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Centre for Consciousness

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Centre for Moral, Social and Political Theory

Centre for Philosophy of the Sciences

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HomeHomeHappy Immoralists and Satisfied Loners: A Pragmatic Perspective On Disagreement About Well-being- Valerie Tiberius
Happy Immoralists and Satisfied Loners: A pragmatic perspective on disagreement about well-being- Valerie Tiberius
comparison between happy and sad mental conditions, with a face expression and a symbol for each, such as a sun and a rainbow for positive thinking

Image by Eshan (Adobe Stock)

Can a morally bad person live well? Can a person without friends achieve well-being? There is long-standing disagreement about the correct answers to these questions. Valerie offers a diagnosis of the debate between those who answer “no” (objectivists about well-being) and those who answer “yes” (subjectivists about well-being).

Valerie suggests that the reason people are divided about this question is that the opposing answers represent two different perspectives on well-being that answer to two different sets of practical interests. Given this diagnosis, the cure is to acknowledge the importance of both perspectives. Valerie argues for a way of doing this that preserves an important subjective sense of well-being.

Date & time

  • Thu 15 Aug 2024, 3:30 pm - 5:00 pm

Location

Level 1 Auditorium (1.28), RSSS Building 146 Ellery Cres. Acton 2601, ACT

Speakers

  • Valerie Tiberius

Event Series

Philosophy Departmental Seminars

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  •  Michael Barnes
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