Abstract

Some find it plausible that a sufficiently long duration of torture is worse than any duration of mild headaches. Similarly, it has been claimed that a million humans living great lives is better than any number of worm-like creatures feeling a few seconds of pleasure each. Some have related bad things to good things along the same lines. For example, one may hold that a future in which a sufficient number of beings experience a lifetime of torture is bad, regardless of what else that future contains, while minor bad things, such as slight unpleasantness, can always be counterbalanced by enough good things. Among the most common objections to such ideas are sequence arguments. But sequence arguments are usually formulated in classical logic. One might therefore wonder if they work if we instead adopt many-valued logic. I show that, in a common many-valued logical framework, the answer depends on which versions of transitivity are used as premises. We get valid sequence arguments if we grant any of several strong forms of transitivity of ‘is at least as bad as’ and a notion of completeness. Other, weaker forms of transitivity lead to invalid sequence arguments. The plausibility of the premises is largely set aside here, but I tentatively note that almost all of the forms of transitivity that lead to valid sequence arguments seem intuitively problematic. Still, a few moderately strong forms of transitivity that might be acceptable lead to valid sequence arguments, although weaker statements of the initial value claims avoid these arguments at least to some extent.

Highlights

  • Some find it plausible that there are values that cannot be counterbalanced by other values; for example, that a sufficiently large amount of torture is worse than any Synthese amount of mild headaches.1 An example concerning positive value is provided by Lemos (1993, p. 487) who finds it better that a million people live excellent lives than that any number of worm-like creatures each feel a few seconds of pleasure.2 One can relate bad things to good things along the same lines

  • My focus is on the view that there are bad things which are inferior to other bad things, where ‘inferior to’ is defined as follows: Inferiority: An object b is inferior to another object b if and only if there is a number m such that m b-objects are worse than any number of b -objects

  • My findings are bad news in that we get valid sequence arguments if we grant a form of completeness and any of several strong forms of transitivity (T1–T4 or T1r –T4r )

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Summary

Introduction

Some find it plausible that there are values that cannot be counterbalanced by other values; for example, that a sufficiently large amount of torture is worse than any. If a sufficiently large amount of torture is worse than any amount of mild headaches, there is a bad in the sequence such that this relation holds between it and its successor; for example, a sufficiently large amount of severe headaches is worse than any amount of moderate headaches It is implausible, the argument goes, that this holds between adjacent bads in the sequence, which are so similar. We would deal with betterness or worseness rather than baldness, but the story could be similar: the holding of the relation of worseness between two items can come in degrees Another option is to understand the truth degree an agent would give to a sentence as the ease with which the agent can accept the sentence (Paris 1997).

The views targeted by sequence arguments
Previous sequence arguments in more detail
Approaches to sequence arguments using many-valued logic
Our logical framework
Many-valued relations and completeness
Transitivity of many-valued relations
Sequence arguments using many-valued logic
Concluding remarks
A Proof of Theorem 1
B Proof of Theorem 2
C Proof of Theorem 3
D Proof of Theorem 4
F Proof of Theorem 5
G Proof of Theorem 6
H A more intuitive structure
Full Text
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