There have of course been attempts at what you would call a positive ethics, notably Utilitarianism, but they inevitably find themselves caught in the barbed wire of the realisation that it is rarely possible to promote pleasure or happiness to the primary aim at no cost in terms of harm to others. — Barry Etheridge
So what I'm interested in exploring is why we see pain as more pressing than pleasure.
Who is "we"? What is the data set you're engaging with? You list four "principles," with three of them focused on harm, and comment on them as if they're THE four established principles. Where is that idea coming from?why, in ethical discourse, do we typically concern ourselves more with pain, suffering, or harms instead of pleasures, happiness, or benefits? — darthbarracuda
I wouldn't be surprised if that mattered to the rapist's moral views.Does it morally matter whether the rapist enjoys the rape — Emptyheady
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