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Repug­nant conclusion

TagLast edit: 8 Aug 2022 20:00 UTC by Pablo

The Repugnant Conclusion is the implication, generated by a number of theories in population ethics, that an outcome with sufficiently many people with lives just barely worth living is better than an outcome with arbitrarily many people each arbitrarily well off. Derek Parfit, who first brought the Repugnant Conclusion to the attention of contemporary philosophers, stated it informally as follows: “For any possible population of at least ten billion people, all with a very high quality of life, there must be some much larger imaginable population whose existence, if other things are equal, would be better even though its members have lives that are barely worth living.”[1]

Further reading

Arrhenius, Gustaf, Jesper Ryberg & Torbjörn Tännsjö (2006) The repugnant conclusion, in Edward N. Zalta (ed.) The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, March (updated March 2017).

Blackorby, Charles, Walter Bossert & David Donaldson (2003) The axiomatic approach to population ethics, Politics, Philosophy & Economics, vol. 2, pp. 342–381.

Parfit, Derek (1984) Reasons and Persons, Oxford: Clarendon Press, ch. 17.

Spears, Dean & Mark Budolfson (2021) Repugnant conclusions, Social Choice and Welfare., vol. 57, pp. 567–588.

Zuber, Stéphane et al. (2021) What should we agree on about the repugnant conclusion?, Utilitas, pp. 1–5.

Related entries

population ethics | total view

  1. ^

    Parfit, Derek (1984) Reasons and Persons, Oxford: Clarendon Press, p. 388.

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58 points
60 comments1 min readEA link

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129 points
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114 points
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30 points
11 comments7 min readEA link

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19 points
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The Repug­nant Con­clu­sion Isn’t

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54 points
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16 points
11 comments3 min readEA link

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17 points
29 comments9 min readEA link

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3 points
16 comments5 min readEA link

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22 points
23 comments8 min readEA link

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21 points
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22 comments24 min readEA link

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13 points
0 comments6 min readEA link

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2 points
14 comments2 min readEA link

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2 points
0 comments1 min readEA link

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3 points
24 comments11 min readEA link

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12 points
2 comments1 min readEA link

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3 points
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−1 points
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The weight of suffer­ing (An­dreas Mo­gensen)

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48 points
1 comment2 min readEA link

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8 points
0 comments22 min readEA link

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7 points
9 comments16 min readEA link

Crit­i­cal sum­mary of Meacham’s “Per­son-Affect­ing Views and Sat­u­rat­ing Coun­ter­part Re­la­tions”

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55 points
30 comments11 min readEA link
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