not exist, what is good or bad depends
on what we as rational humans desire.
Value and the Good Life is the
only book that defends a divine-preference theory of value as opposed
to a divine-command theory of right and wrong. It offers a masterfully
constructed argument in answer to an age-old question and will stimulate
all who seek to know what the good life truly is.. ~
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