I finally finished my series of 5 essays on my life philosophy (Valuism)! In a nutshell, Valuism suggests that you work to figure out what you intrinsically value, and then that you try to use effective methods to create more of what you intrinsically value.
While simple and straightforward at first glance, few people seem to approach life this way, and Valuism ends up with a number of surprising implications and, I think, provides a perspective that can help shed light on a number of different domains.
Interestingly, Effective Altruism is implied by Valuism plus a specific set of strong intrinsic values that most Effective Altruists have (reducing suffering + truth).
Here is the sequence of essays, if you feel like checking them out:
Part 1: Doing what you value as a life philosophy – an introduction to Valuism
Part 2: What to do when your values conflict?
Part 3: Should Effective Altruists be Valuists instead of utilitarians?
Part 4: What would a robot value? An analogy for human values
Part 5: Valuism and X: how Valuism sheds light on other domains
A big shoutout goes to Amber Dawn Ace who wrote these essays with me.
You're the one who's redefining utilitarianism- which is commonly defined as maximization of happiness and well-being of conscious beings. You can consider integrating other terminal values into what you'd like to do, but you're not really discussing utilitarianism at that point, as it's commonly used. For instance, Greenberg points to truth as a potential terminal value, which would be at odds with utilitarianism as it's typically used.
I think Singer is a hedonic utilitarian for what it's worth, and I think I subscribe to it while acknowledging that weighing the degrees of positive and negatively subjective experiences of many kinds is daunting.
As for having other instrumental values (which is why I don't really think the "burnout" argument is very good as against utilitarianism, I agree with you on that one.