Happiness in a Flux? The Instability Problem

In the recent discussion of happiness it has become popular to claim that being happy means having a certain positive attitude towards your life. This attitude involves both a judgement that your life measures up to your standards and a feeling of satisfaction with your life. In this paper, I am goi...

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Main Author: Bykvist, K
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: 2010
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author Bykvist, K
author_facet Bykvist, K
author_sort Bykvist, K
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description In the recent discussion of happiness it has become popular to claim that being happy means having a certain positive attitude towards your life. This attitude involves both a judgement that your life measures up to your standards and a feeling of satisfaction with your life. In this paper, I am going to discuss a serious problem inherent in this account that has important ramifications for the normative question of how we ought to pursue happiness. If happiness is in part determined by your standards, how shall we determine whether you are happier in one life than in another when your standards change across these lives? Perhaps you will judge a life as a parent as better than a childless life, if you were to become a parent, but judge a childless life as better than a parenting life, if you were to remain childless. Which standard should determine the comparative happiness of the two lives? In this paper, I shall argue that some innocent-looking answers to this question will generate inconsistencies. To find an acceptable resolution, we need to make a difficult choice between what on the face of it look like two equally valid principles of happiness. © 2010 Springer Science+Business Media B.V.
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spelling oxford-uuid:01897a4d-d807-45c6-b6db-3ac1aa1faddd2022-03-26T08:35:38ZHappiness in a Flux? The Instability ProblemJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:01897a4d-d807-45c6-b6db-3ac1aa1fadddEnglishSymplectic Elements at Oxford2010Bykvist, KIn the recent discussion of happiness it has become popular to claim that being happy means having a certain positive attitude towards your life. This attitude involves both a judgement that your life measures up to your standards and a feeling of satisfaction with your life. In this paper, I am going to discuss a serious problem inherent in this account that has important ramifications for the normative question of how we ought to pursue happiness. If happiness is in part determined by your standards, how shall we determine whether you are happier in one life than in another when your standards change across these lives? Perhaps you will judge a life as a parent as better than a childless life, if you were to become a parent, but judge a childless life as better than a parenting life, if you were to remain childless. Which standard should determine the comparative happiness of the two lives? In this paper, I shall argue that some innocent-looking answers to this question will generate inconsistencies. To find an acceptable resolution, we need to make a difficult choice between what on the face of it look like two equally valid principles of happiness. © 2010 Springer Science+Business Media B.V.
spellingShingle Bykvist, K
Happiness in a Flux? The Instability Problem
title Happiness in a Flux? The Instability Problem
title_full Happiness in a Flux? The Instability Problem
title_fullStr Happiness in a Flux? The Instability Problem
title_full_unstemmed Happiness in a Flux? The Instability Problem
title_short Happiness in a Flux? The Instability Problem
title_sort happiness in a flux the instability problem
work_keys_str_mv AT bykvistk happinessinafluxtheinstabilityproblem