This isn't the exact thing Vladimir_M was talking about, but: An Impossibility Theorem for Welfarist Axiologies seems rather worrying for utilitarianism in particular, though you could argue that no ethical system fully escapes its conclusions.
In brief, the paper argues that if we choose for an ethical system the following three reasonable-sounding premises:
then we cannot help but to accept one of the following:
This seems rather bad. I haven't had a chance to work through the proof to make sure it checks out, however.
Unfortunately I couldn't find an ungated version of the paper to link to. However I did find this paper by the same author, where he argues that if we define
then no axiology can satisfy all of these criteria. (I have not worked through this logic either.)
...then we cannot help but to accept one of the following:
*The Repugnant Conclusion: For any perfectly equal population with very high positive welfare, there is a population with very low positive welfare which is better.
*The Sadistic Conclusion: When adding people without affecting the original people's welfare, it can be better to add people with negative welfare rather than positive welfare.
*The Anti-Egalitarian Conclusion: A population with perfect equality can be worse than a population with the same number of people, inequality, and lower average
Joshua Greene manages to squeeze his ideas about 'point and shoot morality vs. manual mode morality' into just 10 minutes. For those unfamiliar, his work is a neuroscientific approach to recommending that we shut up and multiply.
Greene's 10-minute video lecture.