In recent years, we have seen an abundance of published philosophical work concerning
the topic of imagination. Yet, there still seems to be one subset of imagination that has not been
widely researched, which is fantasy. My analysis of fantasy concerns its relationship with ethics.
I mainly consider whether we can expand the boundaries of applied ethical principles by
considering whether fantasies can be evaluated as morally right or wrong. When we discuss the
topics of imagination and fantasy …
Read moreIn recent years, we have seen an abundance of published philosophical work concerning
the topic of imagination. Yet, there still seems to be one subset of imagination that has not been
widely researched, which is fantasy. My analysis of fantasy concerns its relationship with ethics.
I mainly consider whether we can expand the boundaries of applied ethical principles by
considering whether fantasies can be evaluated as morally right or wrong. When we discuss the
topics of imagination and fantasy philosophically, it’s not easy to see how such mental
phenomena could have an ethical component to them. More specifically, I want to propose an
account of fantastical ethics for situations where fantasies seem to occur most often, which is
within romantic situations. I argue that for a fantasy regarding romantic situations to be
unethical, the fantasist has to be imagining the fantasizee in such a way that the fantasizee would
not approve of themselves being imagined as, and/or they do not obtain the fantasizee’s consent
to fantasize about them in such a way.