The Confinement Problem: How to Terminate Your Mom with Her Trust

Analysis 55 (4):310 - 313 (1995)
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Abstract

Cliff Landesman provides a vivid description of a case where we have no best outcome available to us. He poses this as a problem for utilitarians who advise us to do the best we can. This does indeed make such advice impractical. I begin by contrasting older versions of utilitarianism with newer ones that have appeared in deontic logic and that were designed precisely to accommodate Landesman's sort of scenario. (I cast matters in terms of the Limit Assumption and world-theoretic versions of utilitarianism.) I then make three points. First, Landesman's problem does not pose any special problem for these newer theories. Secondly, I note that it is an interesting consequence of these newer theories being utilitarian theories, that--contrary to the tradition--utilitarianism isn't automatically a no conflicts theory of obligation. Thirdly, and most importantly, I identify a new, deeper and wider theoretical problem: "The Confinement Problem". This problem infests the newer versions of utilitarianism. Worse still, the infestation spreads to satisficing consequentialism (cf. Scheffler, Slote), the direction Landesman points to for a solution to his problem, and this new problem is one where the theoretical rulings of these theories clearly conflict with intuition.

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Author's Profile

Paul McNamara
University of New Hampshire, Durham

Citations of this work

Deontic logic.Paul McNamara - 2010 - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
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Maximality vs. Optimality in Dyadic Deontic Logic.Xavier Parent - 2014 - Journal of Philosophical Logic 43 (6):1101-1128.

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References found in this work

The Limit Assumption in Deontic Logic.Christoph Fehige - 1994 - In Georg Meggle & Ulla Wessels (eds.), Analyōmen 1 =. De Gruyter. pp. 42-56.
The Limit Assumption in Deontic Logic.Christoph Fehige - 1994 - In Ulla Wessels & Georg Meggle (eds.), Analyōmen 1 =. De Gruyter. pp. 42-56.

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