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John Stuart Mill 180673

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Kant's ethics is a form of 'deontology' (focuses on duty) ... ethics' (Aristotelian) and 'deontology' (Kantian), utilitarianism (or, ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: John Stuart Mill 180673


1
John Stuart Mill (1806-73)
  • UTILITARIANISM
  • (CONSEQUENTIALISM)

2
But first, unfinished business
  • We saw (not quite) that one of the major problems
    with Kants moral philosophy, at least for its
    critics, is that there are many practical and
    moral problems with his extremely rigid
    interpretation of duty never lie under any
    circumstances, etc.

3
  • First of all, Kant was aware of such criticisms,
    and at the end of the Reading you will find his
    response to one version of it.
  • Basically, he accepts that sometimes a lie may
    not harm any particular individual and in some
    cases it may even save a life.
  • BUT a lie harms mankind generally, for it
    vitiates the source of law itself (p.281).

4
  • AND If you lie to stop a murder, for example,
    then you become responsible for all the
    unforeseen (and unforeseeable) consequences of
    this lie. Whereas if you tell the truth, all
    responsibility stays with the (potential)
    murderer.
  • Satisfactory answer??

5
Summary
  • Kants ethics is a form of deontology (focuses
    on duty).
  • Our moral duties are based on Reason they are
    expressions of the law of reason.
  • We are categorically obliged to conform to duty
    because of our nature as rational beings.
  • Reason, and morality, forbid is to make
    exceptions to the rule based on circumstances.

6
  • This approach is in stark contrast to the
    approach of Utilitarianism (or,
    Consequentialism).
  • We will begin looking at Utilitarianism through
    the work of the English philosopher, John Stuart
    Mill (1806-1873).

7
  • Mills version of Utilitarianism is based on, and
    greatly develops the work of Jeremy Bentham
    (1748-1832).
  • Bentham was a so-called radical philosopher and
    wrote many proposals for social and political
    reforms.
  • He formulated the greatest happiness principle
    as the basis of morality.

8
  • And he was also a rather strange guy

9
  • After death, Bentham's body was (as requested in
    his will) preserved and stored in a wooden
    cabinet, termed his "Auto-Icon", at University
    College London. It is occasionally brought out of
    storage at official functions.
  • The Auto-Icon has always had a wax head, as
    Bentham's head was badly damaged in the
    preservation process. The real head was displayed
    in the same case for many years, but became the
    target of repeated student pranks, being stolen
    on more than one occasion, and is now locked away
    securely.

10
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11
  • Bentham was a friend of Mills father, and was a
    huge influence on Mills thought.
  • Mill formulated his moral philosophy
    Utilitarianism as an improvement upon Benthams
    account.

12
  • Alongside virtue ethics (Aristotelian) and
    deontology (Kantian), utilitarianism (or,
    consequentialism) is one of the 3 dominant forms
    of moral philosophy today (at least in the
    English-speaking world).
  • So, what is it?

13
  • Principle of Utility (or, the Greatest Happiness
    Principle)
  • holds that actions are right in proportion as
    they tend to promote happiness, wrong as they
    tend to produce the reverse of happiness. By
    happiness is intended pleasure and the absence of
    pain by unhappiness, pain, and the privation of
    pleasure. (p.257)

14
  • Seems straightforward? No it isnt!
  • This principle is based, Mill tells us, on a
    particular theory of life

15
  • the theory of life on which this theory of
    morality is groundednamely, that pleasure and
    freedom from pain, are the only things desirable
    as ends and that all desirable thingsare
    desirable either for the pleasure inherent in
    themselves, or as means to the promotion of
    pleasure and the prevention of pain. p.257

16
  • Compare/contrast with
  • Plato
  • Aristotle
  • Kant

17
  • So, Utilitarianism wants to promote happiness
    but, whose happiness? And which happiness?
  • Whose happiness? That of everybody affected by
    the action.
  • The standard of utility, is not the agents own
    greatest happiness, but the greatest amount of
    happiness altogether. p.262

18
  • Which happiness?
  • We have already seen that, for Mill, happiness is
    closely associated with pleasure and the absence
    of pain.
  • This has led to the charge of swinishness the
    charge that utilitarianism treats humans as mere
    animals pursuing physical pleasures (of food,
    sex, etc).

19
  • In response to which, Mill distinguishes between
    higher pleasures and lower pleasures.
  • It is better to be a human being dissatisfied
    than a pig satisfied better to be Socrates
    dissatisfied than a fool satisfied. And if the
    fool, or the pig, are of a different opinion, it
    is because they only know their own side of the
    question. The other party to the comparison knows
    both sides.p.260

20
  • Higher pleasures intellect, feeling,
    imagination, moral sentiments
  • Lower pleasures bodily pleasures, mere
    sensation,
  • The person who has experienced both will choose
    the former.
  • Of course people who choose the former may be
    less contented, but nevertheless more happy.
    (p.260)

21
  • Therefore, the ultimate end of human life is
    an existence exempt as far as possible from
    pain, and as rich as possible in enjoyments, both
    in point of quantity and quality. (p.262)
  • And, since this is the end of human action, it
    must also be the standard of morality.

22
  • Therefore, morality is the rules and precepts
    for human conduct, by the observance of which an
    existence such as this might be, to the
    greatest extent possible, secured to all mankind
    and not to them only, but, so far as the nature
    of things admits, to the whole sentient
    creation. (p.263)

23
  • Summary
  • The goal, or end, of all sentient life is the
    minimisation of pain and the maximisation of
    pleasure that is happiness.
  • Morality must be based on a recognition of this
    theory of life. The goal of morality must be to
    maximise happiness for ALL sentient creatures.

24
  • Next time well see how Utilitarianism proposes
    to do that.
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