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9 - Satisficing and Perfectionism in Virtue Ethics

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  04 December 2009

Christine Swanton
Affiliation:
Teaches, University of Auckland, New Zealand
Michael Byron
Affiliation:
Kent State University, Ohio
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Summary

Introduction

I understand the problem of satisficing to be that of whether it is morally permitted (at least sometimes) for agents to choose an action that is less than the best when better actions are in their power and known by them to be so. The primary motivation for accepting the moral permissibility of satisficing is to reduce the demandingness of ethics. The “demandingness objection” has traditionally been directed at consequentialism, but I shall relate the discussion to the demandingness of virtue ethics.

The demandingness objection to certain moral theories is the objection that these theories contain requirements that are too demanding on agents. There are a number of possible strategies for overcoming the objection. A vulnerable theory may allow that it is morally permitted to satisfice, or given that it is not morally permitted to satisfice, it may propose a criterion of best action that is not itself too demanding. A weaker reading of the demandingness objection suggests a third strategy: It is possible that a theory may possess a demanding criterion of rightness or requirement in that sense, but a less demanding conception of conditions under which agents can be blamed for failing to perform right acts, even when those acts are in their power and known by them to be so. Let me briefly elaborate on those three strategies.

The first strategy replaces maximizing or optimizing criteria of rightness with satisficing criteria.

Type
Chapter
Information
Satisficing and Maximizing
Moral Theorists on Practical Reason
, pp. 176 - 189
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2004

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