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Suffering-focused ethics (SFE) is a family of moral views that gives special priority to reducing suffering. As you might know, we at the Center for Reducing Suffering find SFE deeply compelling—it is, after all, the backbone of our work. Part of our mission is to research and build a field around SFE. Unfortunately, SFE remains highly neglected in both academia and broader moral discourse. We are hoping to fill this gap.
Discussions of ethics often focus on a range of concerns and moral traditions. The questions raised are both interesting and deeply important. Yet comparatively little attention is devoted to examining the moral significance of suffering itself and asking whether it deserves some kind of special priority.
The lack of attention given to SFE and its core claims means that it remains underexamined, limiting our understanding of it. It also allows misconceptions to fester, distorting its meaning. For instance, people may equate SFE with negative utilitarianism, assume it is necessarily pessimistic or nihilistic, or believe it must have absurd implications.
We believe that SFE is too important to be neglected in this way. We think these ideas deserve serious examination, open discussion, and careful reflection. Our new Intro to [...]
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By EA Forum TeamSuffering-focused ethics (SFE) is a family of moral views that gives special priority to reducing suffering. As you might know, we at the Center for Reducing Suffering find SFE deeply compelling—it is, after all, the backbone of our work. Part of our mission is to research and build a field around SFE. Unfortunately, SFE remains highly neglected in both academia and broader moral discourse. We are hoping to fill this gap.
Discussions of ethics often focus on a range of concerns and moral traditions. The questions raised are both interesting and deeply important. Yet comparatively little attention is devoted to examining the moral significance of suffering itself and asking whether it deserves some kind of special priority.
The lack of attention given to SFE and its core claims means that it remains underexamined, limiting our understanding of it. It also allows misconceptions to fester, distorting its meaning. For instance, people may equate SFE with negative utilitarianism, assume it is necessarily pessimistic or nihilistic, or believe it must have absurd implications.
We believe that SFE is too important to be neglected in this way. We think these ideas deserve serious examination, open discussion, and careful reflection. Our new Intro to [...]
---
First published:
Source:
---
Narrated by TYPE III AUDIO.
---
Images from the article:
Apple Podcasts and Spotify do not show images in the episode description. Try Pocket Casts, or another podcast app.