[Is Life Worth Living? by William Hurrell Mallock]@TWC D-Link book
Is Life Worth Living?

CHAPTER III
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It consists of a vague idea that, for some reason or other, happiness can never be distributed in an equal measure to all, unless it be not only equal in degree but also the same in kind; and that the one kind that can be thus distributed is a kind that is in harmony with our conceptions of moral excellence.

Now this is indeed so far true, that there are doubtless certain kinds of happiness which, if enjoyed at all, can be enjoyed by the few alone; and that the conditions under which alone the few can enjoy them disturb the conditions of all happiness for the many.

The general good, therefore, gives us at once a test by which such kinds of happiness can be condemned.

But to eliminate these will by no means leave us a residue of virtue; for these so far from being co-extensive with moral evil, do in reality lie only on the borders of it; and the condemnation attached to them is a legal rather than a moral one.

It is based, that is, not so much on the kind of happiness itself as on the circumstances under which we are at present obliged to seek it.


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