Many people take it as a given that positive experiences have intrinsic value, but I don't think the matter is as clear-cut. So here I present a simple experiment which you can try if you are in the mood for listening to music.
Experiment: Listen to some music you like. After a while, mute the music. Alternate between silence and music while trying to appreciate how each feels.
When I mute the music, there is a lingering freedom from what I like to call the "heaviness of being"—basically any pain, unease or listlessness that I may otherwise feel. Turning the music back on definitely adds an enjoyable or gripping quality to the experience. But when I mute it, I don't really get the sense that the experience has become worse, and yet I don't find the peaceful silence better than neutral. This would seem to imply that listening to music is at best neutral.
To be clear, experiences can be impactful and leave a memory associated with meaning and value. Some event can cause me to feel deep sadness and still have this effect, even though I would hardly consider the moment-to-moment experience positive. And my aim here was precisely to call into question the intrinsic value of pleasure, its value when experienced for its own sake. I am curious about your thoughts if you tried the experiment!
I agree that hedonically "neutral" experiences often seem perfectly fine.
I suspect that there's a sleight of hand going on where moral realist proponents of hedonist axiology try to imply that "pleasure has intrinsic value" is the same claim as "pleasure is good." But the only sense in which "pleasure is good" is obviously uncontroversial is merely the sense of "pleasure is unobjectionable." Admittedly, pleasure also often is something we desire, or something we come to desire if we keep experiencing it -- but this clearly isn't always the case for all people, as any personal hedonist would notice if they stopped falling into the typical mind fallacy and took seriously that many other people sincerely and philosophically-unconfusedly adopt non-hedonistic life goals.
See also this short form or this longer post.
I think I can see why anti-realism is not an "anything goes" approach, but I still can't see why "subjective" values (or meaning) should matter. Of course, I also used to look at value in terms of what I cared about, or what motivated me. But at some point I realized that what holding a belief about the importance of something boils down to is that I will feel various emotions and do various actions in response to situations that are related to the belief. There is no intrinsic (dis)value in me (dis)valuing something, I concluded, and this drove me to full... (read more)