What is your answer?
The rationality approach suggests that we decide between hedonism and pluralism by appealing to
{ 1 } - our intuitions.
{ 2 } - what is socially approved.
{ 3 } - our feelings.
{ 4 } - what we'd desire for its own sake if we were as rational as possible (consistent, informed, imaginative, and so forth).
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Directions: Click on a number from 1 to 4.
1 is wrong. Please try again.
The rationality approach suggests that we decide between hedonism and pluralism by appealing to
{ 1 } - our intuitions.
{ 2 } - what is socially approved.
{ 3 } - our feelings.
{ 4 } - what we'd desire for its own sake if we were as rational as possible (consistent, informed, imaginative, and so forth).
Did you forget that chapter about moral rationality?
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2 is wrong. Please try again.
The rationality approach suggests that we decide between hedonism and pluralism by appealing to
{ 1 } - our intuitions.
{ 2 } - what is socially approved.
{ 3 } - our feelings.
{ 4 } - what we'd desire for its own sake if we were as rational as possible (consistent, informed, imaginative, and so forth).
Did you forget that chapter about moral rationality?
<= back | menu | forward =>
3 is wrong. Please try again.
The rationality approach suggests that we decide between hedonism and pluralism by appealing to
{ 1 } - our intuitions.
{ 2 } - what is socially approved.
{ 3 } - our feelings.
{ 4 } - what we'd desire for its own sake if we were as rational as possible (consistent, informed, imaginative, and so forth).
Did you forget that chapter about moral rationality?
<= back | menu | forward =>
4 is correct!
The rationality approach suggests that we decide between hedonism and pluralism by appealing to
{ 1 } - our intuitions.
{ 2 } - what is socially approved.
{ 3 } - our feelings.
{ 4 } - what we'd desire for its own sake if we were as rational as possible (consistent, informed, imaginative, and so forth).
This would seem to lead to pluralism, not to hedonism.
We often desire knowledge or virtue for its own sake, regardless of whether these include pleasure. And we'd likely continue to do so if we came to be more rational (consistent, informed, imaginative, and so forth).
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the end