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The Tango of Ethics : Intuition, Rationality and the Prevention of Suffering.
- Format:
- Book
- Author/Creator:
- Leighton, Jonathan.
- Language:
- English
- Subjects (All):
- Ethics.
- Physical Description:
- 1 online resource (240 p.) ill
- Edition:
- 1st ed.
- Place of Publication:
- Luton, Bedfordshire : Imprint Academic, 2023.
- Summary:
- Despite existing for thousands of years, the field of ethics remains strongly influenced by several largely unquestioned assumptions and cognitive biases that can dramatically affect our priorities. The Tango of Ethics: Intuition, Rationality and the Prevention of Suffering proposes a deep, rigorous reassessment of how we think about ethics. Eschewing the traditional language of morality, it places a central emphasis on phenomenological experience and the unique urgency of suffering wherever it occurs, challenges our existence bias and examines the consequences of a metaphysically accurate understanding of personal identity.A key paradigm in The Tango of Ethics is the conflict and interplay between two fundamentally different ways of seeing and being in the world -- that of the intuitive human being who wants to lead a meaningful life and thrive, and that of the detached, rational agent who wants to prevent unbearable suffering from occurring. Leighton aims to reconcile these two stances or motivations within a more holistic framework he labels 'xNU+' that places them at distinct ethical levels. This approach avoids some of the flaws of classical utilitarianism, including the notion that extreme suffering can be formally balanced out by enough bliss, while maintaining a focus on impact. He also identifies some of the limits of rationality and our dependence on intuitions to make ethical decisions.The book explores the implications of this way of thinking for real-world ethical dilemmas and how we might incorporate it into governance. With societal collapse, increasing totalitarianism and artificial general intelligence all very real threats in the coming years, Leighton argues that it is as important as ever to promote these ethics and their implementation while there is still an opportunity for some convergence around what matters.
- Contents:
- Cover
- Contents
- Front Matter
- Title Page
- Publisher Information
- Epigraph
- Acknowledgements
- The Tango of Ethics
- 1: Ethics as an Authentic Dance
- The Path of Truth and Compassion
- Post-Battle Assessment
- Can Ethics Help Us Improve the World?
- Rethinking Ethics
- Can One Be Too Transparent about Ethics?
- Adjusting Priorities
- 2: Intuition and Rationality
- Intuition and Its Roots
- The Role of Rationality
- Managing Expectations: The Limits of Rationality
- 3: Ethics: What is the Question?
- Understanding Oughtism
- Consequentialism: Impact Matters
- Utilitarianism: Impact On Wellbeing Matters
- Deontology: Follow the Rules
- Virtue Ethics: Be Good
- Can Any One Theory Be Correct?
- 4: Ethics and Subjective Experience
- Hedonic States and Wellbeing
- Preference Satisfaction
- Interests
- Suffering
- The Notion of Urgency
- The Significance of Extreme and Unbearable Suffering
- Buddhism and Craving
- Voluntary Suffering
- Happiness and Wellbeing
- Capturing the Dynamics of Hedonic States
- Absence of Suffering: From Hedonic Zero to Bliss
- 5: Evaluating Value
- The Confusion about Value and the Compulsion to Create It
- The Fundamental Ethical Asymmetry Between Suffering and Happiness
- Negative Utilitarianism
- 6: The Map and the Territory
- The Mathematics of Suffering
- Measuring Suffering
- The Hedonic Delusion
- Lost In Aggregation
- 7: Determining Priorities
- Intensity vs. Instances: The Essence of Uncertainty
- Comparing Physical Pain and Psychological Suffering
- Unbearable Suffering as an Ethical Tipping Point
- Expected Value and Cause Prioritisation
- 8: Suffering and the Illusion of Separateness
- The True Nature of Personal Identity
- The Golden Rule
- Rawls's Veil of Ignorance
- Anti-Speciesism
- Awakening Awareness.
- 9: Our Complex Relationship with Suffering
- The Fleetingness of Momentary Decisions
- Voluntary Personal Sacrifices Don't Justify Imposing Suffering On Others
- Tolerating the Intolerable
- The Need for Systems That Are More Rational and Compassionate Than We Are
- The Intuition Towards Fairness and Against the Concentration of Suffering
- 10: Existence
- A Life Worth Living
- Escaping the Repugnant Conclusion
- Why Non-Existence Isn't a Bad Thing
- Reducing Existential Risk: An Intuition with Conditions
- Preserving Consciousness
- 11: A Holistic Ethical Framework
- Key Principles
- xNU+
- How xNU+ Compares to Prioritarianism
- How xNU+ Responds to Common Objections to Negative Utilitarianism
- Consistency: Being Truthful and Rational
- How Everything Is Connected by Utilitarianism
- How Obsessive Utilitarianism Can Be Self-Defeating
- 12: Current and Potential Causes of Intense Suffering
- Human Suffering
- Abuse and Torture of Non-Human Animals
- Nature and Wild Animal Suffering
- Insect and Other Invertebrate Suffering
- Far Future Suffering
- Artificial/Machine Suffering
- 13: A Tangible Tango
- Helping Those Closest vs. Helping Strangers
- War
- Animal Experimentation
- The Grey Zone of Animal Exploitation
- Veganism vs. Reducing Suffering: Is Eating Animal Products Ever Justifiable?
- Eating Oysters and Other Brainless Invertebrates
- Painlessly Killing Happy Animals
- Euthanasia of Suffering Animals
- Euthanasia and Assisted Suicide in Humans
- Saving Lives vs. Preventing Suffering
- Anti-Natalism
- The Meat-Eater Problem
- Preserving the Environment vs. Reducing Wild Animal Suffering
- 14: From Ethics to Action
- Reflections on the Ethical Tango
- Creating a New Suffering Metric for Health Economics
- Impacting the Far Future.
- Designing Compassionate Blueprints for Governance Based on xNU+ Ethics
- The Last Tango: Embedding xNU+ Ethics into AGI
- Balancing Personal Initiative and Collective Action
- Activism and the Desire to See Impact
- How Much Empathy Do We Need?
- The Fractal-Like Nature of Ethical Action
- Spreading Love, Empathy, Rationality and Compassion
- Back Matter
- References.
- Notes:
- Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources.
- ISBN:
- 9781788361026
- 1788361024
- 9781788361033
- 1788361032
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