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The Monstrous Conclusion

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AbstractThis paper introduces the Monstrous Conclusion, according to which, for any population, there is a better population consisting of just one individual (the Monster). The Monstrous Conclusion is deeply counterintuitive. I defend a version of Prioritarianism as a particularly promising population axiology that does not imply the Monstrous Conclusion. According to this version of Prioritarianism, which I call Asymptotic Prioritarianism, there is diminishing marginal moral importance of individual welfare that can get close to, but never quite reach, some upper limit. I argue that Asymptotic Prioritarianism faces a theoretical cost, that I call the Absolute Priority Principle. However, the Absolute Priority Principle is an extreme version of what I call the Trade-off Condition, an already noteworthy problem facing other (more widely endorsed) versions of Prioritarianism. I conclude that it is better for a theory to imply the Absolute Priority Principle and avoid the Monstrous Conclusion than to imply the Monstrous Conclusion and the Trade-off Condition. The potential for Asymptotic Prioritarianism is substantial.
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Title: The Monstrous Conclusion
Description:
AbstractThis paper introduces the Monstrous Conclusion, according to which, for any population, there is a better population consisting of just one individual (the Monster).
The Monstrous Conclusion is deeply counterintuitive.
I defend a version of Prioritarianism as a particularly promising population axiology that does not imply the Monstrous Conclusion.
According to this version of Prioritarianism, which I call Asymptotic Prioritarianism, there is diminishing marginal moral importance of individual welfare that can get close to, but never quite reach, some upper limit.
I argue that Asymptotic Prioritarianism faces a theoretical cost, that I call the Absolute Priority Principle.
However, the Absolute Priority Principle is an extreme version of what I call the Trade-off Condition, an already noteworthy problem facing other (more widely endorsed) versions of Prioritarianism.
I conclude that it is better for a theory to imply the Absolute Priority Principle and avoid the Monstrous Conclusion than to imply the Monstrous Conclusion and the Trade-off Condition.
The potential for Asymptotic Prioritarianism is substantial.

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