Phenomenal well-being
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Date
2006-08-16
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Texas A&M University
Abstract
Hedonism is not terribly popular as a theory of well-being. And there are good
reasons to question whether hedonism even supplies the best account of happiness. Yet
hedonism captures something important, and it will be the goal of this essay to articulate
just what that is. I suggest that hedonism provides the best account of phenomenal wellbeing
(PWB). PWB is a restricted form of well-being that relates to the quality of the
experience of a life—or, in other words, the quality of one’s phenomenal life. If wellbeing
is characterized as “how well one’s life goes,” then PWB is “how well one’s life
goes for her, from the inside.” In rating a life’s PWB, the life is judged solely on the
basis of the contents of the experience of that life rated against the experience of the
individualÂ’s other possible lives. Unlike well-being, PWB is guaranteed to track more
robust experiential benefits that a person gets out of living a life.
In this work, I discuss the concept of well-being, including the feature of subjectrelativity
that is sometimes ascribed to it; then, after introducing the concept of a
phenomenal life, I develop the concept of phenomenal well-being. I propose what I take
to be the best available account of PWB, which involves the hedonistic concept of
satisfaction. An epistemic model of life-comparison (inspired by Peter RailtonÂ’s full information account of well-being) on which phenomenal lives are judged on the
criterion of satisfaction is presented, followed by some objections, and replies, to PWB
as satisfaction. Finally, some rival accounts of PWB are discussed and
critiqued—notably, an account of cognitive life-satisfaction that resembles theories of
“life-satisfaction” in happiness theory. The claim is that hedonism supplies the best
answer to what makes the experience of our lives go best for us. In the closing chapter, I
make some suggestions concerning the significance of this fact.
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Keywords
well-being, hedonism