Stephen M. Campbell

Bentley University
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    When the Shape of a Life Matters
    Ethical Theory and Moral Practice 18 (3): 565-75. 2015.
    It seems better to have a life that begins poorly and ends well than a life that begins well and ends poorly. One possible explanation is that the very shape of a life can be good or bad for us. If so, this raises a tough question: when can the shape of our lives be good or bad for us? In this essay, I present and critique an argument that the shape of a life is a non-synchronic prudential value—that is, something that can be good or bad for us in a way that is not good or bad for us at any part…Read more