My best guess is that you mean the Von Neumann Morgenstern utility theorem but got the letters wrong.
Oops. Fixed.
If you are referring to those axioms then you could also consider saying VNM-utility instead of VNM-utilitarianism. Because those words have meanings that are far more different than their etymology might suggest to you.
That’s why I talk about “VNM-utilitarianism” rather than simply “utilitarianism”.
That’s why I talk about “VNM-utilitarianism” rather than simply “utilitarianism”.
That isn’t enough to disambiguate the meaning. In fact, your intended meaning is not even one of the options to disambiguate between. Your usage is still wrong and misleading. I suggest following nshepperd’s advice and using “VNM-rational” or “VNM-ratinality”.
(Obviously I will be downvoting all comments that persist with “VNM-utilitarianism”. Many others will not downvote but will take your muddled terminology to be strong evidence that you are confused or ill-informed about the subject matter.)
That isn’t enough to disambiguate the meaning. In fact, your intended meaning is not even one of the options to disambiguate between.
Utilitarianism in practice means some kind of aggregation of all people’s preferences. Most typically either ‘total’ or ‘average’. Even though I am a consequentialist (at least in a highly abstract combatibilist sense) I dismiss utilitarianism as stupid, arbitrary and not worth priveleging as a moral hypothesis. Adding VNM to it effectively narrows it down to ‘preference utilitarianism’ which at least gets rid of the worst of the crazy (‘hedonic utilitarianism’ Gahh!). But I don’t think that is what you are trying to refer to when you challenge VNM-X (because it wouldn’t be compatible with the points you make).
How about “VNM-consequentialism”?
Perfect! Please do. ‘Consequentialism’ means what one would naively expect ‘utilitarianism’ to mean, if not for an unfortunate history of bad philosophy having defined the term already. The VNM qualifier then narrows consequentialism down to the typical case that we tend to mean around here (because you are right, technically consequentialism is more broad than just that based on VNM axioms.)
I believe “VNM-utilitarianism” is problematic because it would suggest that it is a kind of utilitarianism. By the most usual definition of “utilitarianism” (a moral theory involving an ‘objective’ aggregative measure of value + utility-maximising decision theory) it is not.
However, I remember “VNM-rational” and “VNM-rationality” being accepted terminology.
Oops. Fixed.
That’s why I talk about “VNM-utilitarianism” rather than simply “utilitarianism”.
That isn’t enough to disambiguate the meaning. In fact, your intended meaning is not even one of the options to disambiguate between. Your usage is still wrong and misleading. I suggest following nshepperd’s advice and using “VNM-rational” or “VNM-ratinality”.
(Obviously I will be downvoting all comments that persist with “VNM-utilitarianism”. Many others will not downvote but will take your muddled terminology to be strong evidence that you are confused or ill-informed about the subject matter.)
I’m curious, what were the options for what you thought it meant.
How about “VNM-consequentialism”?
Utilitarianism in practice means some kind of aggregation of all people’s preferences. Most typically either ‘total’ or ‘average’. Even though I am a consequentialist (at least in a highly abstract combatibilist sense) I dismiss utilitarianism as stupid, arbitrary and not worth priveleging as a moral hypothesis. Adding VNM to it effectively narrows it down to ‘preference utilitarianism’ which at least gets rid of the worst of the crazy (‘hedonic utilitarianism’ Gahh!). But I don’t think that is what you are trying to refer to when you challenge VNM-X (because it wouldn’t be compatible with the points you make).
Perfect! Please do. ‘Consequentialism’ means what one would naively expect ‘utilitarianism’ to mean, if not for an unfortunate history of bad philosophy having defined the term already. The VNM qualifier then narrows consequentialism down to the typical case that we tend to mean around here (because you are right, technically consequentialism is more broad than just that based on VNM axioms.)
I believe “VNM-utilitarianism” is problematic because it would suggest that it is a kind of utilitarianism. By the most usual definition of “utilitarianism” (a moral theory involving an ‘objective’ aggregative measure of value + utility-maximising decision theory) it is not.
However, I remember “VNM-rational” and “VNM-rationality” being accepted terminology.