Utilitarianism.net has just published two guest essays on ethical hedonism:
(1) In Analytic Hedonism and Observable Moral Facts, Sharon Hewitt Rawlette offers a précis of her 2016 book, The Feeling of Value. Philosophers may be especially interested in her explanation of analytic hedonism and how she addresses Moore’s open question argument. For a general audience, the bulk of the essay then runs through how she responds to a variety of objections to hedonism.
(2) Neil Sinhababu’s Naturalistic Arguments for Ethical Hedonism offers two new (and, I think, very interesting) arguments for hedonism: the reliability argument and the universality argument. More philosophical background may be required to get the most out of this one (it’s very clearly written, but the latter argument, especially, is quite intricate).
Enjoy!
[Update: And for a broader view, see our full chapter on theories of well-being.]
On the second essay, with respect to the reliability argument:
"R2. Phenomenal introspection is reliable in generating belief that pleasure is good"
Some people, like tranquilists and some moral antirealists, don't have the belief that pleasure is good, even after phenomenal introspection. So either pleasure is not good, or phenomenal introspection is not (perfectly) reliable, undermining R1 and the rest of the argument. The author also refers to disagreement as reason to doubt the reliability of a process in R3.
"Phenomenal introspection generates belief that pleasure is good, just as it generates belief that sound-experience has volume."
Maybe this comes down to definitions and is kind of besides the point, but inner monologues don't seem to have volume, at least not my own.