Abstract
In this review essay, I fijirst analyze the main tenets of Larry Temkin’s Rethinking the
Good and, in particular, his claim that the goodness of state of afffairs may not be transitive.
I examine one of the key examples of the book, and how it is intended to underwrite
this claim. Next I describe the diffference between the threat of non-transitivity
and the idea of incommensurability. I also consider the plausibility of what Temkin
calls the Essentially Comparative View, and explore possible responses to examples of
seeming non-transitivity. I also raise some doubts regarding Temkin’s interpretation of
‘the separateness of persons’ and Rawls’ complaints against utilitarians. Finally, I envisage
whether Temkin’s theoretical perspective helps us understand practical dilemmas
that organizations such as the World Health Organization face.