Can Consequentialists Honour the Special Moral Status of Persons?
It is widely believed that consequentialists are committed to the claim that persons are mere containers for well-being. In this article I challenge this view by proposing a new version of consequentialism, according to which the identities of persons matter. The new theory, two-dimensional prioritarianism, is a natural extension of traditional prioritarianism. Two-dimensional prioritarianism holds that well-being matters more for persons who are at a low absolute level than for persons who are at a higher level <italic>and</italic> that it is worse to be deprived of a given number of units than it is good to gain the same number of units, even if the new distribution is a permutation of the original one. If a fixed amount of well-being is transferred from one person to another and then transferred back again, two-dimensional prioritarianism implies that it would have been better to preserve the status quo.
Year of publication: |
2010
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Authors: | PETERSON, MARTIN |
Published in: |
Utilitas. - Cambridge University Press. - Vol. 22.2010, 04, p. 434-446
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Publisher: |
Cambridge University Press |
Description of contents: | Abstract [journals.cambridge.org] |
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