This blog post explores the possibility of giving a reductive analysis of the concept of desert, as in, “getting what you deserve”. I briefly talk about the current state of research on desert, which seems to fail to give any reductive analysis; then I give my preferred reductive analysis, as well as some utilitarian reductive analyses which I developed for my friend Tetraspace, so that she would not need to use a trivialized view.
Here is a natural and appealing idea: it is a good thing when people get what they deserve. If I am distributing raises, and only Jones deserves a raise, then it would be better for me to give the raise to Jones than to anyone else. —Feldman and Skow, SEP entry on “Desert”
SEP on desert
Recently, as an outgrowth of a curiosity about contemporary value theory, I was reading the SEP article on the concept of desert. The following infographic depicts the state of philosophical research on the topic, as portrayed by the SEP article.
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| Infographic of SEP on desert, drawn by Nano Banana. Please click for full image. |
What struck me about the SEP article was that all the given theories took the concept of desert as a primitive concept. This concept can be analysed in terms of its relata: all desert claims involve someone who deserves it (the deserver), something deserved (the desert), and something about the deserver in virtue of which the desert is deserved (the desert base), and optionally a fourth element, which is someone from whom the deserver deserves the desert (the distributor). It can also be distinguished from entitlement: desert holds in virtue of intrinsic features of the deserver, while entitlement holds in virtue of social institutions. But none of the theorists cited in the article seemed to be offering a reductive analysis of desert in terms of other concepts.
Deontological reduction of desert
Personally, I really don’t want to take desert as a primitive concept. I already have a moral theory, so everything looks like a nail. Using my moral theory to define desert, I think my own view of desert is this:
x deserves y (from p) ≝ x has a moral right to receive y (from p), in at least the broad sense of morality. If x has this moral right in the narrow sense of morality, we might say x strongly deserves y (from p).
My moral theory is such that this analysis works perfectly, as far as I can tell.
Utilitarian reductions of desert
My friend Tetraspace is some sort of utilitarian, I think. When I was reading the SEP article, I was reminded of her views on desert.
Trivialized desert
For we each of us deserve everything, every luxury that was ever piled in the tombs of the dead kings, and we each of us deserve nothing, not a mouthful of bread in hunger. —Ursula K. Le Guin, The Dispossessed (quote)
In some old posts to X (formerly Twitter), now deleted, Tetraspace made comments to the effect of espousing a trivialized view of desert: every sentient being, regardless of personal traits, deserves whatever they would get in an ideal world, which includes all of their wildest dreams and infinite eternal happiness, since that’s what everyone receives in the ideal world. I call this view trivialized because everyone deserves the same thing, regardless of who or what they are. (Or rather, maybe different people deserve different things to the extent that they enjoy different things, but still, the linguistic difference is very small.)
She appealed to her consequentialist sympathies to support this view, since she was unable to think of how to arrive at a nontrivial view of desert within her consequentialist framework. Given the state of research in the SEP article (where desert was always taken as a primitive), I really can’t blame her, but I still thought she could do better, even if we insist on a reductive analysis of desert within utilitarianism.
Desert as time-bound desert-from a possibly elided distributor
In a reply to Tetraspace on X (formerly Twitter), in May 2025, I had once offhandedly suggested that she should use this analysis:
x deserves y ≝ ∃ p ∈ person, ∃ t ∈ time, EV(⌜p doesn’t give y to x within t⌝) < 0.
Of course, we can get the version with a distributor by simply freeing the variable:
x deserves y from p ≝ ∃ t ∈ time, EV(⌜p doesn’t give y to x within t⌝) < 0.
Come to think of it now, while this analysis can recover many of the commonsense linguistic phenomena, it has some grave flaws. Namely, it implies that a terrorist kidnapper deserves to receive a ransom, as long as his threat that he will kill his hostages is credible. So much, then, for the time-bound desert-from view.
Note (2026-02-16): I had been silently using the little ⌜corners⌝ for quasiquotation, and this apparently confused Tetraspace at first, so I am noting here that this is what they are.
Desert as improvement in felicific power
After thinking about it now, my best attempt for Tetraspace is that Tetraspace should have a concept of someone’s “power to make things better”, and then she should use this analysis:
x deserves y (from p) ≝ at least one of these holds:
- y is not rivalrous, and receiving y (from p) will increase x’s power to make things better
- y is rivalrous, and receiving y (from p) will increase x’s power to make things better more than if y is given (by p) to anyone else
I think this analysis produces most of the commonsense theorems:
- random abuse is undeserved, because random suffering usually makes you worse at making things better,
- random gifts are usually undeserved but sometimes deserved,
- rewards for good actions are deserved, because of the incentive that they provide, and
- punishment is deserved if, and only if, (and precisely to the extent that,) it’s rehabilitative.
I have no idea whether Tetraspace would take exception to a powers ontology. I think, to account for science, she needs the concept of powers anyway, regardless whether it is primitive; so she might as well use it for the desert theory. Under this analysis, desert is reduced to a metaphysical component (the concept of power) and an evaluative component (an order of world-states from better to worse), where the latter component can be taken wholly from her own value theory. My own moral theory proves beyond a shadow of a doubt that her value theory is wrong, but there is no reason why it should lead her to say weird-sounding things about what people deserve.
FDT-style desert
Upon reading the above, Tetraspace herself suggested adding a counterfactual conditional to the naïve time-bound reduction, which would allow avoiding the result where terrorists deserve ransom. An FDT-style approach that I believe is likely to capture her preferred reasoning is given below.
x deserves y (from p) ≝ The expected utility of the world where the decision algorithm A (which p runs) is logically fixed to output “give y to x” is higher than the world where A is fixed to output “don’t give y.” That is,
Desert(x, y) ≝ EV(⌜A □→ Give⌝) > EV(⌜A □→ ¬Give⌝)
Where the evaluation includes all subjunctive dependencies (past, present, and future) linked to algorithm A.
The box-arrow notation is, of course, David Lewis’s box-arrow for counterfactuals.
This formulation is somewhat opaque to me, but it seems to give the following commonsense results:
- People deserve to be compensated for completed work or good deeds, because the optimal decision algorithm must reliably reward past cooperation to ensure future cooperation.
- Bad actors do not deserve to have their demands met (e.g., ransoms), because an algorithm that rewards threats logically guarantees that more threats will be made.
- Criminals deserve punishment even if it will not rehabilitate them, because fulfilling the algorithm's prior commitment to punish is necessary to deter others from committing the same crime.
- Offenders deserve penalties that fit the crime, because an optimal incentive structure balances the necessary deterrent effect against the societal friction and cost of extreme, draconian penalties.
- Victims do not deserve random bad luck, natural disasters, or random abuse, because unpredictable suffering serves no logical or functional role in shaping positive behavior.
It also seems to yield the result that you deserve your lottery win because you intentionally acquired a ticket, but not a different kind of windfall that really had nothing to do with your decision policy.
I am glad that Tetraspace was able to use her own resources to get closer to commonsense views on desert; the possibility of getting threatened by terrorists is obviously a common decision theory example, but for whatever reason I did not think of this, despite having looked into similar stuff before. I suppose I have to hand this one to the folks at LessWrong. Counterfactuals are still somewhat unclear and metaphysical nowadays, but there is more research going into clarifying them than into powers ontology (or at least I think so), so this seems like an improvement upon the previous proposals.
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| Funny “loading screen” art made with Nano Banana, also posted here. |





